Friday, March 13, 2026

< + > Why Radiology is the Launchpad for Healthcare’s Agentic AI Era

The following is a guest article by Rishi Nayyar, Co-Founder and CEO at PocketHealth

Radiology has a habit of getting there first. It digitized earlier than most departments, built the modern imaging stack (PACS, RIS, modality worklists), and over the last decade became healthcare’s most experienced “AI buyer,” piloting everything from CAD-adjacent tools to triage and workflow optimization. Now the next wave is arriving: agentic AI—software that can interpret context, make decisions, and take actions across systems even when workflows are messy and exception-heavy.

If you want to know where agentic AI will first become an operational layer inside hospitals, don’t look to the enterprise. Look to radiology. Not because it’s trendy, but because radiology sits at a rare intersection of acute operational pain and high technology readiness. That combination makes it the natural proving ground for non-clinical agentic workflows—and what works here won’t stay confined to imaging.

Radiology’s Administrative Burden is Unusually High–and Measurable

Radiology’s operational footprint looks less like a department and more like a logistics business running at hospital scale. Orders arrive from everywhere—ED, inpatient units, specialty clinics, screening programs, outside referrers—and each order can trigger a chain of non-clinical work: eligibility checks, protocoling, prior auth, labs, contrast screening, scheduling constraints, prep instructions, and follow-up routing. In practice, the “edge cases” are the workflow.

One consistent fault line is inside versus outside. A director at a large academic medical center told me their internal order process is straightforward, but outside orders quickly become cumbersome—especially once prior authorizations enter the picture. That’s why point solutions keep failing: the work isn’t a single transaction. It’s navigating exceptions across organizations, payers, and systems.

Last month, an access operations director at a Midwest health network shared a number that should make any COO pause: roughly 400,000 inbound calls a year for imaging scheduling alone. That isn’t customer service. It’s a system using phone calls as an integration layer because workflows can’t coordinate themselves.

In competitive markets, this becomes a race. An operations executive at a large Southwestern system told me the push to automate booking is partly financial, but mostly about speed. Whoever reaches the patient and gets them scheduled first wins. Access is revenue. Access is retention.

Enterprise Fixes Often Miss Radiology’s Nuance

Radiology is frequently poorly served by enterprise initiatives that lack imaging-specific expertise. Centralized scheduling and general call centers may work for templated appointments. Imaging does not work that way. Contraindications, contrast questions, sedation requirements, lab prerequisites, protocol changes—these details matter.

One radiology operations leader at a major West Coast academic system described a familiar tradeoff: manual scheduling persists in interventional radiology, but centralized scheduling is “the contract we’ve got.” When departments lose confidence in scheduling quality, they compensate with manual checks and workarounds. Those workarounds quietly become infrastructure.

Radiology is Exceptionally AI-Ready

While other departments debate definitions, radiology has spent over a decade evaluating AI with a pragmatic lens: governance, validation, workflow fit, and skepticism toward anything that adds clicks. That experience matters. Agentic AI shouldn’t be judged by model metrics. It should be judged by how reliably it performs in messy reality: incomplete orders, contradictory notes, patients who don’t respond, protocols that change, and humans who override.

Agentic AI Fits Radiology Better than Traditional Automation

Rule-based automation is brittle. “If X, then Y” collapses under the weight of exceptions—and radiology is all exceptions.

A nuclear medicine supervisor at a major academic system described a recurring failure mode: patients schedule without the department ever seeing the actual script. Days later, the team discovers the scheduled study doesn’t match the order. In PET imaging, that mismatch turns into real waste: the patient arrives, a dose is prepared, and the script indicates a different study.

Communication breaks in predictable ways too. A nuclear medicine clinical director described spending significant time in operations meetings on one issue: getting correct instructions to patients who don’t use the portal or are outside the system. A frontline coordinator described the daily burden of communicating with Spanish-speaking patients—calling a translation line, translating, leaving a message, then repeating the process when the patient can’t answer.

Then there’s the “too many hands” problem. One imaging ops leader told me six people may touch an exam before a technologist ever sees it, with 15–20 team members doing work that could, in principle, be automated.

