Patients are consumers who expect ease, convenience, and efficiency when accessing healthcare. Today, accessing healthcare services requires more technology than ever. With the introduction of Electronic Medical Records (EMR) came medical data mobility, unleashing data that could be shared, aggregated, and evaluated. The HITECH act funded the expansion of medical record technology in the USA, and since then, has created mountains of data that, when in the right hands at the right time, could save lives. But the promise of data mobility is stalling. Concerns about HIPAA compliance led to technology stagnation over the last decade, as administrators weighed the risk of potential fines and security breaches against gains in efficiency and convenience. State and federal rules on delivering care over video were complicated and contradictory, holding back investment in virtual care. Then, COVID-19 disrupted the technology tightrope that providers had been facing. Regulators temporarily suspended the guidelines that often slowed technology progress. Worldwide, consumers turned to video calls, and the adoption of telehealth exploded. Healthcare is now a technology-first experience. When we need to schedule an appointment or obtain care, patients call, click, or chat. Voice recognition technology is deployed in calls, patients check in with a click, and bots deliver helpful educational information. The timely contextual data exchange makes the experience work. The future of this healthcare technology revolution rests in IT’s hands as those teams now need to manage the applications, devices, data, and workflow while balancing a significantly higher cybersecurity risk. The future is a “healthcare anywhere” model, where data is simultaneously mobile, but controlled. An “app-less experience” will be essential for widespread telehealth adoption, and in the future, patients won’t be forced to download a new app or create a username and password just to meet with their doctor. Human behavior is predictable, and adoption of any new process works best when the experience is simple, fast, and clear. A no-download experience may even be more important across the globe, where countries are earlier in the telehealth adoption curve. Patients will be able to launch their video visit from a single click from any digital channel: a portal, email, text, calendar, and more. This will help providers meet their patients on their own terms, with flexible options on how they can connect and engage, regardless of their circumstance. While COVID-19 prompted governments worldwide to temporarily relax regulatory enforcement of telehealth application security requirements, it became clear that healthcare systems are siloed—not integrated, not scalable, and not secure. Healthcare system CIOs tell us one of their highest priorities is to establish an enterprise telehealth standard that is integrated into the current workflow and can scale securely. These four key elements are critical for telehealth to be sustainable post-pandemic:
COVID-19 accelerated the digital transformation of healthcare. Telehealth was the first domino to fall in the shift from physical to in-person patient visits. Given the mass adoption of this technology for delivering care, it has forced healthcare and technology providers to rethink the entire care journey. To deliver on the promise of a better experience for both patients and clinicians, technology must bring contextual intelligence, communication, and data to the proper point of care. We will see an expansion of new technologies that creates a digital front door experience, further mirroring the conversion of the physical to digital experiences. This will streamline and improve the efficiency of the patient care journey, while driving brand loyalty and patient satisfaction. from https://ift.tt/JlepSiy Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com
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How the Digital Front Door and Artificial Intelligence Will Change the Future of Population Health5/17/2022 The future of healthcare is being driven by digital transformation and innovation. Healthcare is evolving into a new era where nearly everything is connected through digital technologies to improve the way that healthcare is delivered. Most things that need to happen before the patient walks into a clinic or the hospital – from appointment scheduling to check in and digital intake forms – can be done using technology. This was true before the pandemic, but now almost every interaction within a healthcare delivery organization (HDO) starts with a call, click, or chat. As hospitals and healthcare systems continue to re-evaluate their patient engagement strategy, they need to intentionally design a hybrid experience. There’s an entire exchange that can happen with artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML), but digital isn’t the whole story. Throughout the pandemic, healthcare systems have seen increases in the volume of traditional voice channels. Patients have been calling health systems for primary care triage when they used to go to the urgent care. There is so much we can do beyond voice, and HDOs will have to blend analog and digital tools. A simple phone interaction evolves into a virtual triage when call center agents can seamlessly access the electronic health record (EHR), customer relationship management (CRM), and scheduling software through a single pane of glass. The goal of great technology is to drive all the complexity to the background, so every agent knows the contextual information they need to meet the patient where they are and in a channel of their choice. Changing the patient engagement model What we are seeing in the industry is an expansion of virtual care that runs across the care continuum. It stretches from patient intake to inpatient rounding, and from specialty consults to post-acute/chronic care management. Cisco is broadly defining the digital front door to encompass digital collaboration across voice, text, email, and AI chatbots. Digital front door is also communication between care teams and patients to include picture and document exchange. Digital front door technology can positively impact almost every interaction from pre patient check-in, to after they are discharged. This includes:
