Monday, May 4, 2026

< + > CIO Podcast – Episode 113: Balancing Hospital Needs with Technology and Innovation with Nitin Agarwal

For the 113th episode of the CIO podcast hosted by Healthcare IT Today, we are joined by Nitin Agarwal, Chief Information Officer at Wayne Memorial Hospital, to talk about balancing hospital operational needs with technology and innovation! We kick this episode off with one of the biggest technologies in healthcare right now – AI. Agarwal shares where and how he sees AI currently benefiting his organization. Then we discuss how to approach AI as it evolves so quickly. Next, we take a look at Agarwal’s approach with implementation to learn more about how he chooses what to implement. With hundreds of solutions out there, how does he decide among them, and why not go with just one nice AI platform? 

We then transition over to innovation by discussing whether Agarwal views his EMR and ERP platforms as an approach to innovation or a challenge to innovation. Next, we get Agarwal’s perspective on healthcare interoperability. We dive deep to see where interoperability is helping his organization and what areas it should be in that it’s not. Next, we get into the big question of the episode – how do CIOs balance hospital operational needs with technology and innovation? Then we learn more about the challenges Agarwal is facing, that aren’t getting enough acknowledgment. We then conclude this episode with Agarwal passing along the best piece of advice he’s been given in his career.

Here’s a look at the questions and topics we discuss in this episode:

  • Where and how do you see AI benefiting your organization? How are you approaching it as it evolves so quickly?
  • What’s your approach to choosing what to implement with hundreds of solutions out there, and not just one nice AI platform?
  • Do you see your EMR and ERP platforms as your approach to innovation, or do you see them as a challenge to innovation? Why?
  • What’s your perspective on healthcare interoperability? Where is it helping your organization, and where is it not happening that you’d like it to happen?
  • How do you, as a CIO, balance the needs of hospital operations with technology and innovation?
  • What’s a challenge you face that not enough people are acknowledging?
  • What’s the best piece of advice you’ve been given in your career?

Now, without further ado, we’re excited to share with you the next episode of the CIO Podcast by Healthcare IT Today.

We release a new CIO Podcast every ~2 weeks. You can also subscribe to the Healthcare IT Today podcast on any of the following platforms:

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< + > Beyond Data Exchange: The Next Era of Interoperability Happens Inside Clinical Workflows

The following is a guest article by Jonathan Shoemaker, CEO at ABOUT Healthcare

For a time period that seems like just about forever, the healthcare industry has been investing in improving interoperability.

In the early days, Regional Health Information Organizations and HL7 were supposed to get us to interoperability. Then, “Meaningful Use” and the HITECH Act were going to do it. Today, we’ve got CMS Aligned Networks, TEFCA, and information-blocking-rule enforcement.

Despite all this “progress,” simply moving information between systems has not been enough.

As a result, the industry’s prevailing concept of “interoperability” feels like it’s stuck in the early 2000s. We are still largely defining success as “getting the right data to the right place at the right time.” Today, that should merely be table stakes. The important consideration is whether the most vital information is made relevant and actionable within the care process.

Ultimately, the future of interoperability is not about connecting more systems. It is about weaving intelligence directly into the systems clinicians already use, so insights turn into actions at the moment of care.

This next evolution of interoperability is represented by a decision layer woven directly into native electronic health records (EHR) workflows. Instead of relying solely on standalone applications or dashboards, intelligent systems surface insights and recommended actions at the point of care and coordination.

By integrating natively and augmenting, not replacing, EHRs, this approach enables proactive, automated decision-making that improves patient access, throughput, and experience.

Reframing Interoperability: Insights that Drive Clear Actions

Health systems have more data than at any point in history. Yet decision-making has not become faster or easier. In many cases, it feels heavier.

Part of the reason is structural. EHRs were designed primarily for clinical documentation and billing. They function extremely well as digital claim processors, but they were not designed to be intelligence engines first. Layer onto that a deeply cautious culture around data governance, patient data privacy, and patient safety. Add tight controls on AI experimentation. Also consider the reality that most health systems operate on thin margins and do not employ large data science teams.

