Decision Support
Mika Newton, CEO of xCures, sees artificial intelligence the only path forward to delivering quality care, as the U.S. doesn't have enough hospitals, doctors or nurses.
Julia Zarb, CEO and founder of Blue x Blue and a 2025 HIMSS Changemaker Award recipient, says her company uses AI agents to identify and access the data most needed to make informed choices, helping drive efficiency and relieve burnout.
First Databank's technology resides within electronic health records and can offer clinicians guidance on issues such as patient-specific dosing and possible drug interactions, explains Virginia Halsey, the company's SVP of strategy.
Medicomp Systems' LLM-adjacent software cleans, organizes and presents diagnostically connected data for clinicians at the point of care, explains President and CEO David Lareau.
Clinician comfort is growing with the use of artificial intelligence, says Shane Cooke, president and CEO of Etiometry, who sees big things for decision support applications.
An AI-powered "mission control centre" will streamline access to all data across Seoul National University Bundang Hospital to support clinicians' decision-making, says CIO Dr Seyoung Jung.
Alda Mizaku, chief data and AI officer at the prominent provider organization, discusses leveraging artificial intelligence for creating efficiencies in both clinical and office settings, and for boosting predictive analytics.
Julie Harris, Children's Health Alliance senior director of population health, explains how giving providers more information at the point of care by tracking 35 key quality measures reduces their burdens in meeting value-based incentive targets.
Emmanuel Bilbault, cofounder and CEO of POSOS, says the company's AI-powered clinical support platform offers alternate drugs to prescribe to avoid interaction risk, rather than simply alert doctors of possible medication errors.
In some ways, AI could achieve the same accuracy as physicians sooner rather than later. And some aspects of clinical care may migrate away from physicians, says Mount Sinai's interim chief digital and information officer.