In most health systems, patient intake is primarily a manual process and interaction has largely been focused on phone call workflows. The rise in robocall and spam have limited trust in the voice channel, which means patients don’t always answer phone calls. When this happens, the communication process extends. Reimagining the patient communication process requires connecting the systems and applications to the patient data. AI and natural language processing (NLP) will play a big role in accelerating speed to action and increasing the frequency of patient touch points, both before and after clinical interventions. AI can help gather relevant data by guiding a patient in an automated virtual triage exchange and then selectively escalating to an enterprise-scale contact center. At that point, skilled clinicians can pick up the interaction without losing any data in the process. Across the United States, there is a shortage of clinicians in many service lines. If it isn’t an emergency, AI technology can start a patient interaction, digitally freeing up clinical resources for other tasks. Virtual care and digital front door combined with technologies like AI and NLP bring a new promise to streamlining the efficiency and effectiveness of the patient journey. Creating easier, frictionless experiences today leads to brand loyalty and greater patient satisfaction tomorrow. The digital front door is one of the most powerful tools to enable organizations to improve care access and increase patient satisfaction. from https://ift.tt/jDfMqxA Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com The healthcare industry is rapidly changing as the reliance on Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Infrastructure continues to grow. Patients now demands increased connectivity, efficiency improvements, and secure patient data, while supporting the clinical workforce in delivering patient-centered care. Our healthcare systems are stretched, clinicians are experiencing moral injury, our populations are aging, and chronic disease continues to plague our society. Our current healthcare delivery models are not sustainable long term. Throughout the pandemic, we’ve seen the worldwide adoption of digital health solutions to deliver care in convenient and agile ways. While telehealth has been around for a long time, it has now become a critical tool in care delivery, and patients and providers alike have become accustomed to its use. Patients and clinicians are now experiencing the many benefits of remote care and remote monitoring. Digitally enabled care not only helps to address access and equity issues, but it also provides more on-demand care for patients. In turn, this helps reduce hospitalizations and emergency department visits, and it helps increase healthcare workforce effectiveness. Digitally enabled care has now expanded the use of virtual health services into mental health services, triage, virtual ward rounds, and virtual hospitals. It has increased the ability to deliver acute, chronic, primary, and specialty care, without providers having to step foot inside a hospital or healthcare facility. Clinicians conducting non urgent consultations over digital health platforms have benefited from the transition. Clinics have seen a reduction in unnecessary visits to emergency departments, patient clinics, and outpatient waiting rooms. This has eased the administrative burden of clinicians as they can freely transition between patients and clinical operations, and maximize their time spent with patients. Patients, too, experience great benefits from telehealth, including more flexibility scheduling appointments and follow-ups, shorter wait times, seamless communication with clinicians, and the ability to receive care securely, no matter where they live. Virtual health platforms, like Cisco Webex, have also given time back to researchers, physicians, and clinicians. They now have access to an improved collaboration platform and can participate in internal meetings, share information, and collaborate with peers and colleagues within the hospital or across the country. As virtual health continues to evolve and transition to an established mode for long-term patient centric healthcare delivery, planning and consultation will be key to ensuring success and adoption. As we continue to see the delivery of digitally enabled care expand to include wearables, mobile apps, and other new diagnostic and treatment technologies, those healthcare systems with a strong IT foundation will be better positioned to build out and deliver advanced capabilities. Digitally enabled care can divert the pressure from acute care settings to primary healthcare or community care settings, especially for mild or moderate diagnoses. This will, in turn, assist in addressing the unsustainable burden of disease and ensure the resilience of our health systems. Cisco understands how critical technology can be in bridging gaps, breaking down barriers, and connecting the unconnected. This is an exciting time. We can provide advances in technology which, combined with your clinical excellence, can help you provide secure and more convenient patient care. By working with healthcare organizations around the world, Cisco is helping providers do extraordinary things during extraordinary times. from https://ift.tt/OrCpujG Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com Cybersecurity remains top of mind for healthcare, as it is the most targeted industry, incurring the highest average cost of a breach ($9.2M), with the slowest incidence response time (287 days).1 As a healthcare community, we have faced new challenges over the last twenty-four months. While the pandemic has created many new hurdles for the healthcare sector, it also became the catalyst for healthcare innovation and transformation and has accelerated change. Examples of this change include:
