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With a nod to Apple and its famous 1997 TV spot, which highlighted doers and dreamers who colored outside the lines, we profile some of the 'crazy ones' who are helping transform health IT in new and unique ways.
Before coming to health IT in 2006, Jeff Donnell spent more than 20 years in advertising and marketing, which has given him a unique perspective on this industry.
Healthcare pays more than any other industry for information technology, according to a new study, which finds that providers fork over an average of 17 percent more to meet their technology needs than do organizations from 29 other industries surveyed.
We sit down with Brantley Whittington, president of EHR vendor Extormity, provider of the world's most expensive, exasperating, and exhausting electronic health record. Mr. Whittington talks about HIMSS12 trends, the rising costs of HIT, and why he's lobbying for a stage 4 and 5 meaningful use within the next 24 months.
One of the challenges many face in their evaluation of Electronic Health Records is the treatment of an EHR as an application that provides all necessary functionality out of the box, rather than a platform that enables it.
Parody project becomes sly marketing campaign for two IT vendors
"Brantley Whittington," the fictional CEO of the fictional EHR firm Extormity, which pokes fun at the excesses of some vendors, revealed his true identity Tuesday morning at HIMSS11.
If you follow the goings-on in healthcare IT at all, you're probably familiar with an Aspen-based EHR vendor called Extormity.
Managing Editor Mike Miliard interviews the CEO of Extormity, a satirical, fictional EHR vendor promising to extract as many dollars from its clients as possible in a bid to deliver the opposite of meaningful use.