remote patient monitoring news from FierceHealthIT
NewsTelehealth failure a cautionary tale for U.S.
Getting docs engaged and on-board with telehealth may take more than education. It may take cold, hard cash. That's the object lesson this week from a story about one segment of England's burgeoning Read more...
Remote patient monitoring market to hit $295M by 2015
New research from Frost & Sullivan predicts that remote patient monitoring will continue to play a significant role in transforming healthcare. In fact, it says the market for remote monitoring Read more...
Remote monitoring potential of ultrawideband for hospitals too large to ignore
Citing a recent study out of Oregon State University, FierceMobileHealthcare Editor Sara Jackson argues that ultrawideband technology has a boatload of promise with regard to remote patient Read more...
Report: Remote patient monitoring on the upswing
I'm always skeptical of studies by big market research firms that try to get people to buy their research without providing any hard data in a press release or executive summary. Such is the case Read more...
eICUs growing in popularity
Remote monitoring of patients in intensive care units, known as eICU technology, has spread to 300 hospitals in 40 healthcare systems across 30 states. As a result, more than 300,000 patients a year Read more...
Telehealth takes off as evidence grows that it can improve care, save money
The massive spending on health IT as a result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and general growth in EMR adoption is expected to provide a big boost to telehealth as well, Read more...
HIMSS10: Mobile and wireless technologies come of age
There's a reason why we launched FierceMobileHealthcare last year. Wireless and mobile technologies could represent the future of healthcare. They definitely will be represented at HIMSS10. The Read more...
Study: Healthcare IT spending to grow, slowly, during '09
A new study by market research firm Health Industry Insights (HII) predicts that healthcare IT spending will grow this year, albeit slowly, despite the U.S. economy's continued troubles. It's the Read more...
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