The result is a paradox: More data volume, but not more decision velocity.

For years, the industry’s response has been to aggregate data into dashboards. Build another visualization layer and add more reports. The expectation was that if we present enough information, humans would connect the dots and act.

Instead, we have created fractured product stacks and data fiefdoms. Clinicians toggle between multiple screens. Leaders reference multiple dashboards. Valuable insights live outside the primary workflow.

If the EHR is where clinicians spend their day, pulling them into separate tools disrupts concentration and care flow. They should not have to hunt across systems to determine what matters in the moment.

This is where interoperability must evolve. Data exchange is the baseline. The next phase is intelligence integration. Insight must be layered on top of exchanged data, tightly integrated into workflow, and expressed in clear, action-oriented terms.

True interoperability is not just moving information from System A to System B. It is surfacing the most relevant information and predictive and prescriptive recommendations at the exact moment a decision needs to be made.

Case in Point: The Impact of Better Interoperability on ED Observation Status

Consider a common operational challenge in the emergency department: Patients placed under observation status frequently accumulate services and clinical indicators that qualify them for inpatient admission. The data points exist, and the services are documented, but no one may notice in real time that the threshold has been crossed.

This is the classic forest-versus-trees problem. Clinicians are focused on the patient in front of them, while case managers are juggling multiple charts. Patterns that unfold over hours can be difficult to spot without assistance.

An intelligence layer operating within the workflow can continuously monitor cumulative clinical signals in the background. It can detect when the criteria for a status change are met. Most importantly, it can prompt the responsible clinician directly within the native EHR workflow, in real time.

Earlier recognition can accelerate patient movement from observation to inpatient status. That improves care timing. It ensures appropriate reimbursement alignment. It reduces back-and-forth between departments. It minimizes operational friction that so often slows throughput.

Nothing new is being documented. No new data is required. What changes is the ability to see the pattern as it forms and act on it immediately.

The Future of Interoperability: Mesh Intelligence

When the EHR is the platform of record, the objective is not to replace it. The opportunity is to make that platform smarter.

This is where the concept of mesh intelligence comes into play – a network of tightly integrated capabilities that operate within existing workflows, connecting signals across systems and translating them into real-time guidance.

Historically, EHRs have been optimized around documentation and billing. The next evolution of healthcare technology must focus on patient movement and operational decision-making – areas that require visibility across departments, care settings, and roles. That level of coordination cannot be delivered by any single system alone.

Mesh intelligence addresses this challenge by weaving together data signals from across the care environment and translating them into real-time guidance inside the clinician’s workflow. Instead of forcing users to log into another platform, it brings the right information and recommendations to the point where decisions are already happening.

There is also a workforce dimension to this shift. Much of healthcare’s operational knowledge has historically lived in the experience of seasoned nurses, case managers, and coordinators who learned to navigate complex systems over decades. They knew where to click, which reports to run, and how to interpret fragmented information.

As that generation retires, healthcare cannot rely on tribal information alone. New clinicians expect technology to guide them, not slow them down. They are far less tolerant of inefficiency and far more comfortable with intelligent tools that surface insights automatically.

Mesh intelligence helps preserve institutional knowledge by codifying patterns that once existed only in people’s heads. It can accelerate onboarding, support training, and reduce reliance on informal workarounds. Most importantly, it reduces friction by delivering insight directly within the workflows clinicians already trust.

Data is Table Stakes, Decisions are the Differentiator

Healthcare has spent decades focused on connecting systems and exchanging data. That work was necessary, but it was only the first step.

The next era of interoperability will not be defined by how much information moves between systems, but by how effectively that information drives decisions. Health systems need intelligence that operates directly within clinical workflows, where insight can immediately translate into action.

Organizations that succeed will treat data exchange as the baseline and focus instead on delivering real-time, workflow-native guidance that improves patient flow, operational performance, and the clinician experience.

In the end, the true measure of interoperability will not be whether data is accessible. It will be whether the right insight reaches the right person at the right moment – making it easier to deliver the right care, faster.