With change comes new security requirementsHealthcare is evolving into a new era where nearly everything is connected through digital technologies that improve the way healthcare is delivered to patients. The future of healthcare is being driven by digital transformation that evolves our provider care delivery models, with a heightened focus on open-standards interoperability. This ongoing digitization will continue to elevate and introduce new security risks as the threat landscape becomes more complex. Health systems and hospitals continue to evaluate and implement new models for care delivery beyond the hospital walls, such as remote clinics, ambulatory surgery centers, and home health. The digital platforms connecting these locations may be regional, national, or international. While this connectivity creates great opportunities for transformation, it also creates broader attack surfaces for financially motivated threat actors. Healthcare has experienced an ever-increasing frequency and severity of cyber security breaches. Cyberattacks in healthcare more than doubled in 2020, with ransomware accounting for 28% of all attacks. It’s easy to see why the data-rich healthcare industry is a target for bad actors.2 Cybersecurity breaches for healthcare organizations and patients involve the theft of protected health information (PHI), personally identifiable information (PII), ransomware attacks, and the potential to hack and control medical devices. Breaches can result in longer patient stays, delays in procedures, and diversions to other facilities. Medical device security is also a concern for healthcare providers as bad actors take aim at vulnerable unpatched systems and improperly configured devices. The number of connected medical devices can represent up to three-quarters (74%) of the devices on a healthcare delivery organization’s network.2 The proliferation of smart and connected medical devices will only continue in the future. Between 2020 and 2028, the smart medical devices market is projected to grow by 20.1% CAGR.3 To complicate the landscape further, healthcare organizations must consider standards and regulatory requirements such as those found with HIPAA, ISO, NIST, GDPR, and PCI DSS. To protect critical patient data and clinical systems, many healthcare IT leaders have recently adopted the Zero Trust security framework to bolster cybersecurity defenses. While it is both a strategy and an architectural model, organizations need to recognize that it is also a journey. Cisco defines Zero Trust as a comprehensive approach to securing all access across an organization’s applications and environment, from any user, device, and location. It protects the workforce, workloads, and workplace. Five ways to improve security posture in 2022In summary, the overarching mission for CISOs and their security teams is to protect their institutions while maintaining business continuity. Here are five ways that healthcare organizations can improve their security posture this year:
As the world’s largest provider of networking, collaboration, and security technologies, Cisco is committed to addressing the security challenges of the healthcare industry. We encourage you to explore our cybersecurity solutions for healthcare in greater depth in our portfolio explorer tool.
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from https://ift.tt/qhTA30m Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com The way we work, live, and learn has fundamentally shifted. After nearly two years in which employees have operated mostly from home, hybrid work is here to stay. In healthcare specifically, we’re seeing technology innovation excel at a rapid pace. Hybrid work, a notion previously reserved for tech companies and forward-thinking employers, has been adopted in healthcare with great success. In March, Cisco participated in the Healthcare Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS) annual conference, where we demonstrated the power of hybrid work through our interactive patient and provider experience. We encourage you to take the virtual tour to see the ways in which technology can positively impact the care journey. Why hybrid work? The healthcare workforce is in crisis. Nearly 20% of healthcare workers have left their job since the pandemic started, and 49% of those individuals cited burnout or stress as their top reason for leaving the healthcare field. The pandemic has heightened our society’s awareness of mental and behavioral health issues caused by stress, isolation, and loss of social contact and community. While the general population has experienced the impact of these conditions in a profound way, the clinician population has been subjected to the most extreme of these conditions. If not addressed immediately, moral injury (clinician burnout) will have an impact on the future of healthcare with major implications around clinical satisfaction at work and quality of care delivery. To truly resolve the issues our society is facing around moral injury for our critical healthcare workers – our health systems need to change, and increased focus needs to be placed on employee experience and wellbeing. The time is now to rethink the workplace for our clinicians and care teams, equipping them with the technology tools they need to spend less time on