Friday, May 8, 2026

< + > Canadian Healthcare Humor – Fun Friday

Happy Friday everyone!  You made it through another week.  We hope you had an amazing week and you’re ready for a great weekend.  If it’s Friday, then you know it’s time for another edition of Fun Friday where we look to entertain you and maybe educate you a bit at the same time.

This week’s Fun Friday is a bit of satire about the Canadian healthcare system.  If you listen to the Healthcare IT Today podcast, then you’ve probably heard Colin and I compare the US healthcare system to Canada in many episodes.  As you’d expect, there are pros and cons to every system.  I’m sure this points out some of the cons, but it’s pretty funny.

Full Disclosure: We love our Canadian healthcare friends starting with Colin and Brittany on the Healthcare IT Today team.

Thanks to everyone for supporting Healthcare IT Today.  We’ll be back next week with more great healthcare IT content.  Have a great weekend!



< + > How AI is Replacing the Microsoft Word Protocol – Life Sciences Today Podcast Episode 60

We’re excited to be back for another episode of the Life Sciences Today Podcast by Healthcare IT Today. My guest today is Scott Chetham, Co-Founder and CEO at Faro Health. In this episode, I sit down with Chetham to explore why the clinical trial industry is still designing $100M+ studies in Microsoft Word — and what’s finally being done about it. Chetham shares his journey from the Gold Coast of Australia to the heart of San Diego’s biotech scene, and how two decades of hands-on clinical development experience led him to build an AI platform that can do in 60 minutes what previously took five experts three weeks.

From a published Merck study showing $130M in cost avoidance to becoming the first company to automate study builds directly into Veeva, Faro Health is quietly becoming the backbone of protocol design for 6 of the top 10 pharma companies. We also dig into the future of vertical integration in drug development — from molecule discovery all the way through automated clinical monitoring.

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

  • What is an Australian doing in the US, working in clinical development? How did that happen?
  • Tell us what you’re doing at Faro Health.
  • Who are your sponsors, and how do you create value for them?
  • How do you capture value? What is your business model?
  • What’s your superpower?
  • What are three things you want to do for your sponsors in 2026?
  • I’ve been thinking about vertical integration, on and off, for the past ten years. How great would that be?
  • What is the biggest anti-pattern in the 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!



< + > The Speed of Trust: Why Healthcare IT is Failing the “Midnight User”

The following is a guest article by Lineo Chale, Health Information Manager at Perkily

In the rush to digitize healthcare, the industry has fallen into a “complexity trap.” We frequently celebrate the launch of robust platforms capable of managing everything from electronic records to wellness tracking, yet we often overlook the most critical metric of all: the time-to-value for a concerned user. When a health question arises in the middle of the night, a user isn’t looking for a “comprehensive digital ecosystem.” They are looking for a bridge between their symptoms and a credible, immediate solution.

The Psychology of the Search Bar

The reason most digital health tools struggle with long-term retention isn’t a lack of engineering; it’s a failure to compete with the simplicity of a search bar. When professional tools feel like a chore to navigate, buried behind multi-step registrations or cluttered dashboards, users default to general search engines.

This creates a dangerous feedback loop. Search algorithms are optimized for engagement and clicks, not clinical validity. For the average person, a simple search for a persistent symptom doesn’t lead to evidence-based advice; it leads to a rabbit hole of worst-case scenarios and unverified anecdotes. This “Dr. Google” effect places an immense burden on the healthcare system, as clinicians must spend valuable consultation time undoing the misinformation their patients gathered online.

Closing the 17-Year Knowledge Gap

The challenge isn’t limited to patients. The medical community faces a staggering “evidence lag”—the reality that it takes nearly two decades for breakthrough clinical research to become standard bedside practice. This gap exists because the latest peer-reviewed data is often buried in fragmented journals or locked behind paywalls, making it inaccessible during the high-pressure moments of care.

To solve this, we must move away from “feature-heavy” apps and toward specialized decision-support tools. This is where the intersection of AI and evidence-based medicine becomes transformative.