Agentic AI is designed for this terrain. Not a single-task bot, but a workflow actor that can interpret unstructured inputs (faxed orders, notes, call transcripts), reason about next steps (what’s missing, what study is intended, what constraints apply), take actions across systems (create tasks, request missing items, propose slots, send instructions in-language), and adapt when the plan breaks (retry, escalate, route with context).

Radiology is the Wedge into the Broader Health System

Radiology isn’t just an early adopter. It’s the launchpad. Imaging is high volume, cross-system, exception-driven, and operationally central. If agentic AI can coordinate non-clinical radiology workflows reliably, it becomes a blueprint for operational intelligence across service lines.

Radiology is where agentic AI stops being a demo and becomes infrastructure—and once it’s infrastructure, it spreads.

About Rishi Nayyar

Rishi Nayyar is the Co-Founder and CEO at PocketHealth, the agentic AI workflow automation platform transforming health system operations. Trusted by more than 900 hospitals and imaging centers across North America since 2016, PocketHealth uses agentic AI and intelligent workflow orchestration to automate non-clinical work across the patient journey — from referral intake and scheduling to image exchange and patient communications — helping healthcare teams reduce manual work, redeploy staff, and deliver safer, more efficient care.



< + > Ease Health Emerges from Stealth with $41M from Andreessen Horowitz | KeyCare Raises $27.4 Million

Check out today’s featured companies who have recently raised a round of funding, and be sure to check out the full list of past healthcare IT fundings.


Ease Health Emerges from Stealth with $41M from Andreessen Horowitz to Redefine the Operating System for Behavioral Health

Funding Supports the Scale of Ease’s AI-Native Operating System for Behavioral Health: One Record, One Workflow, One Source of Truth

Ease Health, today announced that it has raised a $41 million Series A led by Andreessen Horowitz to build a leading AI-native operating system for behavioral health providers. Ease unifies CRM, EHR, and RCM into a single platform designed to materially improve access to care, clinician experience, and provider economics across the behavioral health ecosystem.

Behavioral health providers today operate on fragmented, legacy software technology stacks that were not designed for the complexity of today’s modern care delivery. Admissions teams juggle disconnected CRMs and intake tools, clinicians document in EHRs built off paper workflows, and billing teams rely on manual, error-prone workflows. Ease was built from the ground up to replace this patchwork with one AI-native system purpose-built for behavioral health.

Ease’s platform spans the full patient lifecycle, from referral and intake through clinical care, billing, and collections. By consolidating what are traditionally 6–10 separate systems into one, Ease reduces administrative overhead, eliminates redundant workflows, and enables automation across the most cost-intensive areas of behavioral health operations.

“At a time when demand for behavioral health care is accelerating, providers are constrained by software that was never designed for their reality,” said Daisy Wolf, General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz. “Ease is re-architecting the behavioral health technology stack around automation, intelligence, and real operational leverage. We’re excited to back a team that is building infrastructure that directly improves provider sustainability and patient access.”

“Consolidating into a single platform transformed our operations,” stated Alex Hoffman, L.A.P.C., Owner of Christian Counseling Associates…

Full release here, originally announced March 2nd, 2026.


KeyCare Raises $27.4 Million to Scale their AI-Powered, Epic-Based Virtual Care Solution for Health Systems

Led by HealthX Ventures, the Round will Accelerate Development of KeyCare’s AI-Enabled Virtual Care as Demand for Access to High-Quality, Coordinated Virtual Care Continues to Surge

KeyCare, the nation’s first Epic-based virtual care company, today announced the close of a $27.4M financing round. The most recent round was led by HealthX Ventures and included participation from 8VC, LRVHealth, BOLD Capital Partners, and Ikigai Venture Partners. Additionally, this financing included a variety of strategic partners, such as WellSpan HealthAllina HealthUniversity of Chicago VenturesEdge Ventures (investment arm of Emplify Health), and Exact Sciences, Inc. This latest funding round brings KeyCare’s total capital raised to over $55 million.

