Tuesday, April 28, 2026

< + > MediQuant Reduces Cyber Exposure, Tech Footprint, and Costs with Application Rationalization

Over the decades, IT systems proliferate at health care systems, particularly when individual departments install solutions optimized for their particular use case. Jim Jacobs, CEO at MediQuant, points out that users tend to rely on existing systems and resist having them taken away. But consolidation can help customers meet their defined priorities: reducing cyber exposure, tech footprint, and costs.  A structured application rationalization approach and tool can provide the data needed to make those decisions.

Serving clients since 1999, MediQuant supports what Jacobs calls “responsible AI.” He worries that many organizations move too fast and risk costly mistakes. MediQuant has adopted AI across four pillars: to provide clinical insights and improvements in revenue cycle, to drive improvements in complex implementations, and in identifying more uses for patient data.

MediQuant is also innovating around DICOM, consolidating imaging data from all modalities into a centralized, DICOM-based archive, enabling seamless access to historical studies while reducing costs and eliminating the complexity of fragmented legacy systems.

Check out our interview with MediQuant to learn more about the benefits of application rationalization and the unique ways they’re helping hospitals and health systems get value from their health data archive.

Learn more about MediQuant: https://www.mediquant.com/

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MediQuant is a proud sponsor of Healthcare Scene.



< + > The Digital Front Door is Locked for Millions of Patients; Health IT Leaders Hold the Key

The following is a guest article by Mike Barton, VP, Communications at AudioEye

Patient Portal Adoption has Surged, but Accessibility Failures are Locking out the Patients who Need Digital Access the Most

The digital transformation of healthcare has made it easier than ever for patients to manage their own care. For the one in four Americans living with a disability, that promise often falls apart at the first click.

A patient checks her lab results at 10 p.m. She logs into her health system’s patient portal, pulls up the results page, and sees what her doctor ordered. Five minutes, start to finish.

Same portal, different patient. This one is blind. The login form has no labels, so her screen reader can’t tell which field is for her username and which is for her password. She guesses. Gets it wrong. The error message that pops up? Invisible to her assistive technology. She never gets past the front door.

That second scenario is not uncommon. According to the ONC’s 2024 Health Information National Trends Survey, over 75% of individuals now have online access to their medical records. But for the one in four American adults living with a disability, the digital front door to healthcare might as well be bolted shut. These aren’t people opting out of digital health. They’re being shut out by the very tools meant to bring them in.

Where Patient-Facing Digital Tools Break Down

The failures in patient portals aren’t random. AudioEye’s 2025 Digital Accessibility Index analyzed more than 420,000 web pages across 15,000 websites and found that the average healthcare page had 272 accessibility issues. They cluster in the exact workflows patients use most.

  • Keyboard Navigation Failures: Patients with motor disabilities often can’t use a mouse, so they navigate entirely by keyboard; healthcare sites averaged 6.1 keyboard-related violations per page – that’s enough to make logging in or filling out a form a dead end
  • Low Contrast Text: If the color contrast between text and background is too low, people with low vision can’t read it; healthcare pages averaged 69.1 contrast violations per page; lab results, medication instructions, appointment details: all potentially unreadable
  • Broken Links and Forms: Screen readers need properly labeled links and form fields to guide someone through a page; without them, it’s guesswork; healthcare sites averaged 5.4 inaccessible links and 4.0 broken form elements per page

All of this is happening on live patient portals, at organizations that would absolutely describe themselves as patient-centered.

The Regulatory Pressure is Real and Immediate

The updated Section 504 rule from HHS, finalized in May 2024, requires organizations receiving federal financial assistance to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA across their digital properties (45 CFR Part 84).

59% of business leaders said their organizations would face legal risk if audited today, according to AudioEye’s 2026 Accessibility Advantage Report. Yet only 47% describe their accessibility programs as proactive. The rest are operating reactively or meeting bare minimums. If you’re in health IT, that gap should worry you.

A Practical Fix Roadmap for Stretched Teams

Most patient portal accessibility failures are configuration and content issues. Fixable, if you prioritize the highest-impact areas.

Start with the critical path. Map the five to ten workflows patients use most. Audit those specifically against WCAG 2.1 AA using both automated scanning and manual testing with assistive technology. Automated tools catch roughly two-thirds of issues. The rest — screen reader behavior, keyboard flow logic, cognitive accessibility — requires human evaluation.

