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By Molly Merrill | 02:00 pm | July 06, 2011
Websites are "the new storefront" these days, and medical practices should not be missing out on the opportunity, says one expert. However, he points out that they "are a constant evolution," and so it's important to "lay the right foundation."Mike Cuesta, director of marketing at CareCloud, a Web-based medical practice management software firm in Miami, offered some tips for medical practices when it comes to creating and maintaining websites.
By Jamie Thompson | 07:18 pm | July 05, 2011
Mexico's Ministry of Health of Nuevo Leon has chosen the e-Screener Plus (eSP) by Dallas, Tex.-based OZ Systems to manage the state's newborn hearing and metabolic screening programs.Every Ministry of Health public hospital in Nuevo Leon will use the solution with the aim of improving follow-up care for more than 30,000 infants each year.
By Mike Miliard | 05:49 pm | July 05, 2011
PORTLAND, ME - Once upon a time, the tools of medicine were pretty simple: tongue depressor, blood pressure cuff, stethoscope. Nowadays Try exergames and first-person simulators, "wiihabilitation" and multiplayer mHealth apps. For years, video games and virtual reality have been playing around the periphery of healthcare. Now, the market for healthcare gaming is starting to cohere into something more substantial, says Ben Sawyer, founder of Portland, Maine-based Games for Health.
By Mike Miliard | 05:39 pm | July 05, 2011
As doctors increasingly adopt mobile devices, this much seems clear: At least for now, Apple is king. According to an April survey of U.S. physicians, sponsored by Aptilon Corporation, 61 percent of docs intend to own an iPhone by the end of 2011 - up sharply from 39 percent at the beginning of the year. Strikingly, that's more than double the iPhone's 24.7 percent adoption rate among American smartphone users at large.
By Molly Merrill | 05:36 pm | July 05, 2011
Why did you start blogging and why do you think you have been so successfulI started blogging back in 2004. At that time there were less than 100 physicians blogs. I started blogging because I thought a blog was a great way to provide commentary from the physician perspective that is often lacking in news reporting today. It was after two or three years of constantly doing it that I realized it had become a powerful media to connect patients and doctors.