KeyCare’s virtual care medical group, working on its optimized instance of Epic, has become a trusted primary care extension partner for health systems, allowing for easy patient access that improves access and quality of care. Through a fully integrated, 24/7 virtual care model, KeyCare clinicians provide urgent, preventive, chronic, and virtual-first primary care while keeping visits connected to the patient’s home health system, preserving continuity and coordination across the full care journey.

“Over the past year, KeyCare has played an important role in supporting 24/7 urgent care access for UChicago Medicine’s patient population through convenient virtual care,“ said Hannah Levine, Executive Director at UCM Ventures (a venture investment vehicle of the University of Chicago Medical Center). “Evidence indicates that thoughtful virtual care access benefits both patients and providers by enhancing care availability, treatment adherence, and triage efficacy. We appreciate the innovative approach KeyCare brings to healthcare delivery and recognize the value of supporting local Chicago-based initiatives.”

“Access is one of the defining challenges in healthcare,” said Sulabh Agarwal, CEO at KeyCare. “Health systems are under pressure to deliver timely care, but the infrastructure wasn’t designed for how patients actually seek care today. This funding allows us to continue building a tech-first, coordinated virtual care model that works within the existing healthcare ecosystem, not around it.”

KeyCare will use the new capital to deepen its investment in AI-enabled technology, expand operational capacity to meet growing demand from health system partners, and continue scaling its platform to improve patient experience and provider efficiency, all in service of increasing access to high-quality care. By combining Epic’s growing AI toolset with their own AI development, KeyCare will have a powerful and unique virtual care workforce many describe as “Telehealth 2.0”: a scalable, AI-first model designed to increase provider capacity without sacrificing quality.

“As healthcare becomes more digital, integration and coordination matter more than ever,” said Mark Bakken, Founder and Managing Partner at HealthX Ventures…

Full release here, originally announced March 3rd, 2026.



Thursday, March 12, 2026

< + > HIMSS26 Day 3: Insights from the Show Floor

HIMSS is one of the largest gatherings in health IT, bringing together more than 30,000 healthcare leaders, CIOs, executives, and innovators to explore the future of healthcare technology.

Throughout the conference, we’re talking with top companies and industry leaders about the biggest trends shaping healthcare today including AI, cybersecurity, workforce challenges, leadership, and major product announcements from the show floor.

Check out some of our short video interviews from Day 3 of #HIMSS26:

Christine Landry, Global Vice President for Healthcare at Kyndryl Consult

Matthew Lukash, VP North America at Absolute Security

Amit Khanna, SVP & GM of Agentforce Health at Salesforce

Janet Desroche, Associate Vice President at MEDITECH

Marcus Perez, President at Altera Digital Health

Brett Ferancy, Global Alliance Leader at Abnormal AI

Stephen Speicher, MD, MS at EHR Association AI Workgroup

Jeff McCool, AVP of Healthcare at SoundHound AI

Chip Witt, Principal Security Evangelist at Radware

Chris Sullivan, Head of Vertical Industry Strategy and Solutions at Zebra Technologies

Robert Dwyer, Ph.D., Chief Data Scientist at Certilytics

Dr. Sean Kelly, Chief Medical Officer and Sr. VP of Customer Strategy at Imprivata

Charles Fortune, CTO and Co-Founder at BeyondID, a KeyData Cyber Company

Casey Williams, Senior Vice President of Patient Engagement at RevSpring

Catharine Giles, Head of Sales at Intuition Robotics

David Kirk, Chief Medical Officer at Regard

Scott Francis, Technology Evangelist at Ricoh Document Scanners

Olivia Zheng Milgrom, Sr. Biomedical Informaticist at Semedy

Phil Sobol, Chief Commercial Officer, CereCore

Randal Crohn, Vice-President of Sales at MicroGrid Power

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< + > Device-Centric Mobile Security is Creating Big Risks in Healthcare BYOD Environments

The following is a guest article by Matt Stern, CISO at Hypori

Bring Your Own Device deployments are common in healthcare today. Physicians review charts on personal phones between consults. Nurses coordinate care through mobile messaging tools. Administrators approve workflows from tablets at home after hours. The modern healthcare organization depends on mobility to function at the speed patient care demands.