About Jonathan Shoemaker

Jonathan Shoemaker joined ABOUT Healthcare in 2023 as Chief Executive Officer, bringing more than 25 years of health system and information systems experience with a proven track record of transforming and delivering initiatives and solutions that improve healthcare delivery, operations, and growth.

Before joining ABOUT Healthcare, Jonathan was most recently Senior Vice President of Operations and Chief Integration Officer, as well as a member of the Senior Executive team leading Allina Health’s Performance Transformation Office. Before his most recent role at Allina, Shoemaker spent six years as Allina Health’s Chief Information Officer and Chief Improvement Officer. Prior to Jonathan’s tenure at Allina, he held leadership positions at prominent IT & healthcare firms, including NorthPoint Health and Wellness Center, BORN Consulting, and Hennepin County Medical Center.



< + > Sectra Completes Oxipit Acquisition | ModMed Acquires Bonsai Health

Check out today’s featured companies who have recently completed an M&A deal, and be sure to check out the full list of past healthcare IT M&A.


Sectra Completes Oxipit Acquisition, Accelerating Autonomous AI in Radiology

International medical imaging IT and cybersecurity company Sectra has completed the acquisition of Oxipit, a pioneer in autonomous AI for radiology and the developer of the first solution with CE Class IIB certification for autonomous chest X-ray analysis. This milestone strengthens Sectra’s position as a provider of advanced, regulatory-approved AI solutions for diagnostic imaging.

“With the acquisition of Oxipit, we’re adding a new dimension to our AI offering: autonomous AI that can genuinely reduce radiologists’ workload in daily clinical practice. Equally important, we’re acquiring the clinical validation and regulatory expertise required to deploy this category of AI responsibly at scale. The acquisition complements our vendor-neutral AI marketplace, which remains a cornerstone of our strategy, and our own rapid innovation, such as MCP-powered system administration. Together, these moves demonstrate clear leadership in AI for diagnostic imaging and position us to help healthcare providers manage rising imaging volumes and address staff burnout,” says Torbjörn Kronander, President and CEO at Sectra.

With the acquisition complete, Sectra now owns and will further develop ChestLink, Oxipit’s flagship product and one of the most clinically validated examples of autonomous AI in radiology. Unlike conventional AI decision-support tools, which flag findings or assist prioritization but leave reporting to the radiologist, autonomous AI is developed and validated to independently complete a defined diagnostic task. ChestLink automatically identifies and clears high-confidence normal chest X-rays from the worklist, freeing radiologists to focus on cases with a higher probability of disease…

Full release here, originally announced April 15th, 2026.


ModMed Acquires Bonsai Health to Accelerate AI-Powered Patient Engagement

Addition of Agentic AI Platform Brings Automated Patient Reactivation and Self-Scheduling to the AI-Powered Practice

ModMed, a leading provider of software and services to specialty medical practices backed by Clearlake Capital Group, L.P., today announced the acquisition of Bonsai Health, a high-growth agentic AI patient engagement platform. This acquisition marks a major step forward in ModMed’s journey to create the AI-Powered Practice, integrating powerful new front-office automation capabilities such as automated patient reactivation and AI-driven self-scheduling.

“We are thrilled to welcome the incredible team at Bonsai Health into the ModMed family,” said Dan Cane, Co-Founder and Co-CEO at ModMed. “Bonsai was built on a simple but powerful mission: to ensure the right care happens at the right time. Their agentic AI platform and approach to patient reactivation are a perfect fit for our vision of the AI-Powered Practice. By bringing together the top-tier talent and solutions from both organizations, we’re creating an innovation powerhouse dedicated to delivering more value to the practices we serve.”

A Proactive Engine for Practice Growth

Bonsai Health acts as a proactive engine that works behind the scenes to automate front-office workflows. Utilizing an advanced agentic AI engine, the platform is designed to automatically identify care gaps in a patient’s history as well as openings in a provider’s schedule. It then leverages multi-channel SMS and email to seamlessly handle patient reactivation and self-scheduling without requiring manual staff intervention.