administrative burden and more time interacting with patients or disconnecting from work for mental and physical breaks. How can care be delivered in a hybrid setting? For healthcare organizations, offering hybrid work can help retain workforce and reduce clinician burnout by enabling clinicians and staff to be productive in their preferred environment—inside a care facility, at home, or moving between locations. One of the most common ways we’ve seen healthcare being delivered in a hybrid environment is through telehealth. Patients and providers can be in the place that’s most convenient at the time of the consultation. For patients, telehealth means care on-demand, and quicker access to the providers and specialists they need. For providers, telehealth can mean better schedule density, and less time traveling between hospitals, clinics and their home. And, because Webex Instant Connect integrates into existing electronic health records, adoption of telehealth is simplified. Another area where we’ve seen the significant impact of hybrid work is in the digital front door. The digital front door is an omnichannel patient engagement tool, which lowers the burden on staff for scheduling and improves choice and shared decision making for the patients. How does hybrid work improve the clinician experience? As I’ve already shared, hybrid work helps minimize the burden that often falls to providers. But hybrid work can also drive efficiencies in the delivery of care. Clinical communications and collaboration allows care providers to communicate across various locations throughout a care facility or between the facility and home. If a nurse needs to reach the provider on call, they can do so via secure messaging and calling. This means that the provider can consult remotely and in a fast and effective manner. Through our hybrid workforce use case, we can also help healthcare organizations collaborate and work effectively, regardless of their location, by providing remote and secure connectivity into the operational domain. One final area where hybrid work is being adopted within healthcare is through remote expertise. Using Webex Remote Expert on Demand paired with augmented reality devices, experts can share knowledge and expertise with students in an education capacity, or train providers in remote locations where a specialist may not be available. This technology can also be used to connect remote experts to the frontline, enabling them to see what the frontline worker is seeing while performing their job. Get started with hybrid work At HIMSS 2022, we certainly saw that hybrid work is the future for healthcare. While the industry initially adopted hybrid work as a means to deliver care during the pandemic, healthcare organizations are realizing the value of hybrid work in improving the patient and clinician experience, as well as the financial and environmental benefits of hybrid work. It’s all connected, the patient experience, the clinician experience, and the economics of care delivery. Cisco is bringing value to digital care delivery and hybrid work, one workflow at a time. Want to dive deeper into hybrid work for healthcare? We encourage you to watch this short webinar about how hybrid work is supporting healthcare heroes around the world, and request a demo from a hybrid work expert. from https://ift.tt/1n2zDvH Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com Pre-pandemic, digitally enabled healthcare was progressing; we recognized the burden of disease was unsustainable and that there was a real need to shift to a preventative care model, underpinned by technology. However, the last couple of years have proven how capable technology is at aiding our pressurized health care systems, creating a sense of urgency to rapidly accelerate its integration. The power of digital connectivity and equitable access The power of digital connectivity throughout the pandemic has been undeniably evident; remote triaging and virtual care has come into its own and off its success there has been an acknowledgment to do more of the same. Yet, our healthcare systems have been exasperated by the pandemic and not just through a rise in demand for urgent care. Elective treatment has been delayed. On top of this, COVID-19 has exposed the digital divide regarding the level of care people receive based on their connectivity levels and the disparity of healthcare that is available depending on where you live in a country. Worryingly, 58% of people were unable to access critical services during the pandemic lockdown due to unreliable internet. As a society, we have a duty to level up the health care journey to ensure equitable access and experiences for everyone, whilst balancing public system costs and resources. Digitally integrated and secure healthcare platforms have the power to aid the path of our health systems’ recovery – both short term in response to the pandemic and long term to shift towards a preventative healthcare model. They create an ecosystem which enables care to be delivered in the most appropriate setting and personalized to the needs of the patient, whilst building in security mechanisms. It is critical that these systems interact and coordinate with one another to help ensure people have a seamless, contextualized experience regardless of their journey of care – be it with their General Practitioner, hospital, council, at home or in a care home, remotely or in person. Digitally enabled healthcare systems create a more inclusive workforce A digitally enabled healthcare system has immense benefits too – for both staff and patients. Hybrid work has the potential to create a more inclusive and empowered workforce, encouraging those who may have recently retired or left their profession back into practice to work part-time in remote roles. In part, hybrid solutions can help to