Yet as healthcare has embraced BYOD, its mobile security strategies have largely failed to keep pace. Personal smartphones and tablets were never designed to be trusted enterprise endpoints. They are consumer devices built for convenience, personalization, and constant connectivity, not for safeguarding regulated health information. Despite this, many healthcare organizations continue to rely on device-centric security models that assume endpoints can be controlled, monitored, and trusted in the same way as corporate-owned laptops.

BYOD Has Turned Personal Devices Into Primary Healthcare Endpoints

In healthcare environments, mobile devices now sit directly on the clinical frontline. Email, EHR access, secure messaging, care coordination tools, and even privileged system access flow through devices the organization does not own and cannot fully control.

This dramatically expands the attack surface. A compromised personal phone can become a pathway into clinical systems, patient records, and operational infrastructure.

Of course, this is not a failure of users. Clinicians and staff are not careless or negligent. The problem is architectural. Healthcare security teams are attempting to impose enterprise-grade control on consumer hardware in environments where ownership, authority, and trust are fundamentally misaligned.

Mobile is Now a Preferred Attack Vector

Healthcare has long been a high-value target for attackers, and mobile endpoints have become one of the easiest ways in. Personal devices routinely lag on patches, connect to untrusted networks, and run dozens of applications with opaque data collection practices. Phishing has evolved into smishing and messaging-based attacks that bypass traditional email defenses. Malicious links arrive via text, chat apps, and QR codes, channels many security teams struggle to monitor.

Once a mobile device is compromised, attackers can harvest credentials, session tokens, and authentication artifacts without ever breaching a hospital network directly. In BYOD environments, every unmanaged phone effectively becomes part of the enterprise attack surface, whether security leaders intend it or not.

The most common response has been to double down on device-centric tools such as mobile device management (MDM) and mobile application management (MAM). These platforms attempt to recreate enterprise ownership by enforcing configurations, monitoring compliance, restricting applications, and retaining the ability to wipe data remotely.

In healthcare, this approach introduces new problems rather than solving existing ones.

First, trust erodes. Clinicians are understandably uncomfortable with invasive controls on personal devices. Even when policies are carefully written, the perception of surveillance matters. Concerns about privacy, data visibility, and accidental data loss during remote wipes create resistance. Enrollment drops, exceptions multiply, and shadow IT fills the gaps.

Second, offboarding becomes fragile. When clinicians leave or rotate roles, access revocation depends on tools that must operate on devices the organization does not physically control. Profiles linger. Cached data persists. Enforcement relies on cooperation at precisely the moment cooperation is least guaranteed.

Most critically, device-centric security rests on a flawed premise. It assumes the endpoint itself can be trusted. In an era of sophisticated mobile malware and firmware-level exploits, that premise no longer holds. If a device is compromised below the operating system, no policy, profile, or container can protect the data accessed through it.

Rethinking Mobile Security by Removing Data From the Device

There is a simpler and more resilient approach. Stop pulling sensitive healthcare data onto personal devices. When applications and data remain isolated in controlled environments, the personal device becomes an access interface rather than a storage location. Information is displayed, not stored. No patient data is processed, cached, or retained locally. Only encrypted visual output reaches the endpoint.

This architectural shift fundamentally changes the risk equation. A compromised phone no longer exposes patient data because there is nothing on the device to steal. Threat detection, monitoring, and policy enforcement move back into environments that healthcare organizations already understand and control. Security becomes consistent instead of probabilistic.

This model also resolves one of healthcare’s most persistent tensions: privacy versus security. When organizations no longer need visibility into personal devices, user trust improves. Enrollment friction drops. Clinicians retain autonomy over their devices while organizations retain control over their data. BYOD security stops being adversarial and becomes cooperative.

From a compliance perspective, this approach aligns naturally with healthcare’s regulatory realities. HIPAA, data minimization principles, and evolving privacy expectations all benefit when sensitive information never leaves controlled systems in the first place.

