enow.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: patient fusion portal

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Practice Fusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Practice_Fusion

    Patient Fusion: Personal health record (PHR) system that gives patients access to their prescriptions, diagnoses and test results. Records update as physicians adds information to their patients’ charts. Consumers can search physicians by location and specialty, and request an appointment online.

  3. NextGen Healthcare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NextGen_Healthcare

    NextGen Patient Portal; NextGen Health Data Hub; NextGen Health Quality Measures; NextGen Advanced Auditing; NextGen Mobile; NextGen Rosetta interface platform; Mirth Connect acquired September 2013; NextGen Healthcare's services include: Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) NextGen EDI Services; NextGuard Data Protection; Former products

  4. Patient portal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_portal

    Patient portals are healthcare-related online applications that allow patients to interact and communicate with their healthcare providers, such as physicians and hospitals. Typically, portal services are available on the Internet at all hours of the day and night.

  5. Veradigm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veradigm

    Veradigm (formerly Allscripts Healthcare Solutions, Inc.) is a publicly traded American company that provides physician practices, hospitals, and other healthcare providers with practice management and electronic health record (EHR) technology. Veradigm also provides products for patient engagement and care coordination, as well as financial ...

  6. Intraosseous infusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intraosseous_infusion

    MeSH. D017148. eMedicine. 80431. [ edit on Wikidata] Intraosseous infusion ( IO) is the process of injecting medication, fluids, or blood products directly into the bone marrow; [1] this provides a non-collapsible entry point into the systemic venous system. [2] The intraosseous infusion technique is used to provide fluids and medication when ...

  7. Remote patient monitoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_patient_monitoring

    Remote patient monitoring (RPM) is a technology to enable monitoring of patients outside of conventional clinical settings, such as in the home or in a remote area, which may increase access to care and decrease healthcare delivery costs.

  8. CareFusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carefusion

    CareFusion was created in 2009 as a spinoff of medical technology businesses from Cardinal Health. [1] It began publicly trading on the New York Stock Exchange on September 1, 2009. [2] Cardinal's core business was drug distribution, a low-margin and low-risk, predictable business, with which the higher-margin, higher-risk medical technology ...

  9. Personal health record - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_health_record

    The patient portal is typically defined as a view into the electronic medical records. In addition, ancillary functions that support a health care provider's interaction with a patient are also found in those systems e.g. prescription refill requests, appointment requests, electronic case management, etc.

  10. EMIS Health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EMIS_Health

    EMIS Health, formerly known as Egton Medical Information Systems, [1] supplies electronic patient record systems and software used in primary care, acute care and community pharmacy in the United Kingdom. The company is based in Leeds. It claims that more than half of GP practices across the UK use EMIS Health software and holds number one or ...

  11. Autotransfusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autotransfusion

    Autotransfusion. Specialty. Emergency medicine, surgery, hematology. [ edit on Wikidata] Autotransfusion is a process wherein a person receives their own blood for a transfusion, instead of banked allogenic (separate- donor) blood. There are two main kinds of autotransfusion: Blood can be autologously "pre-donated" (termed so despite "donation ...