Fix login and authentication first. A patient who can’t get past the front door can’t use anything else. Then test and fix form labels, link descriptions, and alt text on high-traffic pages.

Someone has to own it. Nearly half of organizations manage accessibility entirely in-house, but 64% of those teams admit they lack the specialized skills. If nobody owns accessibility as an ongoing practice, it won’t survive the next site update.

Build testing into every release cycle. Every portal update, new feature, and vendor patch can introduce new barriers. The organizations that stay compliant test at every release, not once a year before an audit.

The Real Impact is Patients, Not Compliance

Yes, the Section 504 deadline matters. But fines aren’t the real cost here.

If the disability rate in your community mirrors the national average, approximately 25% of your patients have a disability. Even if only a fraction of those people can’t complete basic portal tasks, you’re talking thousands of patients a year who are functionally locked out. They give up on the portal. Call the front desk instead. Skip the follow-up because the phone line was busy. And slowly drift away from their own care.

#digital

< + > Bioxtreme Announces Strategic Investment Led by Serra Holding | Amperos Health Secures $16M Investment

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.


Bioxtreme Announces Strategic Investment Led by Serra Holding and Introduces Plaxtreme to Accelerate Neurorehabilitation Innovation

Leadership Expansion Across the U.S. and Europe Supports Global Growth of Next-Generation Neurorehabilitation Robotics

Bioxtreme, an innovator in neurorehabilitation technologies leveraging its proprietary error augmentation approach to accelerate motor recovery, today announced a new strategic investment led by Serra Holding, a family office focused on hands-on investment and operational support across the healthcare sector, including hospitals, mental health institutions, and medtech companies. This investment brings the company’s total funding to $15 million to date, accelerating Bioxtreme’s global expansion, strengthening operations in the United States and Europe, and supporting the launch of Plaxtreme, the company’s advanced robotic rehabilitation device engineered to drive neuroplasticity and accelerate motor skill recovery in individuals with neurological conditions.

Plaxtreme is designed to address the restoration of functional hand movement. Combining precision robotics, immersive virtual environments, and Bioxtreme’s proprietary error augmentation technology, Plaxtreme restores grasp and release while accelerating recovery and improving functional outcomes for users. Key capabilities include:

  • Patented Error Augmentation Technology – Amplifies movement errors to trigger the brain’s natural adaptive responses, accelerating motor learning and improving movement accuracy
  • Personalized Adaptive, AI-Based Learning– AI analyzes movement performance in real time, adjusting subtle force demands and therapy parameters; continuously adapts to support progressive learning
  • Supination and Pronation Training- Supports natural forearm rotation for functional movement, improves coordination for daily tasks; functional, ADL-based activities in an interactive, 3D environment; gamified tasks drive engagement and high repetition practice
  • Adaptive Feedback Driven Rehabilitation – Real-time, visual feedback supports continuous progress; automatically adapts difficulty to the patient’s ability
  • Designed for Smooth, OT Workflows – Quick setup with no complex calibration, and seamless left/right and transition; convenient hand positioning for efficient clinical use

Bioxtreme’s portfolio also includes Dextreme, an advanced robotic rehabilitation system for upper-limb recovery that also applies adaptive error augmentation forces to accelerate motor learning and restore functional independence…

Full release here, originally announced April 21st, 2026.


Amperos Health Secures $16M Investment as it Launches Industry’s First AI-Native Denial Management and Revenue Recovery Platform

Helping Providers Resolve Denials Five Times Faster and Cut Denial Rates by 70%

Amperos Health, the first insurance revenue recovery partner capable of working denials end-to-end entirely with AI, announced today that it has closed a $16 million Series A funding round, led by Bessemer Venture Partners, with participation from Uncork Capital and Neo.

The raise comes as Amperos launches the industry’s first AI-native denial management and revenue recovery solution for healthcare providers. Amperos’ agentic capabilities provide end-to-end denial and collection automation, while a team of subject matter experts provides judgment and expertise for complex and difficult-to-recover claims. Amperos then delivers detailed insights into how providers can optimize their billing and collections processes to prevent future denials. To date, Amperos has served over 3,000 clinical locations across all 50 states, driving nearly $700 million of revenue recovered per year across over 500,000 claims.