The Evolution of Clinical Decision Support

Modern healthcare IT must prioritize tools like AskFleming that are calibrated for clinical reasoning rather than surface-level summaries. By pulling directly from PubMed, clinical trials, and systematic reviews, these platforms can surface the specific level of evidence behind every answer in seconds.

When we integrate these referenced answers at the point of care, we empower both the provider and the patient. Instead of a clinician navigating “40 open tabs” to verify a protocol, they can access cited research instantly. Instead of a parent spiraling into anxiety over an unverified blog post, they can access information grounded in peer-reviewed reality.

Building for Utility, Not Just Presence

The future of healthcare IT isn’t about who has the most features; it’s about who provides the most clarity. We need to build tools that respect the user’s time and the gravity of their questions.

If we want to see real retention and clinical impact, we must start building for the “midnight moment”—the high-stakes, high-stress window where a user needs an answer they can actually act on. By shortening the distance between the laboratory and the living room, we don’t just build better apps; we build a more informed, safer healthcare system.

About Lineo Chale

Lineo Chale is a Health Information Manager at Perkily. She specializes in digital health and healthcare IT, focusing on using AI to simplify complex health decision-making for patients and clinicians alike. She is passionate about closing the gap between clinical research and everyday patient care. You can connect with her on LinkedIn.



< + > AcuityMD Raises $80M | Almanac Health Raises $10 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.


AcuityMD Raises $80M for AI Augmentation to Medtech Sales Platform

AcuityMD has raised $80M to advance its provision for assisting medtech companies in accelerating the adoption of their products across healthcare settings and geographic markets.

The Boston-based company’s Series C financing round was led by existing investor StepStone Group. VC firms Benchmark, Redpoint Ventures, ICONIQ, and Atreides Management also participated.

Used by 16 of the top 20 medtech companies, AcuityMD’s platform identifies metrics including physicians, facilities, networks, procedures, and reimbursement dynamics. Aggregating this data alongside medtech companies’ internal data, including contracting information, product indications, territory structure, and CRM activity, companies can better estimate commercial execution and reach the right end markets for their products.

With the fresh funding in hand, which brings AcuityMD’s total funding to date to over $160m, the company plans to augment its existing platform with artificial intelligence (AI) with the launch of AcuityAI. According to AcuityMD, its AI platform’s overall aim is to avail medtech company sales representatives with more streamlined insights.

As well as advancing its AI capabilities, AcuityMD also intends to use the funding towards deepening the medtech ontology of its data model, and to expand the platform beyond commercial pursuits, with a view to accelerating adoption across the full product lifecycle.

AcuityMD CEO, Mike Monovoukas, commented, “AI will transform medtech, but only with the right context, deeply embedded in the workflows where decisions are made. AcuityMD is that context layer, serving the rep in the field, the commercial leader planning territories, and the teams launching the next generation of innovation.”

AI is having an appreciable impact on driving efficiencies in the broader healthcare space…

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


Almanac Health Raises $10 Million to Empower Clinicians Across Specialties with Safe, Research-Validated Clinical AI

Seed Round Led by F-Prime, with Participation from General Catalyst and Lightspeed Venture Partners; General Catalyst Previously Led the Pre-Seed Round

Almanac Health, a research-validated clinical AI platform and evidence-based clinical decision support company founded by physician-researcher Cyril Zakka, MD, whose work at Stanford introduced retrieval-augmented generation to clinical medicine, has raised $10 million in a seed round led by F-Prime, with participation from General Catalyst and Lightspeed Venture Partners. General Catalyst previously led the company’s pre-seed round with participation from Soma Capital. This financing brings Almanac Health’s total funding to nearly $12 million and will accelerate the company’s mission to bring safe, evidence-grounded AI to clinicians and health systems.