address chronic healthcare workforce shortages and underpin new virtual models of care that can contribute to a reduction in the backlog of care. Plus, the automation and streamlining of processes through greater collaboration eases the burden of administrative tasks and increases productivity, whilst also reducing service costs and CO2 emissions. A sleeker, smarter care system that focuses on prevention and shifting care closer to home using digital technologies, is also a game changer for patients. For non-urgent care, a digital front door provides access to video consultation that can be less disruptive than in-patient care, with many consultations being conducted in the comfort of one’s own home. For those people with longer term health conditions, a secure portal packed with health and wellbeing materials, virtual advice and access to health coaching can help them live healthier lives. Technology enabled healthcare is re-imagining the patient experience, whilst creating possibilities to redefine how frontline staff deliver care, help improve patient outcomes and achieve operational efficiencies. The biggest challenge we face is ensuring everyone can access these critical services through affordable broadband and that they have the digital skills and devices to use them. Cisco solutions help our customers across healthcare focus on what they do best, which is caring for patients. Experience the holistic care journey through our digital booth infographic. from https://ift.tt/vfMzl1n Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com Earlier this month I had the pleasure of attending the Healthcare Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS) annual conference. As I walked the show floor, spoke with our customers and partners and listened to the powerful words of Cisco’s Senior Vice President and Global Innovation Officer, Guy Diedrich, during his mainstage presentation, one topic in particular resonated with me. Sustainability. As business leaders and technologists, we have a moral obligation to connect everyone, be ethical stewards of technology and protect our planet. The time is now for us to invest in sustainable practices in healthcare and beyond. Cisco is committed to ensuring a sustainable and regenerative planet with ongoing initiatives and solutions aimed at reducing emissions and addressing climate change. If we don’t take action, collectively as a society, we will have a detrimental and irreversible impact on our planet. In short, we are running out of time. Cisco’s purposeCisco’s purpose is to power an inclusive future for all. To achieve our purpose, we leverage our technology and inspire our people to make a positive impact in communities worldwide and on the planet. Each word in our purpose has a meaning. The word future speaks specifically to our sustainability initiatives. In September 2021, Cisco committed to net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, 10 years ahead of the time by which climate scientists say the planet must reach net zero to avoid the worst effects of climate change.1 We will achieve our goal by continuing to increase the energy efficiency of our products, accelerating use of renewable energy, embracing hybrid work, investing in carbon removal solutions, and further embedding sustainability and circular economy principles across our business. Did you know that despite the magnitude of the climate crisis, less than 2 percent of all philanthropic dollars are currently spent in the fight against climate change? That’s why the Cisco Foundation announced a new 10-year, US$100 million commitment to fund nonprofit grants and impact investing in climate solutions.1 Sustainability in healthcareCreating a sustainable and regenerative planet is no small task. But we can begin with meaningful steps and thoughtful use of technology to lessen our impact on the planet. In healthcare, we are taking those meaningful steps through the use of smart and sustainable hospitals, telehealth and digital front door. As an industry, healthcare accounts for 4.4–4.6% of worldwide greenhouse gas emissions.2 The U.S. healthcare system accounts for almost one quarter of these emissions, a figure which grew by 6% between 2010 and 2018.3 These emissions contribute to climate change and indirectly lead to reduced health outcomes. At the recent United Nations Climate Change conference, COP26, a group of 50 countries committed to develop climate-resilient and low-carbon health systems. These countries are committed to reducing the impact their health systems have on CO2 emissions and climate change. The dual objectives of a climate-resilient and low carbon health system were emphasized by an open letter from over 450 healthcare providers representing more than 46 million healthcare workers around the world. This group warned the climate crisis is the single biggest health threat facing humanity and calls on world leaders to deliver on climate action. So, what can healthcare organizations do to help meet sustainability targets and lessen their impact on climate change? Let’s start with smart hospitalsSmart hospitals securely connect clinical, operational, and business systems, applications, users, and data across physical healthcare facilities for a more automated and sustainable experience. A smart hospital can harness the fourth utility to deliver reduced power consumption, which leads to enhanced building operations, lower cost of ongoing operations, improved space and asset utilization, and most importantly, reduction of carbon footprint. Interested to learn more? See how one hospital in South Korea achieved greater efficiencies with integrated network management solutions. Telehealth and digital front doorAs a result of the pandemic, patients have never been more invested in the management of their health. Patients want to manage their