255 episodes

Faces of Digital Health (former Medicine Today on Digital Health) is a podcast on digital health, exploring how different healthcare systems adopt technologies in healthcare. Its aim is to satisfy curiosity about different cultures, identify barriers to success in different countries and finding answers and advice for accelerating the success of digital health entrepreneurs.

Faces of Digital Health Tjasa Zajc

    • Science
    • 5.0 • 10 Ratings

Faces of Digital Health (former Medicine Today on Digital Health) is a podcast on digital health, exploring how different healthcare systems adopt technologies in healthcare. Its aim is to satisfy curiosity about different cultures, identify barriers to success in different countries and finding answers and advice for accelerating the success of digital health entrepreneurs.

    How is Healthcare Re-Shaping (Towards Virtual and Retail Care) Globally, According to NextMed Health Participants?

    How is Healthcare Re-Shaping (Towards Virtual and Retail Care) Globally, According to NextMed Health Participants?

    Healthcare is facing challenges on all fronts. WHO estimates a projected shortfall of 10 million health workers by 2030, mostly in low- and lower-middle-income countries. Countries at all levels of socioeconomic development face, to varying degrees, difficulties in the education, employment, deployment, retention, and performance of their workforce. Several other factors, such as the aging population and the rising demand for healthcare services, put healthcare systems under pressure to change and adapt. To a degree, with the help of technology. A big topic in many systems, especially in the US, is the move of retail providers such as Amazon and pharmacies, Walgreens, and CVS into primary care. Hospitals are looking at opportunities for virtual care and turning homes into hospital-like environments supported by virtual monitoring. 
    At this year’s NextMed Health Conference is San Diego, Rasu Shrestha - Chief Innovation & Commercialization Officer, Executive Vice President at Advocate Health - hospital system of 67 hospitals across six states – Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, North Carolina, South Carolina and Wisconsin, mentioned that the health system made a deal with Best Buy, the provider of consumer electronics. 

    In this episode, we will take this news as a starting point for a broader discussion: how is healthcare transforming globally, and what does the shift towards virtual care look like in 2023? You will hear from experts from the US, Canada, Germany, The Netherlands, Kenya, China, and UAE who spoke or attended the NextMed Health conference. 
    Speakers:


    Rasu Shrestha - Chief Innovation & Commercialization Officer, Executive Vice President at Advocate Health (USA),


    Ali Hashemi, investor, CEO of meta[bolic] (UAE),


    Bianca Rowenhorst, CIO at the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports in the Netherlands,


    Lucien Engelen, thought leader, who operates globally at the convergence of Innovation & Strategy for executive boards, governments, corporates (Netherlands),


    Michael Friebe, HealthTEC Inventor/Investor/Entrepreneur and professor (Germany),


    Alex Zhavorkonkov, CEO of InSilico Medicine (USA, China, Canada, UAE, Belgium, UK, and Taiwan),


     Emilian Popa, CEO of Ilara Health (Kenya)


    Zayna Khayat, VP Client Success Teladoc Health in Canada, In house health futurist at Deloitte Canada's Life Sciences & Healthcare team and Adjunct faculty with the University of Toronto Rotman School of Management in the Health Sector Strategy stream (Canada).

    • 39 min
    The Netherlands Ep. 2: Buurtzorg: Redefining Nursing With Self-Managing Teams

    The Netherlands Ep. 2: Buurtzorg: Redefining Nursing With Self-Managing Teams

    One of the biggest global challenges in healthcare at the moment is the workforce crisis.
    Workforce shortages are not related to the number of people that get trained for healthcare professionals but the working conditions that they need to operate under. 
    In today’s episode, we will look at a good practice related to nursing organizations in the community of the Netherlands. I spoke with Thijs de Blok, CEO of Buurtzorg International - an organization of 15.000 nurses that work in self-managing teams and provide holistic care to patients. I asked Thijs, more about the early beginnings of the organization, how it fits in the dutch healthcare system context, and what he observed in terms of care providers globally.

    Tune in to the episode about nurses in the US: Has The Risk of Becoming a Nurse Become Too Great in the US? https://www.facesofdigitalhealth.com/blog/nurse-rebecca-love-nurse-alice
    www.facesofdigitalhealth.com
    Newsletter: https://fodh.substack.com/

    • 54 min
    The Netherlands Ep. 1: Insights from the CIOs of Three University Medical Centers in the Netherlands

    The Netherlands Ep. 1: Insights from the CIOs of Three University Medical Centers in the Netherlands

    After a series of discussions about healthcare data in the US, we’re now moving to insights and good practices in the Netherlands. The Netherlands has roughly 17 million people. As you will hear, its healthcare is highly digitalized with high digital literacy. You will hear a short panel discussion that was recorded at mHealth Israel in Tel Aviv. 

    Corne Mulders – CIO University Medical Center Utrecht 
    Simon Vermeer – CIO Erasmus University Medical Center (Erasmus MC Rotterdam) 
    Paul Hillman – CIO Maastricht University Medical Center

    Shared their views about digital health development in the Netherlands, how their institutions approach innovation, and where they see room for improvements regarding healthcare digitalization on the national level. 

    www.facesofdigitalhealth.com
    Newsletter: https://fodh.substack.com/

    • 23 min
    Healthcare Data Series 5/5: Seqster - The Operating System For Easier Healthcare Research

    Healthcare Data Series 5/5: Seqster - The Operating System For Easier Healthcare Research

