Care coordination is more than moving information from point A to point B. Patients need care teams to communicate, collaborate, and plan—often across organizational boundaries.
Team-based care coordination is essential to high-quality and cost-effective care, especially for people with urgent or complex needs.
An ambulance crew tells how computers have improved their ability to care for people in an emergency. Intel-powered devices are used throughout their shift, from the dispatch center to monitoring equipment to ruggedized laptops.
Health project aims to reduce readmission and increase follow-up appointment attendance.
A Medicaid experiment seeks to control healthcare costs, while improving quality of care.
Collaborative workflows and information tools meet the demands of today’s complex healthcare environments.
An Intel white paper discusses IT considerations when sharing information across care settings.
IT is correctly recognized as a building block for coordinated care. But an even more important factor is teamwork.
Intel and Presbyterian Healthcare Services launch an employer-led healthcare plan for personalized, coordinated, and efficient care.
The Community of Practice is a consortium of healthcare IT leaders collaborating for the benefit of providers that are developing or planning to develop an ACO or accountable care strategy.