Digital Health
Adam Hutchinson, oVRcome founder and CEO, discusses reducing phobias using VR exposure therapy, how the company fills the gap in VR psychiatric care access for providers and patients, and its trial on combatting social anxiety with VR.
Steen Strand, CEO of Emteq Labs, discusses the company's launch of Sense, emotion-sensing eyewear that collects real-world data on a wearer's facial expressions and its potential use for healthcare data collection.
Christopher Ahn, biomedical engineer supervisor at the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs, says that for clinicians who use medical devices an AI chatbot could answer questions and offer support, which is more immediate than filing a service ticket.
KeyCare CMO Dr. Carrie Nelson discusses how virtual care can improve acute and chronic conditions while easing clinical workload and improving patient access, especially for seniors during winter.
Rob Havasy, senior director of the thought advisory group at HIMSS, relays how AI technology is maturing, including people's understanding of the technology and the processes organizations are putting in place to overcome past shortcomings.
ShiftMed EVP and chief nurse executive Larry Adams discusses artificial intelligence tools such as predictive analytics, intelligent scheduling and data-driven decision support, and how they can help solve staffing shortages in the nursing field.
Antoine Robiliard, VP at Withings, relays how the company's home health devices, including its smart scale, help with remote patient monitoring to enable care teams to gather patient data while concentrating on other work.
Torrey Smith, cofounder and CEO of Endiatx, discusses the company's pill-sized robot, Pillbot, that swims inside a patient's stomach to allow for virtual gastroenterology examinations and how it sees the tech being used in the future.
Kauvery Hospital founder Dr Manivannan Selvaraj recalls how their hospital embarked on a digital transformation over two decades ago.
Zipline cofounder and CTO Keenan Wyrobek discusses how using long-range drones for prescription delivery and lab services as well as health-at-home programs support could reduce care costs and delays and improve patient experiences.