“Complexity in healthcare revenue cycle management (RCM) should not be the norm, and that’s why our mission at Amperos is to streamline the denial and collections process so providers can focus on what matters most – operating their practices and serving their patients,” said Michal Miernowski, Co-Founder and CEO at Amperos Health. “I’m thrilled to announce our most recent funding round, which will be critical as Amperos accelerates its growth to serve more providers, expands its analytics capabilities, and launches new agentic capabilities in other RCM workflows.”

Denials are rising in healthcare today, with 12% of claims denied in 2024, representing a $262 billion loss in revenue to providers. Providers then spend more than $26 billion annually in recovering these denied claims, of which 70% end up getting paid. And yet, 63% of RCM teams are understaffed, while healthcare administration teams face a 32% annual turnover rate.

These statistics exemplify why Amperos has built a new product that can fill gaps in the RCM workforce while recovering more value in denied revenue. The product manages the full denial management process, from following up through insurance portals and calls to submitting corrected claims, medical records, and appeals.

“Denials are one of healthcare’s fastest-growing pain points: a growing portion of claims denied, hundreds of billions in lost revenue, and RCM teams that are chronically understaffed. It’s a broken process ripe for AI transformation,” said Sofia Guerra, Partner at Bessemer Venture Partners…

Full release here, originally announced April 22nd, 2026.



Monday, April 27, 2026

< + > Health IT Mount Rushmore – Part 1 – Healthcare IT Today Podcast Episode 191

For the 191st episode of the Healthcare IT Today Podcast, we are building our own Mount Rushmore for Health IT! We have so much to discuss that this topic will actually be split up into two episodes. So for part 1, we first talk about who we think should be on the Mount Rushmore of Health IT Technologies. Then we discuss all of the Health IT People we would put on our Mount Rushmores.  Who would you add to our list and who would you remove from our lists?

Here’s a preview of the topics and questions we discuss in this episode:

  • Who should be on the Mount Rushmore of Health IT Technologies?
  • Who should be on the Mount Rushmore of Health IT People?

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

We publish a new Healthcare IT Today podcast every ~2 weeks. Thanks to our friends at Healthcare Now Radio, you’ll be able to listen to the latest episodes of Healthcare IT Today on their radio station for the first two weeks. Then, we’ll be publishing each episode as a podcast and YouTube video here after it finishes on the radio.

You can also subscribe to the Healthcare IT Today podcast on any of the following platforms:

Thanks for listening to Healthcare IT Today and if you enjoy the content we’re sharing, please rate the 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 HealthcareITToday.com.

If you work in Healthcare IT, we’d love to hear where you agree and/or disagree with the perspectives we shared. Feel free to share your thoughts and perspectives in the comments of this post, in the YouTube comments, with @Colin_Hung or @techguy on Twitter, 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!

Listen to Our Latest Episodes:



< + > We’re Asking the Wrong Question About Data Privacy in Healthcare

The following is a guest article by John Roach, President at Resultant

Common Misconceptions about Data Regulations are Stifling Healthcare Innovation

At a packed panel discussion at CES on health data privacy earlier this year, I made a confession on stage that made several attorneys in the audience visibly uncomfortable: I think healthcare’s legal departments are often the biggest barrier to innovation, and to better patient outcomes.

Let me explain why I believe this, and why it matters far beyond healthcare.

The Compliance Trap

First, I must acknowledge the complexity. Healthcare organizations face HIPAA, HITECH, state privacy laws, FDA regulations, FTC oversight, and increasingly, sector-specific AI governance rules. It’s genuinely complicated.

But stepping back, as a consumer and as a citizen, I think expectations are straightforward. If an organization is going to collect our data, we expect them to comply with privacy regulations. Full stop. And increasingly, people assume that compliance is not optional or impressive. It’s simply the baseline.

At the same time, there is a growing expectation that if organizations and governments are collecting this data, they have a responsibility to use it to improve services and outcomes. 

This is where things break down.

The General Counsel Problem

I’ve worked closely with a lot of general counsels. And if you ask many of them what their job is, they’ll joke that it’s to keep someone out of jail. The safest way to do that is often to say no.

And while that instinct is understandable, I do not think it is the right default mindset.

Here’s what this looks like in practice: A healthcare system wants to identify patients at high risk for readmission so they can provide preventive care. The data science team can build the model. The clinical team sees the value. But the legal team kills the project. While it doesn’t violate the regulations, it might create risk, and navigating the compliance framework seems too complex.