Moving Beyond Endpoint Control

Endpoint control made sense in an earlier era, when devices were enterprise-owned and relatively homogeneous. In today’s healthcare environment, defined by mobility, consumer hardware, and constant connectivity, it is a legacy concept that no longer scales. The future of healthcare mobile security will not be built by trying to tame personal devices. It will be built by designing systems that assume those devices are untrusted and irrelevant to data protection.

Healthcare organizations that decouple security from the endpoint will reduce risk, improve clinician experience, and avoid the endless cycle of patching and exception handling that defines device-centric BYOD today.



< + > Third Way Health Raises $15M | Salma Health Launches Integrated Brain Health Center of Excellence

Check out today’s featured companies who have recently raised a round of funding, and be sure to check out the full list of past healthcare IT fundings.


Third Way Health Raises $15M to Expand AI-Powered Healthcare Front-Office Operations

The New Funding from Health Velocity Capital Will Accelerate Commercial Expansion, Operational Scale, and Advance AI Capabilities

Third Way Health, Inc. (TWH), a leading AI-enabled services partner for healthcare organizations, announced today that it has raised an oversubscribed $15 million in Series A funding by Health Velocity Capital, with partner Kristin Torres Mowat leading the round. With this additional capital, the company’s total funding now sits at $22.5 million, supporting continued product investment and operational scale.

Today’s healthcare practices are overwhelmed by unprecedented administrative complexity, driven by outdated technology and fragmented processes. The result is widespread staff burnout and subsequent turnover, delayed patient care, and mounting financial pressure for providers and health systems.

Third Way Health addresses these challenges with a hybrid human and AI operating solution for healthcare practices, currently supporting practices that collectively serve more than 5 million patients each year. The company provides comprehensive front office services, from scheduling to prior authorization, through a white-glove implementation model that transforms operations in as little as 12 weeks. Fully dedicated teams are embedded in clients’ workflows, creating seamless, scalable operational support. To date, Third Way Health has helped clients reduce front-office administrative costs by up to 40 percent, increase patient visits by 11 percent on average, and cut phone wait times in half.

“No patient should have to wait on the phone when they need care,” says Third Way Health Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer, Timm Schneider. “Automation, including AI, can make a real difference in facilitating those interactions, but our clients choose our solution not just for the sake of having better technology, but because we are helping them improve outcomes, including the patient experience and top-line growth. This funding will give us the resources to scale what we know already works and expand our reach.”

Third Way Health will use the funding to accelerate customer growth, expand its operational footprint, and further advance its automation roadmap. The company plans to invest in scaling its sales and implementation teams, deepening its AI capabilities, and enhancing its platform to support a growing base of customers.

“Healthcare providers are under significant administrative and financial pressure, and front-office operations are often a source of friction for both patients and clinicians. While AI will play an important role in improving these workflows, it is not a standalone solution,” said Kristin Torres Mowat, Partner at Health Velocity Capital…

Full release here, originally announced February 26th, 2026.


Salma Health Launches Integrated Brain Health Center of Excellence, Ushering in a New Era for Comprehensive Brain Care, Technology, and Research

Company Emerges from Stealth with $80M in Funding to Transform Fragmented Brain Healthcare System through Next-Generation Clinics, Offering Access to Rapid-Acting Personalized Treatment

Salma Health today announced its official launch as the next-generation brain health company that integrates advanced diagnostics, rapid-acting interventions, and continuous care coordination under one roof. The $80M Series A funding was co-led by Mubadala Capital and ARCH Venture Partners with participation from Lingotto Horizon, as well as others, including Averin Capital. With this financing, Salma Health is positioned to build and operate centers of excellence designed to fundamentally reshape how brain conditions are diagnosed, treated, and studied.

