HIMSS23
HIMSS23
Dana Trampas, senior digital health specialist at HIMSS, shares how healthcare organizations can promote and advocate for LGBTQ health equity and inclusion within their patient populations and their workforces.
HIMSS23
Natasha Ramontal, HIMSS digital health strategist for community outcomes and analytics, describes how the Community Care Outcomes Maturity Model (C-COMM) engages and empowers patients by supporting meaningful care relationships.
HIMSS23
Lawrence Voyten, HIMSS board member and national advocacy chair, details how HIMSS chapter leaders can proactively support health equity and interoperability with their local governments.
HIMSS23
Grady Burrows, executive director of HIT in the CLE, talks about creating a demand-driven model for diverse, local IT teams and his work with colleges and employers to build a career pipeline for youth.
HIMSS23
Lawrence Whittle, CCO at Verana Health, describes how patient data can be used to improve healthcare, including making clinical trials more efficient and helping clinicians discover which treatments yield the most value.
HIMSS23
Dr. John Showalter, CPO at Linus Health, describes drug therapy advances for Alzheimer's and how technology can help screen and identify at-risk patients sooner to optimize outcomes and quality of life.
HIMSS23
Dr. Jay Bhatt, managing director at Deloitte, shares recommendations on how businesses can realize productivity and retention benefits by boosting health equity for their employees.
HIMSS23
Kathy D. Ford, chief product and strategy officer at Project Rōnin, explains how AI can help drive value-based care for oncology by empowering clinicians to find the most effective, cost-efficient treatment for each patient.
HIMSS23
Joana Feijó, business development director for Health Cluster Portugal, describes how Portugal is using lessons learned from other countries to modernize its own digital healthcare infrastructure.
HIMSS23
Michelle Ramim, assistant professor of health informatics at Nova Southeastern University, describes how the university requires seminars on cybersecurity and wearable medical device attacks for medical and dental students.