health at the time and in the place most convenient for them – telehealth and omnichannel appointment management (digital front door) are the new norm. But telehealth and digital front door aren’t just tools that improve the patient experience. They also have significant impacts on sustainability targets. Less travel time to and from appointments and the opportunity for remote work for providers and contact center agents helps reduce emissions and lowers carbon footprint. What’s next?The climate crisis cannot be solved by one person, organization, nation, or community. We must come together as partners, innovators, and communities worldwide to help bring about a shared vision of a sustainable and regenerative world. To learn more about Cisco’s mission, register for our event “Powering an Inclusive & Sustainable Future for All” on April 20th. To see how Cisco is helping healthcare organizations meet sustainability targets, visit Cisco portfolio explorer for healthcare or if you would like to speak to someone on any of the topics above, click here and the proper Cisco contact will reach out to you. Sources:
from https://ift.tt/4pVWOG7 Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com I engaged in many conversations at the annual HIMSS Global Health Conference & Exhibition last week, and came away with a resounding call to action. It’s time to make healthcare available and accessible for everyone, everywhere. The vehicle to achieve global health equity is technology. Currently, nearly half of the world remains unconnected to the Internet, and in many countries, it is not affordable, creating a clear division between those who have access, and those who don’t. This digital divide often means those most vulnerable, such as people in rural communities with no Internet or few doctors, lack access to information and resources when they need it most. When it comes to healthcare, lives are on the line. For people who already have access to the Internet and healthcare services, there is a new expectation that healthcare be virtual or hybrid, with easy access to personalized care information. For people unconnected to the Internet, expanded, affordable access allows them to view healthcare information and resources, take advantage of healthcare services online, book appointments, and attend virtual appointments quickly and easily. The pandemic has worsened the inequity and division. With hospitals overwhelmed, healthcare workers experiencing burnout, and an increase in isolation especially for seniors, individual and community care has changed dramatically, and continues to evolve. Technology can play an important role in closing the digital divide and bringing healthcare to everyone through thoughtful and innovative use of technology. In resource-constrained areas, governments and organizations can also use technology to train and educate local healthcare workers, and provide them access to healthcare data, services, and resources, allowing more coverage and care for people in their communities. For someone in a rural community, this can save them time, such as a day of travel to see a doctor. Between virtual visits and community health workers, communities can now move towards patient care anywhere. When people are isolated, such as the aging population or those in ICU care, technology can keep them connected to family and friends. Human connection, unity, support, and love can motivate patients, improve their outlook, and ultimately help their overall wellbeing. Technology can also improve the livelihoods of healthcare workers by creating efficiency and time savings. Streamlining administrative tasks such as scheduling and providing secure access to data, allows them to spend more time with patients or to take a much-needed break. In addition, hybrid healthcare environments help keep both workers and patients safe from physical contact, while still providing the ability to meet and consult with patients and the care team. With increased use of technology, companies and governments must ensure the security of patient data and create trust with residents. This requires trusted partnerships with technology vendors such as Cisco, with the experience and portfolio to bring together applications, users, devices, and data to build a secure, intelligent platform for digital healthcare. Through partnerships and innovative technology, we can bring healthcare to more people and communities; to power an inclusive future for all. Watch Guy Diedrich’s presentation for more information on bridging the digital divide. To learn more about what Cisco can do for your healthcare organization, check out our digital booth experience, taking you through one patient and provider journey. from https://ift.tt/eE2BTih Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com Now more than ever, we believe that technology can be used to provide an opportunity and access for all, make a meaningful impact, and bring about a better and brighter future. Cisco’s purpose is to power an inclusive future for all, and we are committed to best supporting you as you reimagine care for the future. Join our team next week at HIMSS 2022, healthcare’s most influential event of the year, and learn firsthand why healthcare organizations like yours trust Cisco. With the unmatched breadth and performance of our portfolio, and the industry-leading security embedded throughout our solutions, our customers across healthcare can focus on what they do best, which is caring for patients. Whether you are planning to attend in-person or participate virtually, here are the top four ways to connect with us during the show:
For more information, please visit the Cisco at HIMSS event website. We look forward to connecting with you in Orlando or virtually next week! from https://ift.tt/ipKkaSv Check out http://felpec.wordpress.com |