EU countries agree on ‘key pillars’ of health union
On Monday, October 24th, representatives of the EU member states passed three final regulations to complete the European Health Union, which are to come into force in…
On Monday, October 24th, representatives of the EU member states passed three final regulations to complete the European Health Union, which are to come into force in…
The FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) has published its FY2023 guidance priority lists. Digital health is a major focus of the center's current fiscal…
How do Europeans understand digital health? How it came about and developed, where are we now and what to expect. Major stakholders of the European digital health and startups
Tensions between IT systems and the pace of clinical development. Inside out approach instead of structuralisation. Technical solutions are here already, political will is not. Read Part 2 of the interview with Jens Winther Jensen, the Danish Clinical Quality Programme CEO
Minimalism in the Internet of Medical Things, health data ownership back to patients, automation of regulatory compliance. What else will the future bring to digital health infrastructures?
Legal and regulatory definitions of digital health are covered in a brief overview from the WHO, the US, the UK, Germany, France, China and other countries
Governments, regulators, healthcare providers, AI professionals and educational institutions all have a responsibility to address the challenges in the adoption of AI in the healthcare sector
Various challenges exist that can undermine or limit the adoption of AI, from the lack of digitalisation in the healthcare system to issues around trust and reluctance