More than one-third of Americans experience a brain health condition each year. Yet care remains fragmented, siloed, and slow, especially for patients whose needs span psychiatry, neurology, psychology, and crisis care. Salma Health directly addresses this gap through an integrated, technology-enabled model built around three pillars:

  • Specially Equipped Clinics providing in-person healthcare services augmented by telehealth solutions; these clinics deliver advanced therapeutics, intensive care programs, crisis mitigation, and patient support across a full spectrum of psychiatric and neurological services for all levels of acuity with rapid access and coverage across a broad range of payors, all under one roof
  • Clinical Research Capabilities conducting clinical trials to support pharmaceutical and medical device companies, expanding the therapeutic options for patients
  • A Proprietary AI-Driven Technology Platform that brings together clinical knowledge, operational coordination, clinical data, and the latest advances in generative AI to power the development of Brain Health OS, an intelligent operating system that unlocks clinical insights, enhances decision support, and streamlines care coordination

Salma Health’s integrated model connects front-line clinical care with world-class scientific research to deliver breakthrough therapies for individuals living with psychiatric and psychological conditions, memory and dementia disorders, headache and migraines, and brain injuries. It also lays the groundwork for a deeper understanding of the brain, advancing the field toward precision brain health and driving better, more lasting outcomes.

“Brain health conditions are deeply complex, yet for decades we’ve just treated them with trial and error,” said Alaa Halawa, CEO at Salma Health and Head of Healthcare at Mubadala Capital…

Full release here, originally announced February 26th, 2026.



< + > HIMSS26 Day 2: Insights from the Show Floor

HIMSS is one of the largest gatherings in health IT, bringing together more than 30,000 healthcare leaders, CIOs, executives, and innovators to explore the future of healthcare technology.

Throughout the conference, we’re talking with top companies and industry leaders about the biggest trends shaping healthcare today including AI, cybersecurity, workforce challenges, leadership, and major product announcements from the show floor.

Check out some of our short video interviews from Day 2 of #HIMSS26:

Katie Whalen, SVP, Head of Global Strategic Partnerships for Merchant Solutions at Fiserv

Michael Meucci, President & CEO at Arcadia

Philipp von Gilsa, CEO at Kontakt.io

Anurag Mehta, CEO and Cofounder at Omega Healthcare

Braheem Santos, US Healthcare Segment Leader at Schneider Electric

Frank Cohen, Chief Revenue Officer at ORDR

Dr. Scott Silvers, Chief Clinical Innovations Officer at DynaMed

Dr. Aki Al-Zubaidi, Founder & CEO at Eon

Chris Platt, HPE Field Chief Technologist, Healthcare Life Sciences at Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Arun Ahuja, SVP & GM – Healthcare & Corporate at Illumia (formerly Transact + CBORD)

Josh Howell, Healthcare CTO at Rubrik

Curtis Hendrick, EVP of Cloud & Digital Transformation at Optimum Healthcare IT

Pat Williams, CEO at iScribe Health

Dr. Rowland Illing, Global Chief Medical Officer and Director, Healthcare and Life Sciences at Amazon Web Services (AWS)

Skip Sorrels, Field CTO – CISO, at Claroty

Josh Stern, Chief Business Officer at Vim

Jay Volk, Chief Growth Officer at ETHERFAX

Jim LaRoe, CEO at Symphion, Inc.

Todd Goldberg, Chief Business Officer at Avatar Medical

Lisa Gulker, Chief Nursing Officer at Oracle Health and Life Sciences


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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

< + > Bonus Features, HIMSS Edition – March 11, 2026 – Epic AI news, Microsoft Dragon Copilot integrations, plus 22 other stories

Welcome to a special edition of Healthcare IT Today Bonus Features including interesting stories, product announcements, new hires, partnerships, research studies, awards, sales, and more from HIMSS26 in Las Vegas. Because it’s such a busy week for the entire industry, we want to make sure you’re informed of all the latest news, announcements, and stories happening to help you better do your job.

Top News

Product Announcements

Implementations

If you have news that you’d like us to consider for a future edition of Healthcare IT Today Bonus Features, please submit them on this page. Please include any relevant links and let us know if news is under embargo. Note that submissions received after the close of business on Thursday may not be included in Bonus Features until the following week.



< + > Why Radiology is the Launchpad for Healthcare’s Agentic AI Era

The following is a guest article by Rishi Nayyar, Co-Founder and CEO at PocketHealth Radiology has a habit of getting there first. It digit...