Wellness

CMO: Provider organizations should deploy AI where it solves real pain points

At Himss25, the focus of those present on implemented innovations – techniques that eliminate friction and enhance cooperation, also advised Dr. Colin Panas, the chief medical official of DrFirst.

The company reported that Drfirst (Booth 1058) is a seller of medicine management technology that works from the prescription through commitment and is used by nearly half a million prescriptions, 270 EHRS and health information systems, and more than 2000 hospitals in the United States.

“I have recommended information technology leaders in Himss25 to give Amnesty International and automation in practical and measurable ways,” Panas said. “Amnesty International is already affecting, but the key to information and lead managers is to spread artificial intelligence as it replaces real pain points.

“Whether the automation of the previous authorization’s workflow, the inclusion of predictive analyzes to adhere to medicines, or enable the clinical decision -making, the chatting, the focus should be on reducing the administrative burden and improving the results of patients.” “Look for artificial intelligence systems that provide real and quantitative measuring value for doctors and patients alike.”

Empowering better cooperation

On another front, break the data silos to enable better cooperation, I advised the banas.

“One of the largest health care obstacles is fragmented data, which prevents service providers and pharmacies and motivated from working together efficiently,” he said. “IT leaders should give priority to inter -employment through integration that facilitates the actual time exchange of data through the environmental health care system. When clinical data is available and implemented within the workflow, it leads to faster therapeutic decisions, lower errors and better participation of the patient.”

He added that information technology managers and other health technology leaders should enable patients who have targeted information to improve commitment and reduce reading operations.

“When patients end in the hospital, it is often connected to taking incorrectly described medications – or not at all,” he pointed out. “Patient participation programs that include allocated and targeted information linking people to resources to save costs and relevant clinical information that pays the commitment to medicines.

He said: “Information technology managers and information technology leaders should focus on the patient’s participation platforms that give patients the information they need, with no administrative burden to the busy doctors.”

Artificial intelligence effect

In this way, Panas noticed what he noticed that it was the great techniques for Himss25.

“Amnesty International has been a dominant topic in the field of health care for years, but in 2025, it moves from noise to requests in the real world,” he said. “This year, the industry focuses on the practical impact of Amnesty International – especially in areas such as the patient’s participation and the support of the clinical decision and the accelerating time for treatment.

“For patients, artificial intelligence factors transform the medicine journey by working as a concrete that provides actual time updates on COPAIS, prejudices and financial aid options,” continued. “These innovations eliminate long-to-stick times and calls between service providers, insurance companies and pharmacies-reduce frustration and give patients greater control of their care.”

He said that the improved clinical decision -making tools of artificial intelligence are now combined directly into the EHR and the workflow, which enables doctors to quickly search in clinical literature for enlightened decisions. He pointed out that this reduces the excessive cognitive pregnancy and improves the safety of patients by ensuring that service providers have the most updated treatment visions at the care point.

Panas said: “In addition, the sabotage innovation is preparing to revolutionize how to send electronic wills to pharmacies, which comes out of an old system that suffocates innovation and reduces clinical cooperation.” “Medical prescriptions are, after all, clinical orders. However, electronic wills are dealt with through a system based on old claims that treat them more like financial transactions.

“A new approach with customizable workflow allows for recipes and pharmacists to fully cooperate and communicate with defense motivat and patient support programs, eliminate time-consuming manual solutions, and reduce delays that affect patient care-especially for specialized and high-cost drugs,” and concluded.

Follow Bill Hit coverage on LinkedIn: Bill Seuiki
Email him: bsiwicki@himss.org
Healthcare is Hosz News.

Watch now: Why can you not only empty artificial intelligence on the information manager or CTO to form an Amnesty International officer

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