Data Book

Informações:

Sinopsis

Data Book spotlights the best stories and insights in healthcare technology. Big data and artificial intelligence are changing medicine and the world, but innovation also brings grave cybersecurity concerns. Every week, this Healthcare Analytics News podcast explores the people and plots behind the health-tech evolutionand the solutions to its problems.

Episodios

  • S2 Ep2: Why We Need to Discuss Gene Editing and Ethics

    03/08/2018 Duración: 24min

    Gene editing is not science fiction. In fact, it’s rapidly entering mainstream medicine. But what ethical issues surround these fascinating technologies? And what is healthcare’s role in fostering discussions and building patient trust? In this episode, we tell the story of Henrietta Lacks, whose cells were taken without permission in 1951, to better understand consent. Then we draw insights from Marcy Darnovsky, Ph.D., executive director of the [Center for Genetics and Society](https://www.geneticsandsociety.org/). To read a feature story on the complicated ethics of gene editing, [visit our website](https://www.hcanews.com/news/the-complicated-ethics-of-gene-editing).

  • S2 Ep1: Pedialyte, Hangovers and the Patient Experience

    20/07/2018 Duración: 30min

    Season 2 Premiere: Pedialyte was always a drink for sick kids. Then adults began using it to fight hangovers. When the beverage’s manufacturer found out, it embraced the change. The point: As healthcare prioritizes the patient experience, leaders must adapt. And they can learn a lot from Pedialyte’s embrace of the customer experience. Featuring a discussion on the power of partnering with patients. Guest: Colin Hung, chief marketing officer and editor of HealthcareScene. Check out the best stories in health tech at [Healthcare Analytics News](http://www.hcanews.com/)™.

  • S1 Ep14: Rural Healthcare's High-Tech Hope

    29/06/2018 Duración: 25min

    Patients who live in rural areas face significant health challenges, from socioeconomic forces to care-delivery issues. The problems all add mean one thing: Rural healthcare is in rough shape. The stories of two children facing life-threatening injuries highlight what's at stake. But our guest, William Paiva, PhD, is using a sprawling data set, algorithms, and high-tech tools to flip the status quo. He's the executive director for Oklahoma State University's Center for Health Systems Innovation, and he's trying to make the Sooner State the Silicon Valley of Health Data Analytics—and rural medicine. Check out the best stories in health tech at [Healthcare Analytics News](http://www.hcanews.com/)™.

  • S1 Ep13: The Slow, Frustrating Rise of the Electronic Health Record

    22/06/2018 Duración: 26min

    Electronic health records have a lot of promise, but they’re not where they need to be. The ultimate goal is interoperability, which would enable patients’ medical data to follow them anywhere. But that’s not happening—just ask Seema Verma, MPH, the head of Medicare and Medicaid, and Janae Sharp, a health IT key opinion leader. In this episode, we dig into their stories and document the rise of the medical record. For more stories like this one, check out our mothership, [Healthcare Analytics News](http://www.hcanews.com/)™.

  • S1 Ep12: Finding Fault When AI Kills

    15/06/2018 Duración: 19min

    In March, a self-driving car struck and killed a pedestrian, marking a grim first. But who is liable when AI fails and kills someone? It’s unfortunate but likely that healthcare will need to grapple with this very issue in the near future, and the self-driving car industry is the closest place to look for answers. Story: The first human killed by a robot Guest: Gautham Thomas, writer for [Healthcare Analytics News](http://www.hcanews.com)™ Photo: Mixabest/[Wikimedia Commons](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:KUKA_Industrial_Robots_IR.jpg)

  • S1 Ep11: Should Cops Have Access to Consumer DNA?

    08/06/2018 Duración: 22min

    The Golden State Killer took too many lives and broke too many spirits before his reign of terror ended with an all-too-late capture in April, 2018\. But even though his crimes were heinous, many question the measures police used to identify alleged murderer and rapist Joseph James DeAngelo. In the eleventh episode of _[Healthcare Analytics News](www.hcanews.com)' _Data Book, co-hosts Jack Murtha and Tom Castles are joined by the National Institutes of Health's Dr. Christine Grady, who explores the ethics and implications behind the cold-case capture, and what it could mean for healthcare.