These capabilities complement ModMed’s existing patient engagement suite powered by Klara. While Klara serves as a centralized communication hub helping staff manage conversational workflows and patient outreach, Bonsai adds a specialized, proactive AI layer focused on improving patient outcomes, reducing staff workload, and filling gaps in the practice schedule—automatically…

Full release here, originally announced April 20th, 2026.



Sunday, May 3, 2026

< + > Bonus Features – May 3, 2026 – 81% of patients repeat the same personal information multiple times to the same provider, 61% of orgs have made outsourced managed services a core part of IT strategy, plus 23 more stories

Welcome to the weekly edition of Healthcare IT Today Bonus Features. This article will be a weekly roundup of interesting stories, product announcements, new hires, partnerships, research studies, awards, sales, and more. Because there’s so much happening out there in healthcare IT that we aren’t able to cover in our full articles, we still want to make sure you’re informed of all the latest news, announcements, and stories happening to help you better do your job.

Studies

Partnerships

Products

Implementations

People

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.



Saturday, May 2, 2026

< + > Weekly Roundup – May 2, 2026

Welcome to our Healthcare IT Today Weekly Roundup. Each week, we’ll be providing a look back at the articles we posted and why they’re important to the healthcare IT community. We hope this gives you a chance to catch up on anything you may have missed during the week.

Enabling More Effective Collaboration and Data Exchange Between Payers and Providers. Third-party integration platforms and real-time data normalization are some of the strategies the Healthcare IT Today community has embraced – while remembering that data insights must be paired with human-centered care coordination to truly make an impact. Read more…

From Systems to Information: Rethinking Legacy Data in Healthcare. John Lynn sat down with Shawn Fichter at Legacy Data Access, which aims to help organizations build a proactive archival strategy built around use cases rather than applications. This requires understanding how users actually need to access information. Read more…

Bringing Software-Defined Robotics to Surgery. Colin Hung talked to Luke Hares at CMR Surgical about the Versius Plus platform’s use of software to accommodate the needs of customers without expensive and disruptive hardware upgrades. Read more…

Measuring AI’s Clinical, Operational, and Financial ROI. Members of the Healthcare IT Today community said they do this by gathering physician feedback, focusing on existing metrics, and routinely reassessing what’s measured. Read more…

Reducing Cyber Exposure, Tech Footprint, and Costs with Applications Rationalization. Jim Jacobs at MediQuant joined John to discuss how to consolidate legacy technology and minimize resistance to change by making the case for a more secure, less complex tech stack. Read more…

Free Health IT Solution Intelligence for Hospitals and Health Systems. Clay Holderman and Mike Taylor at AVIA and Panda Health described the company’s intelligence platform, a combination of research and advisory services on dozens of technology tools, with basic information open to everyone. Read more…

Bringing Value-Based Care Data Into the Doctor’s EHR Workflow. John sat down with Jonas Goldstein and Dr. Jeremy Presley at Aledade to discuss how Aledade Assist uses AI-enabled computer vision to layer patient insights directly onto a clinician’s existing EHR. Read more…

Leading Hospital at Home Programs. Amid a 5-year extension of the Acute Hospital Care at Home program, Healthcare IT Today looked at how health systems make hospital at home thrive and grow. Read more…

Life Sciences Today Podcast: The State of Israeli Medtech Innovation. Shai Policker at Edge Medical Ventures joined Danny Lieberman for a thought-provoking conversation on limited funding, missed commercialization opportunities, and building partnerships with firms in the U.S. Read more…

Healthcare IT Today Podcast: Health IT Mount Rushmore, Part 1. John and Colin debated the key people and technologies that should be on the industry’s Mount Rushmore. Read more…

AI in Healthcare Needs Governance, Not Just Momentum. Ken Puffer at ePlus outlined the challenges of adopting AI just because the market is moving. Governance will help identify the right use cases, manage risk, and determine what results define success. Read more…

Reframing Healthcare Cybersecurity in the Era of Generative AI. Digital capabilities that enable advanced care delivery also introduce systemic vulnerabilities. Generative AI is no different, amplifies threats while providing powerful tools for defense, noted Shammi Thakur at MarkNtel Advisors. Read more…