Almanac Health is a unified clinical AI platform for clinical decision support that brings specialist-grade knowledge to every clinician at the point of care. It is designed to work within existing electronic health record (EHR) systems, governed by institutional controls, and grounded in peer-reviewed evidence. The platform is currently undergoing rigorous clinical validation in academic medical center settings.

“There is no shortage of technologies promising to transform medicine. But few are grounded in real evidence, built with integrity, and deserving of trust from the people and organizations using them. Almanac Health’s goal is to build clinical AI held to that standard. Validated through research, with incentives aligned with clinicians and patients. We’re focused on getting that right,” said Cyril Zakka, MD, Founder and CEO at Almanac Health.

Cyril Zakka, MD, has worked at the intersection of medicine and AI across clinical practice, academic research, and industry. After earning his MD, he went on to conduct machine learning research at Stanford, where he developed the first retrieval-augmented generation system for clinical medicine, an approach to grounding AI in trusted medical knowledge that has since been widely adopted across clinical AI. That work, published in NEJM AI, became one of the journal’s most-cited papers and established the foundational approach used by most clinical evidence AI products today. He subsequently led health AI at Hugging Face, the largest open-source AI platform, before founding Almanac Health.

“Cyril is one of the rare founders who has both the clinical training and the technical depth to build AI that clinicians will actually trust, as well as the discipline to validate it before deploying it. Almanac Health represents what we believe the next generation of healthcare AI should look like: grounded in research, governed by institutions, and built with incentives that put clinicians and patients first,” said Carl Byers, Partner at F-Prime.

The funding will allow the company to grow its team across clinical medicine…

Full release here, originally announced April 23rd, 2026.



Thursday, May 7, 2026

< + > New Smart Data Archiving Features at MediQuant

MediQuant is a data migration and health data archiving company for hospitals, health systems and medical practices. It offers healthcare organizations the opportunity to retire legacy applications while maintaining compliance needs.  Plus, they keep important metainformation about the healthcare data so that the archive can be searched and data can be retrieved quickly. In a recent interview with Mike McGuire, Senior Vice President of Product Strategy, we dive into the wide variety of new products and features that MediQuant announced leading into the HIMSS conference.

For example, they can now create patient summaries from an organization’s full health data archive so that a doctor can see the most salient facts about a patient before a visit, without spending a lengthy time looking through all the archived health data. MediQuant also uses AI to retrieve health information from unstructured data, which they call “non-discrete” data. They also are working to provide different kinds of summaries for different medical specialties so the information is user specific.  If a clinician wants to see more details, the summaries provide a link back into the archived record for each piece of data.

Some of their other new features include support for DICOM images and revenue cycle data.  Often healthcare organizations need to archive DICOM images from legacy systems that can’t be put in their PACS.  MediQuant archives them to allow these images to be retrieved and compared to more recent imaging.  Plus, they provide those DICOM images in a lossless format so that all detail is present. Patient accounting data can also be stored in MediQuant’s DataArk archive.  This is done in a format where the healthcare organization can continue working on this data even from the archive.

The MediQuant interface makes it easy to see how old data is, how much it’s being used, and whether it’s old enough to be deleted according to regulations.  This is a powerful feature that helps healthcare organizations address risk and cost.

Another new feature is ApplicationArk, which aids application rationalization by indicating the state of each application: whether it’s in active use, just being viewed, etc.  Application rationalization has become an important effort in most provider organizations.  This tool gives them some structure to assess which applications they have in their organization and the state of each application.

If you want to see some of the great new features that MediQuant is rolling out to their customers and how health data archiving is moving past a static archive, you’ll enjoy this interview with Mike McGuire from MediQuant.

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

Listen and subscribe to the Healthcare IT Today Interviews Podcast to hear all the latest insights from experts in healthcare IT.

And for an exclusive look at our top stories, subscribe to our newsletter and YouTube.

Tell us what you think. Contact us here or on Twitter at @hcitoday. And if you’re interested in advertising with us, check out our various advertising packages and request our Media Kit.

MediQuant is a proud sponsor of Healthcare Scene.



