HIT News Round Up: Mitigating Clinician Burnout; MiHIN and Reducing Health Inequities; and AI Top Risk for Healthcare

Welcome to the Health Information Technology Weekly News Round Up from RosettaHealth. Each week, we will provide you with a summary of all the actionable news that hospitals, HIT vendors, ACOs, and population health providers need to be smart and effective when it comes to HIT and health information exchange.

KLAS: Improved EHR Efficiency Can Mitigate Early-Stage Clinician Burnout

Preventing clinician burnout by increasing EHR efficiency is easier than reducing burnout after it has peaked, according to a KLAS Arch Collaborative report.

Michigan’s Data-Sharing Efforts Help Reduce Health Inequities

Lisa Nicolaou of Michigan Health Information Network (MiHIN) recently authored this Op-Ed about how MiHIN is combining power of health and social care data to help reduce health inequalities in Michigan. 

How Health Systems Can Connect Clinicians to Data More Quickly

Healthcare deals with valuable clinical data, and one of the biggest challenges for health systems lies in delivering it to providers where and when they need it, according to this recent Health Tech article.

Home Health Providers Face Interoperability Challenges

Factors such as a lack of monetary incentives, toothless policy requirements and a failure to see the strong business case, is hindering effective health data exchange abilities for home health providers, according to this recent Home Health Care News article.

Digital Health Startups to Face Challenges in 2024

Slower-than-expected adoption of digital health solutions and a wider VC drawback from the digital health sector leaves startups that raised during the frothy days fast running out of cash, according to this recent Sifted article.

AI Identified as a Top Risk for Healthcare

AI and new technologies are among the top five management risks providers face in 2024, according to an annual report by Kodiak Solutions.

Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare Needs More Regulation, WHO Says

In an effort to curb the improper use of artificial intelligence in health care, the World Health Organization recently released new guidelines for ethically using the technology.


To learn more about how RosettaHealth can assist with any health information challenges you might have, book a free consultation with one of our interoperability experts.


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