How PHI Can Quietly Leave the Healthcare Environment. Dennis P. Sweeney at Vertebrai Solutions and at Tellogic asked a key question: What happens to patient data after an AI model accesses it? Effectively mitigating risk means redacting PHI at the source. Read more…

The Key to Unlocking the Digital Front Door for Millions of Patients. The average healthcare page had 272 accessibility issues, which shuts out the 25% of Americans living with a disability. Most are fixable configuration and content issues, according to Mike Barton at AudioEye. Read more…

We’re Asking the Wrong Question About Data Privacy. Leaders must reframe the question from “Can we do this?” to “How do we do this responsibly?” That will allow providers to be intentional and disciplined about data collection while unlocking value, said John Roach at Resultant. Read more…

This Week’s Health IT Jobs for April 29, 2026: North Carolina’s Piedmont Health Services is looking for a CIO. Read more…

Bonus Features for April 26, 2026: 27% of healthcare orgs deploying AI across multiple functions, while 56% of orgs believe operational and technology investment will stabilize finances. Read more…

Funding and M&A Activity:

Thanks for reading and be sure to check out our latest Healthcare IT Today Weekly Roundups.

#weeklyroundups

Friday, May 1, 2026

< + > Israeli Medtech: Innovation Without an Ecosystem? – Life Sciences Today Podcast Episode 59

We’re excited to be back for another episode of the Life Sciences Today Podcast by Healthcare IT Today. My guest today is Shai Policker, Co-Founder and Managing Partner at Edge Medical Ventures! I sit down with Policker to challenge a provocative thesis: that Israeli medtech is trapped in a cycle of underfunding, walking-dead companies, and missed commercialization opportunities. I bring the data — $5.6B raised by 41 US medtech companies in 15 months, zero Israeli — and argue that the Israel Innovation Authority’s habit of writing small checks keeps entrepreneurs in perpetual poverty rather than building a self-sustaining ecosystem.

Policker pushes back with a counter-model: Edge VC’s venture studio approach, which starts from validated unmet needs sourced from large medical device corporations, builds companies from scratch, and bridges Israeli innovation to US commercial operations through a first-of-its-kind partnership with the state of New Jersey. The result: Israeli R&D capital efficiency meets American go-to-market expertise.

Our conversation covers the IAA’s evolving funding programs, why US investors still see Israel as a premier innovation hub, and what it actually takes to cross the ocean without crashing into the wall.

Check out the main topics of discussion for this episode of the Life Sciences Today podcast:

  • Tell me about your journey.
  • Break it down for our audience – when you say ‘a venture studio’, ‘we’re more of a VC’, and ‘we’re more hands on’, what does that mean?
  • Were you with the Israel Innovation Authority (IIA) for a while?
  • How much money are you managing right now?
  • My controversial opinion is that as a citizen of Israel, I would like my government investing more in the ecosystem and less in helping VC’s make more money. I know you don’t agree with this – so what is your view?
  • Would Israel as a country be better off if the government was creating commercialization infrastructure?
  • What is, in your opinion, the biggest anti-pattern in the Israeli medtech industry?

Subscribe to Danny’s newsletter to get strategic patterns for life science leaders building a defensible business.

Be sure to subscribe to the Life Sciences Today Podcast on your favorite podcasting platform:

Along with the popular podcasting platforms above, you can Subscribe to Healthcare IT Today on YouTube.  Plus, all of the audio and video versions will be made available to stream on Healthcare IT Today. As a former pharma-tech founder who bootstrapped to exit, I now help TechBio and digital health CEOs grow revenue—by solving the tech, team, and go-to-market problems that stall your progress. If you want a warrior by your side, connect with me on LinkedIn.

If you work in Life Sciences IT, we’d love to hear where you agree and/or disagree with our takes on health IT innovation in life sciences. Feel free to share your thoughts and perspectives in the comments of this post, in the YouTube comments, or privately on our Contact Us page. Let us know what you think of the podcast and if you have any ideas for future episodes.