< + > From Visibility to Automation: The Next Evolution of RTLS in Healthcare

The following is a guest article by HT Snowday, Senior Director at Midmark RTLS 

A charge nurse trying to determine which patients are ready to move. A nurse searching for an available IV pump. A clinician navigating multiple systems to piece together what’s happening in real time.

In each of these moments, outcomes don’t just depend on access to information; they depend on how quickly that information turns into action.

Healthcare is undergoing a fundamental shift in how technology is used at the point of care. Artificial intelligence is accelerating decision-making. Real-time data is becoming more accessible. And yet, many systems still rely on clinicians and staff to log in, navigate, interpret and act.

That model is starting to break.

One of the most significant changes happening in healthcare technology isn’t just AI itself, it’s how AI agents are redefining the interface. Instead of dashboards and reports, clinicians receive real-time, contextual guidance embedded directly into their workflows.

When that happens, the value of software shifts from a point-solution interface to the quality, accessibility and immediacy of the data powering it.

Agent-enabled RTLS sits at the center of that shift.

This article explores how RTLS is evolving from a visibility tool into a foundational layer for automation, and why that evolution is critical to reducing friction in care delivery.

RTLS is More than the Map  

It’s time to start thinking about RTLS as more than a point solution, more than a tracking tool.

The RTLS map is just the interface. The real value is in what location data enables: automation of manual tasks, location-aware safety alerts and operational insights that clinicians and administrators can act on immediately.

When viewed this way, it becomes clear that visibility alone is only the first step. The real opportunity is to use that data to drive action, without requiring clinicians or staff to go looking for it.

The Breaking Point: Caregiver Reality 

Care delivery has changed significantly over the last decade. Patients are arriving sicker. The number of devices in each room has increased. Documentation requirements continue to expand. And clinicians are managing a constant stream of interruptions and alerts.

At the same time, something as simple as finding equipment still consumes a meaningful portion of a shift, often 20 to 60 minutes per nurse, per day.

Caregivers don’t need another system to log into. They need fewer steps to complete routine work.

The Interface Is Changing: From Software to Agents 

One of the most significant shifts in healthcare IT is how AI agents are redefining the interface.

Today, RTLS and most healthcare technologies are delivered as point solutions. Users log in, navigate dashboards or lists of data, interpret what they see and decide what to do next.

That model doesn’t scale.

A new model is emerging where the interface becomes the agent itself. Instead of navigating systems, clinicians interact through natural language or receive real-time guidance embedded directly into their workflows.

Instead of logging in and looking for data they need, clinicians simply ask:

  • “Where’s the nearest available IV pump?”
  • “Which patients are ready to move?”
  • “Is there a room available in the ED?”

Or increasingly, they don’t ask at all, because the system tells them.

The real shift isn’t just AI generating insights: it’s agents acting in real time. It’s the difference between informing decisions and executing them.

This shift changes the role of RTLS entirely. It moves from being a standalone application to becoming a critical data layer that feeds real-time, contextual decision-making across systems.

From Insight to Action: Where AI Is Already Making an Impact 

AI’s first impact in RTLS has been making data easier to access.

What once required reports, filters or analysts can now be handled through simple, conversational queries. Staff can get immediate answers to operational questions, and leaders can surface insights that were previously buried in data.

But the more meaningful shift is happening beyond insight.

The healthcare data evolution we’re seeing is:

Visibility → Insight → Action → Automation

RTLS-driven workflows are already pointing in this direction:

  • Alarm systems suppressing alerts when staff are already present
  • EMR updates happening in real time as patients move through care settings
  • Equipment located instantly and tracked for utilization

These are early examples of automation where location data triggers an outcome without manual input.

AI accelerates this progression by removing the final barrier: execution. Instead of navigating multiple systems to complete tasks, staff can rely on agents to handle them, whether that’s locating equipment, assigning resources or triggering workflows.

Why Context Matters More Than Location 

For AI-driven workflows to be effective, raw location data isn’t enough.

