Whatever happened to Open Source in 2016?
Open source was all the rage in the NHS in 2015, but itās barely rated in the past 12 months. Jon Hoeksma examines the drivers
Back to Top
Open source was all the rage in the NHS in 2015, but itās barely rated in the past 12 months. Jon Hoeksma examines the drivers
People and policies came and went at the top of healthcare IT, but some trusts pushed on with major projects and news emerged of tech
Digital Healthās cyber security columnist, Davey Winder, undertakes a musical review of some of the hack attacks that were made on the NHS in 2016,
Dr Neil Paul has a few gadgets that heād like to find under his Christmas tree. Starting with some iPhone extensions and moving onto drones,
When he was three, Joe McDonald wanted a Johnny Seven one man army, the very latest thing from New Jersey. This year, thanks to some
Outpatient services are old-fashioned and hugely wasteful. But change that works for patients and staff
Andrew Hine, MD of CereCore International, a healthcare IT application support and EPR consulting firm,
Appropriate engagement and support for clinical staff is not just fundamental to digital implementation, it
Concerns about AI should not stop progress. They should prompt us to think about how
Building a āsuperappā is a delicate act of statecraft, writes Mohammad Al Ubaydli from Patients