Meanwhile, that same patient’s behavioral data is flowing freely from their smartwatch to a third-party app to a data broker, with almost no legal protection. The organization that could actually use the data to improve care is paralyzed. The organization selling the data to the highest bidder faces minimal constraints.

The contradiction is absurd.

Reframing the Question

What I’ve seen work is a push from organizational leadership to reframe the question. Not “can we do this?” but “how do we do this responsibly?” That means creating value from data within a complex legal framework, not avoiding the framework altogether.

The most effective organizations change the internal posture from “no” to “yes, but with guardrails.” Yes, we will protect privacy. Yes, we will comply with regulations. And yes, we will still find ways to responsibly use data to improve how we serve people.

Most regulatory frameworks ultimately point back to the same underlying security standards, often those put forth by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. So while it’s harder, it’s not unknowable. The bigger obstacle is organizational courage and the willingness to do the hard work of building proper governance.

Playing the Long Game

Here’s where I’m going to talk out of both sides of my mouth, because I think we have to hold two truths at once.

First, what data are we actually protecting? Historically, no one really envisioned the secondary use of the data being collected. In healthcare, especially, data existed to support transactional and clinical needs. You had to bill correctly. A physician needed to know what happened at the last visit. That was the core purpose.

What we’re realizing now is that this same data has enormous downstream potential to influence health outcomes. But these outcomes also operate on very long-term horizons. The characteristic timeframe for influence can be decades.

That means organizations have to think differently. You need to be extremely thoughtful about what data you collect and why you collect it. It should have a clear purpose and a clear rationale for being maintained.

At the same time, technology is a moving target. There may be things we can do with this data in 10 or 20 years that we cannot imagine today, and those insights may align perfectly with those long health timelines.

So the challenge is holding both truths at once: Be intentional and disciplined about data collection, while recognizing that responsible stewardship today can unlock powerful future value tomorrow.

A Technical Solution to a Trust Problem

There is an emerging approach that actually points the way forward. Historically, organizations would hand over large datasets to researchers or partners and hope their controls were sufficient. That introduces real risk, and it’s one reason legal teams default to “no.”

Instead of moving data to people, we’re increasingly bringing people to the data. Secure, virtual data environments allow researchers to analyze sensitive data where it lives, using familiar tools, without ever taking custody of the raw data.

This addresses both the legal risk and the trust gap. It enables insight while maintaining control. And it changes the calculus for organizations that have been sitting on valuable data, afraid to use it.

Organizations that get this right build trust not by limiting insight, but by designing systems that enable insight safely, transparently, and with clear accountability.

The Stakes

Every industry is facing some version of this challenge: the tension between data’s value and data’s risk. And every organization has lawyers whose job is to minimize liability.

But in healthcare, the stakes are literally life and death. When we fail to use data that could prevent disease, reduce suffering, or catch problems early, people get hurt. When we fail to combine social determinants data with clinical data because it’s “too complex,” we miss the opportunity to address health inequities at their root.

The regulatory environment isn’t going to get simpler. AI is going to make these questions more urgent, not less. And with healthcare costs rising at the fastest rate in 15 years, advanced data analytics could bend that curve. But only if we’re brave enough to use it.

About John Roach

John Roach is President at Resultant, a data and technology consultancy. John started Resultant’s data analytics practice in 2013, which laid the groundwork for capabilities that extend to nearly every client engagement today.  Resultant specializes in data solutions for healthcare organizations across sectors, including Retina Consultants of America (acquired by Cencora), Children’s Hospital Association, and the Indiana Department of Health and Human Services.



< + > Cresora Commerce Launches with Over $4M in Funding | Worki Raises $2.75 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.


Cresora Commerce Launches with Over $4M in Funding to Redefine AI-Driven Commerce Infrastructure

Backed by Nashville Capital Network and Private Investors, Cresora Targets Healthcare First with Expansion Across Industries

Cresora Commerce (Cresora), an AI-native commerce infrastructure platform, today announced its official launch alongside the successful close of its initial funding round totaling more than $4 million. The round includes participation from Nashville Capital Network (NCN) and a group of private investors, with the deal finalized in early 2026.