Context is what makes location meaningful.

It’s not just: Where is the IV pump?
It’s:

  • Is it available?
  • Is it clean?
  • Is it already assigned?
  • Is it appropriate for this patient?

RTLS, when implemented correctly, connects location to workflow, status and intent. That’s what allows systems (and eventually AI agents) to move from answering questions to making decisions.

Without that context, automation breaks down. With it, RTLS becomes a critical enabler of intelligent operations.

The Hybrid Future: Scale + Precision 

While AI is increasing the value and role of software overall, RTLS itself is evolving.

Historically, when it came to RTLS, healthcare organizations had to choose between scale and precision (broad visibility across a facility or highly accurate, room-level certainty in specific areas).

That tradeoff is disappearing.

hybrid RTLS approach is emerging, combining Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) technology for enterprise-wide visibility with infrared technology for clinical-grade, room- and bed-level accuracy where it matters most.

This model allows organizations to:

  • Deploy scalable tracking across the entire environment
  • Enable staff safety and asset visibility at scale
  • Layer in precision only where workflows depend on it

In practice, this eliminates the need to compromise between “find it fast” and “know exactly where it is.”

More importantly, it creates the foundation required for automation. Because while broad visibility enables awareness, precision enables action.

The Strategic Shift: Agent Enablement vs. Agent Ownership 

As AI adoption accelerates, many vendors are racing to build proprietary agents.

But that approach introduces risk.

AI is evolving too quickly to lock into a single agent or execution model. More importantly, it fragments the ecosystem, forcing healthcare organizations to manage multiple agents across disconnected systems.

A more sustainable approach is emerging—agent enablement.

Instead of owning the agent, we see an opportunity for RTLS platforms to enable any agent to interact with their data and workflows. That means:

  • Structuring data so it’s usable and contextual
  • Building connectors that allow external agents to access and act on that data
  • Supporting enterprise AI environments where agents can reason across systems

Healthcare organizations are already moving toward enterprise-wide AI strategies. The systems that will succeed are the ones that integrate rather than isolate.

From Visibility to Automation 

When you bring these shifts together, the trajectory becomes clear.

RTLS is evolving from a tracking tool to an operational intelligence layer, and ultimately, to an automation engine. AI agents accelerate that evolution by closing the gap between insight and action, turning real-time data into real-time decisions.

But the foundation remains unchanged:

  • High-quality, integrated data
  • Systems that work together
  • A strategy built for flexibility and scale, not data siloes

Because ultimately, this transformation isn’t about RTLS or AI.

It’s about reducing friction in care delivery. Fewer clicks. Less time spent searching. More time focused on patients.

Visibility made progress possible.

Automation is what’s next.

About HT Snowday 

HT Snowday is Senior Director at Midmark RTLS, where he focuses on advancing the role of real-time location systems as a foundational layer for intelligent healthcare operations. With deep expertise in healthcare technology, data strategy and workflow optimization, he is particularly focused on how artificial intelligence and agent-driven systems can transform real-time data into automated action at the point of care. Snowday works closely with health systems to align emerging technologies with clinical and operational needs, helping organizations reduce friction, improve efficiency and enable more responsive, data-driven care delivery.

Midmark RTLS is a proud sponsor of Healthcare Scene.



< + > ŌURA Welcomes Galen AI Team, Acquires Technology | IKS Health Announces Agreement to Acquire TruBridge

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.


ŌURA Welcomes Galen AI Team, Acquires Technology to Advance Connected Health AI Roadmap

To advance its vision to bridge clinical care and connected, personalized health technology, ŌURA is excited to welcome Galen AI to its team. Founded in 2025 by Stanford computer science graduates, Galen AI is an AI-powered personal health companion that brings together medical records, labs, medications, and wearable data into one secure, unified platform. Oura will acquire Galen AI’s technology and bring its team to Oura to help accelerate Oura’s AI-powered vision for a connected health companion.