Thanks so much for listening!


#medtech


< + > AI in Healthcare Needs More Than Momentum, It Needs Governance

The following is a guest article by Ken Puffer, Healthcare CTO at ePlus

Healthcare has been on the AI journey for a long time, even if we didn’t always call it that. Ten to fifteen years ago, we were talking about machine learning, process automation, and building more intelligence across the healthcare ecosystem. Today, AI has, in a lot of ways, become omnipresent in day-to-day healthcare operations, moving from broad interest to tangible, impactful use cases. Baseline tools have matured, and vendors and health systems alike are building around practical needs within clinical and operational workflows.  

That said, if healthcare organizations want to see and sustain real value from AI, they cannot treat every new tool like a science experiment. Healthcare is not an industry where you can afford to be casual about new technology. You are dealing with patient safety, financial performance, cybersecurity, operational workflows, clinician satisfaction, and organizational trust at the same time. If an AI initiative is not well considered, those areas can get out of balance quickly.  

AI Pressure Versus AI Readiness 

One of the biggest mistakes organizations can make is adopting AI just because the market is moving, the board is asking questions, or competitors are making announcements. Those pressures are real. Yes, boards want to understand how AI is being used. Patient groups are asking similar questions. Internal teams are hearing a lot from vendors and the media. But pressure to act is not the same as being ready to act. 

What organizations need first is a common language and a shared framework for AI discussions. If leadership, IT, clinical staff, compliance, security, and operations are all using different definitions, the program is already at risk. Before buying or building anything, teams need to understand what the capabilities are today, what is available in the market, and how those capabilities align with real use cases. 

Define Success Early 

However, before you can do anything, there needs to be clarity on what success looks like. That sounds simple, but it is where many AI efforts break down. Programs with strong potential often stay stuck in pilot mode because ownership is unclear, measurement is not defined, and accountability is missing. Without structure, AI becomes a science project. It creates activity, but not value. In healthcare, that is not enough. 

When evaluating a use case, organizations should be asking tough, direct questions. Who owns this? How will it be measured? Are the success criteria defined? What risks does it introduce across security, finance, and operations? Who is responsible for reviewing (and maintaining) the program after it goes live? 

Governance Enables the Right Ideas 

Governance is not just about limiting risk. It’s about creating the conditions for the right ideas to succeed. Take, for example, ambient documentation, which addresses a pain point that physicians have been facing for years: Balancing manual, time-intensive data entry with personal patient interaction. Physicians want to focus on patient care, not the computer. They don’t want to spend hours after work finishing charts, nor do they want to spend their entire time in the room with the patient inputting into the computer. AI tools can ease that documentation burden in a meaningful way.  

However, governance still matters. Physicians always need to review and approve what is being done. The organization needs to define how documentation quality will be evaluated. Leadership needs to track the impact on chart closure, billing readiness, physician satisfaction, and workflow. Proper governance allows innovation to resolve the administrative pain points that burden clinicians every day.  

Operational Use Cases and Oversight 

The same governance principles apply in operational settings. Computer vision can help identify when a patient has left a room after discharge, allowing environmental services to turn the room over more quickly. This affects throughput, emergency department flow, and revenue. In outpatient settings, dwell time monitoring can highlight when patient wait times are too long. In operating rooms, computer vision can track setup, preparation, and turnover in one of the most resource-intensive areas of the hospital. 

These are strong use cases. But they also show why governance must extend beyond the technology itself. If tools can identify people, monitor movement, or automate alerts tied to patient flow, there must be clear oversight around how they are used, who has access, and what policies guide their use.  

From Hype to Real Impact 

Healthcare organizations don’t need more AI hype. They need practical governance that helps them focus on the right use cases, while measuring results and managing risk. Only then can AI drive sustained impact for both the patient and the clinician. 

#healthcare

< + > CIO Podcast – Episode 113: Balancing Hospital Needs with Technology and Innovation with Nitin Agarwal

For the 113th episode of the CIO podcast hosted by Healthcare IT Today, we are joined by Nitin Agarwal, Chief Information Officer at Wayne ...