    This is the fifth and last episode of the Healthcare Data in the US series. In the first one, Arif Nathoo - CEO and co-founder of Komodo Health, described how the company is planning to capture and de-identify every encounter patients have with the US healthcare system.
    The second episode featured Phil Lindemann, VP of Business Intelligence at Epic, and Epic’s Clinical Informaticist Dave Little, who talked about Epic Cosmos - a database of EHR data from 178 million patients. In the third episode, Samir Unni, Business Development Lead for Healthcare at Palantir Foundry, explained the principles of Palantir in healthcare, why they support an open-data approach, how knowledge from other industries is transferred to healthcare and more. 
    In the fourth episode, representatives of four companies working on automating care tasks, providing clinicians with clinical decision support, and creating synthetic data records, four industry experts shared their experience with building solutions on top of EHRs, challenges related to connecting to electronic health records, and the need for better interoperability APIs to really enable data to be used for health outcomes improvement.
    In this final episode,  Ardy Arianpour, CEO of Seqster, explains for Seqster provides its clients with an operating system for researching of clinical and tracking patient data to create new solutions. Enjoy the discussion and tune into other episodes as well.
    This series will be summarized in our newsletter - find it and subscribe at
    fodh.substack.com
    www.facesofdigitalhealth.com
    Seqster: https://www.seqster.com/

    • 48 min
    Healthcare Data Series 4/5: Synthetic Data, Automation of Care Tasks, and Better Insights from EHR data in Acute and Oncology Care

    Healthcare Data Series 4/5: Synthetic Data, Automation of Care Tasks, and Better Insights from EHR data in Acute and Oncology Care

    Electronic health records and digital data gathering have now been around long enough that the focus has shifted from gathering to using the data for research, AI development, and clinical decision support systems. Various companies are trying to build solutions to help clinicians navigate care, and workflows, and have the right information in front of them to make decisions fast without losing time searching through the whole patient’s record. This is the fourth episode in the series about healthcare data management in the US. In the first episode, we heard how Komodo health collects data about various encounters people have with healthcare. In the second episode, we learn about Epic Cosmos - a research environment consisting of clinical data from the electronic medical records of 178 million patients. In the third episode, we heard how Palantir Foundry helps healthcare enterprises, regulatory agencies, and governments optimize their workforce planning and crisis response through an open-data approach and experience from other industries. Today, you’ll hear a panel discussion recorded at HLTH, in which industry experts shared their experience with building solutions on top of EHRs, challenges related to connecting to electronic health record and needs for better interoperability APIs to really enable data to be used for health outcomes improvement. Today, you will hear from: (Kathy Dalton Ford Chief Product and Strategy Officer at Project Ronin, Josh Rubel, Chief Commercial Officer for MDClone, David Lareau, CEO of Medicomp Systems, Inc. , Greg Miller, CGO of Lumeon).

    www.facesofdigitalhealth.com
    Monthly newsletter: https://fodh.substack.com/

    • 45 min
    Healthcare Data Series 3/5: Palantir Foundry and Making Data-Driven Decisions in Healthcare

    Healthcare Data Series 3/5: Palantir Foundry and Making Data-Driven Decisions in Healthcare

    This is the third episode in a series of discussions about healthcare data challenges and data management practices in the US. One thing is clear to everybody: regardless of the efforts, patient data is still scattered around in different organizations.
    In the first episode, you can listen to a discussion with the CEO and co-founder of Komodo Health, Arif Nathoo. Komodo Health currently has some part of the healthcare data of 330 million people in the US. One of the leading providers of electronic healthcare records systems in the US is EPIC. EPIC holds around a third of the US EHR market share and has some part of the medical data of 250 million patients.
    In the second episode, Phil Lindemann, VP of Business Intelligence at Epic, and Epic’s Clinical Informaticist Dave Little, MD explained a bit more about EPic Cosmos - a database built to enable easier clinical research. Epic Cosmos currently combines 178 million de-identified patient records from over 6.5 billion encounters, representing patients in all 50 US states.
    In this episode, you’ll hear from Samir Unni, Healthcare Business Development Lead at Palantir Foundry.
    Palantir Foundry connects the back-office software systems and analytics teams directly with caregivers. Foundry is used across the healthcare and life sciences value chain, from drug discovery and development, through to manufacturing, marketing, and sales. At the Federal level in the US Palantir is partnering with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and more. In this short discussion recorded at HLTH 2022, Samir Unni, Healthcare Business Development Lead at Palantir Foundy explained the principles of Palantir in healthcare, why they support the open-data approach, how do they choose their customers and more.

    www.facesofdigitalhealth.com
    This discussion is part of a broader series of talks about healthcare data management in the US. An in-depth summary will be published in the monthly newsletter:
    fodh.substack.com

    • 28 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
10 Ratings

10 Ratings

Barbthemum ,

Benefits and problems of IT and AI in healthcare

This is a rare found of invaluable resource for understanding the role of IT and AI in healthcare "in the context". With a lot of knowledge, experience and invaluable mixture of creativity and sense for "what really matters", Tjasa allways suprises with "fresh" questions to the right people. She makes cross professinal connections, avoids cliches and diggs "deep down to the rabbit hole" in a unique way.
I admire her abillity to adress universal and local healthcare issues and solutions that technology can offer with a visionary approach. She represents complex topics in understandable way, suitable also for non. tech or non-professiona audience. Keep on doing a great job!

fbbunny ,

Global insight

Good source if you’re interested in going beyond business, to how psychologyvand culture influence technology development and adoption.

RdecaPest ,

Probably the best podcast about digital health

This is not your typical trivial hype-generating fantasy blunder podcast like so many these days.
You can expect thoughtfull interviews about the state of digital health on a broad range of topics that have relevance to healthcare professionals, developers and businesspeople, delivered by a well prepared host with a clearly broad understanding of the industry.

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