Headquartered in Nashville, Cresora enters the market at a critical inflection point as enterprise organizations face mounting complexity across payments, reconciliation, and financial workflows—while simultaneously confronting a once-in-a-generation opportunity to streamline operations through AI. Cresora is part of a new class of AI-native platforms purpose-built to dismantle entrenched silos and eliminate inefficiencies in transaction processing, delivering a level of flexibility, intelligence, and speed to market that legacy systems were never designed to support.

Cresora was founded by experienced operators with deep expertise in healthcare tech, payments, and financial infrastructure. The leadership team includes co-founders and other executives who previously built and scaled AxiaMed, a healthcare payments platform acquired by Bank of America in April 2021.

“We have years of experience inside the traditional payment ecosystem, where we saw firsthand how outdated technology, rigid business models, and inflexibility create unnecessary friction for consumers, merchants, and the vertical software companies that support them,” said Kevin Kidd, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer at Cresora Commerce. “With the rapid rise of AI and the shift toward an agentic economy, a fresh, nimble approach is now essential. That’s why we created Cresora — to empower business organizations and the vertical software providers they rely on with modern commerce solutions that harness AI-driven efficiencies, improve profitability, streamline workflows, and automate operations and compliance.”

While traditional payment solutions focus on transaction execution, Cresora is designed with a unified orchestration layer that sits between payers and payees—managing the full lifecycle from transaction initiation through settlement, reconciliation, and reporting…

Full release here, originally announced April 21st, 2026.


Worki Raises $2.75 Million to Build the AI Workforce Unifying Infrastructure Layer for Healthcare Workforce Operations

Backed by Redesign Health and Healthliant Ventures, Worki is Building the Connective Layer to Help Health Systems Implement AI, Reduce Administrative Burden, and Navigate Growing Workforce Anxiety

  • Funding Round Led by Redesign Health and Healthliant Ventures Validates Worki’s Approach to Modernizing Healthcare Workforce and HR Operations with its AI Platform
  • Worki Unifies Fragmented Workforce Systems into a Single Job Architecture and Data Context Layer, with Built-In Audit and Governance Powered by AI Agents Throughout the Data Standardization Process; Once Established, Worki Deploys AI Agents that Amplify Existing Workforce Roles with People in the Middle, Accelerating ERP Readiness, Post-Merger System Unification, and Reducing Administrative Burden Across Each Effort
  • The Company’s Task-Role Architecture Creates an Actionable Roadmap that Gives Health System Leaders Visibility into How Work is Performed at the Task Level, Where AI can be Introduced, and What it Means for their Workforce, Replacing Guesswork with Operational Clarity
  • Early Health System Partners Project Millions in First-Year Savings, with Additional Gains as Adoption Scales

Worki, a healthcare workforce infrastructure company, today announced it has raised $2.75 million in pre-seed funding led by Redesign Health, a healthcare venture builder, and Healthliant Ventures, Tanner Health’s venture arm, to help health systems reduce administrative overhead and navigate the shift to AI-driven operations.

Health systems are moving past AI experiments and into real implementation, but many are still figuring out where they’re headed, all while trying to modernize how they operate and reassure their teams about what this means for their jobs. Worki addresses this by providing an infrastructure layer that connects workforce systems and enables AI to be deployed across real roles and workflows, with humans remaining at the center of all tasks.

The investment from Redesign Health and Healthliant reflects growing demand for solutions that bring structure to a fragmented landscape, giving leaders visibility into how work is performed and a way to introduce AI without disrupting their workforce. Early deployments have already shown measurable impact, with health system partners reducing administrative burden and projecting meaningful cost savings as adoption scales.

Central to Worki’s approach is a task-role architecture that maps how work is performed across healthcare administrative and operational functions. This structured mapping creates an actionable contextual layer, a roadmap that identifies precisely where AI agents can augment, automate, or streamline specific tasks within existing roles. Rather than deploying AI broadly and hoping for adoption, the contextual layer provides each agent with the granular intelligence it needs to operate within the boundaries of real workflows…

Full release here, originally announced April 16th, 2026.



Sunday, April 26, 2026

< + > Bonus Features – April 26, 2026 – 27% of healthcare orgs deploying AI across multiple functions, 56% of orgs believe operational and technology investment will stabilize finances, plus 29 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.

Reports

Products

Implementations

Company News

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.


#healthcare



< + > MediQuant Reduces Cyber Exposure, Tech Footprint, and Costs with Application Rationalization

Over the decades, IT systems proliferate at health care systems, particularly when individual departments install solutions optimized for th...