  • S1 Ep10: A New Kind of Warfare

    01/06/2018 Duración: 19min

    The WannaCry and NotPetya cyberattacks crippled hospitals, shipping companies, and many other industries. North Korea and Russia have since been blamed for launching these assaults. Now, a year later, we examine what this new age of cyberwarfare means for healthcare and the world at large. This episode is based on the June cover story of Healthcare Analytics News™. [Check us out online](http://www.hcanews.com/).

  • S1 Ep9: Is AI Real?

    25/05/2018 Duración: 22min

    In 1973, a renowned mathematician published a damning report that almost sunk the growing field of artificial intelligence. The problem was, he held several misconceptions about AI—just like many people today. In this episode, we tell the story of the Lighthill Report and the subsequent AI winter and chat with Kevin Campbell, MD, about AI basics and how it can help healthcare. Photo: A robotic arm built for MIT's AI lab in 1972\. Courtesy of ArnoldReinhold, Wikimedia Commons. Read more Healthcare Analytics News™ stories at www.hcanews.com.

  • S1 Ep8: Return of the Luddite

    18/05/2018 Duración: 23min

    Major data breaches have turned some people against big data and analytics. To determine whether this moment marks the return of the Luddite, we present the story of the actual Luddites. The acclaimed health-tech thinker John Nosta explains why healthcare—and everyone—must stand up in defense of data. Read more Healthcare Analytics News™ stories at www.hcanews.com.

  • S1 Ep7: The High-Tech Hospital the World Wasn't Ready For

    11/05/2018 Duración: 29min

    Health Care International, the "first paperless hospital," was supposed to change everything, but it went bust in mere months. What can healthcare learn from this story? Guests include Nick van Terheyden, MD, and Shereese Maynard, MBA.

  • S1 Ep6: Finding Orangeworm

    04/05/2018 Duración: 21min

    Cybersecurity researchers recently revealed a new kind of healthcare hacker. Orangeworm, as the group is called, has been preying on glaring vulnerabilities for years. Can it be stopped? To find out, Data Book talks to John DiMaggio, a senior threat intelligence analyst for Symantec and one of the people who unearthed Orangeworm. CynergisTek's John Nye delivers the Insight.

  • S1 Ep5: Amazon's Path of Disruption

    27/04/2018 Duración: 27min

    The country's great disrupters have a new target: healthcare. Amazon, Google, Apple, and even Uber—they're all trying to improve American medicine. But can tech change such a complex system? To find out, Data Book explores Amazon's history and interviews Kate McCarthy, a senior health-tech analyst for Forrester. Image courtesy of Canonicalized.com.

  • S1 Ep4: Overcoming the Cultural Resistance to Health Tech

    20/04/2018 Duración: 26min

    Not every doctor and health system embraces big data, artificial intelligence, and digital health. Join our guests Kevin Campbell, MD, and Janae Sharp to find out what's at stake. Plus, what healthcare can learn from journalism's botched tech evolution. Image credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org

  • S1 Ep3: The Gene-Editing Company That Didn't Need CRISPR

    13/04/2018 Duración: 25min

    CRISPR, TALEN, and gene editing sound like the stuff of the future, but they are already changing medicine. What about zinc finger nucleases? That's what Sangamo Therapeutics uses to perform gene editing, and the tech recently earned the company a $3 billion deal. Today on Data Book, the origins of CRISPR and the Sangamo story.

  • S1 Ep2: What Healthcare Can Learn From Baseball

    06/04/2018 Duración: 27min

    Big data and analytics have become a big part of baseball. So, what can healthcare take from America's national pastime? A lot. Just ask Neil Kudler, MD, of Vertitech IT. But first, Data Book explores the sport's most notorious high-tech scandal.

  • S1 Ep1: Who Is the Dark Overlord?

    29/03/2018 Duración: 21min

    When 10 million patient records were posted for sale on the dark web, a hacker collective called the Dark Overlord took credit for the data dump. The mysterious group's taunting attacks underscored a much larger problem for healthcare: cybersecurity. Read the full story here. http://www.hcanews.com/news/defending-your-data-from-the-dark-overlord

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