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Read more about trends in health, population health management, disease
management and risk assessment.
(Jefferies & Company, Inc., Equity Research, January 2001)
"Companies that hope to be successful IT companies in the healthcare market must focus on providing value-added solutions to their clients, utilizing the platform that allows them to best serve their clients. This is why we are so excited about HCIT companies utilizing the Internet to provide solutions on an ASP bases. The fad of e-Health is gone. The dawn of ASPs in healthcare is here–and it is here to stay."
(This file is an excerpt of the original report. For a complete copy, contact sales@phdx.com)
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Global Med Deal May Be Harbinger Of ASP Ascent in DM Programs
(Disease Management News, February 25, 2000)
In a development indicative of a major trend, Global Med Technologies, Inc., a Lakewood, Colo.-based medical technology company, says it has signed a $2.8 million contract with "a division of one of the largest HMOs in the United States" to provide disease management (DM) services as an Application Service Provider (ASP). The pact is contingent upon Global Med Technologies successfully obtaining the needed funds to transition its DM software from the design phase to the coding phase.
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(Disease Management News, September 25, 1999)
Technology is dramatically changing the way disease management (DM) services are being delivered to the chronically ill, but the DM industry will have to find ways of coping with a host of legal, regulatory, and reimbursement issues before it can take full advantage of the gains.
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(Disease Management News, January 10, 1999)
From all indications, the role of provider organizations in both developing and implementing disease management (DM) programs will grow substantially in 1999. That's the unanimous view of experts in health plans, DM vendors, and providers themselves queried by DMN at the end of 1998.
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(Disease Management News, July 25, 1998)
While everybody acknowledges physician buy-in is essential for a successful disease management (DM) program, there is growing evidence physicians often are not buying in - sometimes for logical and compelling reasons and sometimes simply in protest of how they believe they're treated.
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(Disease Management News, June 25, 1998)
Disease management (DM) vendors and providers are venturing beyond static informational World Wide Web pages on the Internet, producing interactive Web sites as DM tools. The health-care industry is catching up with the information age. In fact, MicroMass Communications spokesman Steve Sloate expects 55% growth in the next two years in DM Internet usage. For this growing use, more user-friendly, interactive, and safer Web sites/applications with additional security measures will help overcome Web fears of the past.
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