“As we shape the next era of Oura, we’re investing in world-class talent to help us push the boundaries of what AI can do for personal health,” said Tom Hale, CEO at ŌURA. “Galen AI’s founders bring a rare combination of health domain knowledge, AI expertise, and product vision, strengthening our ability to deliver more personalized, more meaningful health insights to more people.”

Investing at the Intersection of AI and Health

Most people still experience their health information in silos: test results in one portal, visit notes in another, prescriptions in a third, and day-to-day patterns captured by wearables. That fragmentation makes it harder to see the full picture, understand what’s changing, or know what to do next. Solving that challenge requires not just great technology, but people who deeply understand the problem.

By bringing Galen AI’s team and their cutting-edge AI infrastructure into Oura, the company is accelerating its ability to connect those dots. The team’s experience unifying longitudinal health data across tens of thousands of healthcare systems and labs and developing AI-powered insights at the intersection of various modalities of health data will help Oura continue to design experiences where clinical data and continuous biometric signals work together, creating clearer, more contextual health insights for Oura Members.

“We started Galen AI to help people make sense of fragmented health data and turn it into meaningful, everyday action,” said Viraj Mehta, Co-Founder of Galen AI…

Full release here, originally announced April 17th, 2026.


IKS Health Announces Agreement to Acquire TruBridge to Strengthen Access to Rural and Community-Based Healthcare

Inventurus Knowledge Solutions, Inc. (IKS), the U.S. subsidiary of Inventurus Knowledge Solutions Limited (IKS Health), a global leader in care enablement solutions, today announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire TruBridge, Inc. (TruBridge), a prominent provider of healthcare technology solutions for rural and community hospitals. This proposed strategic acquisition underscores a commitment to broaden access to high-quality care and support the clinicians and hospitals that serve communities across the United States.

Today, nearly one in five Americans face challenges accessing care. By bringing together IKS Health’s comprehensive care enablement capabilities that serve a range of healthcare organizations with TruBridge’s deep expertise in supporting rural and community hospitals through revenue cycle management and electronic health record (EHR) solutions, the combined healthcare technology company is expected to strengthen local healthcare systems, and enable patients to receive essential care closer to home while also enhancing care delivery across the ambulatory and acute care continuum.

Post closing, the combined company will deliver continuous improvement and connected workflows to the core of rural healthcare and to medical groups overall, combining agentic artificial intelligence (AI) with human-in-the-loop expertise to proactively address complex operational challenges. As the platform incorporates a broader range of clinical and financial data, it is designed to become increasingly intelligent and efficient. This growing intelligence, reinforced by human insight, is anticipated to ensure community hospitals and medical groups have the financial resilience and advanced support needed to focus on the health of their patients.

“By welcoming TruBridge, IKS Health is extending its proven, clinician-first experience to the vital rural and community hospital market,” said Sachin K. Gupta, Founder and Global CEO at IKS Health. “This new entity supports our long-term vision of building a comprehensive care ecosystem for all types of healthcare organizations. By pairing TruBridge’s essential system of record with our AI-driven system of action, we are moving beyond simply recording data to actively solving the complex operational challenges facing providers today. The combined entity will work toward ensuring community care teams have the same access to advanced technology and financial resilience, enabling them to deliver exceptional care close to home.”

Together, the organization will bring modern revenue cycle management, predictive analytics, and advanced EHR capabilities to support more than 2,000 healthcare organizations and over 150,000 clinicians with a broad portfolio of AI-driven and human-led solutions designed to improve clinical, operational, and financial excellence.

“I am excited for TruBridge and IKS Health to combine forces and expand the focus on strengthening rural and community healthcare,” said Chris Fowler, President and CEO at TruBridge…

Full release here, originally announced April 23rd, 2026.



< + > Canadian Healthcare Humor – Fun Friday

Happy Friday everyone!  You made it through another week.  We hope you had an amazing week and you’re ready for a great weekend.  If it’s Fr...