Health & Human Services
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Public agencies use software from Libera for vocational rehabilitation. CiviCore, once part of Neon One, has government clients that include courts, schools and health and human services departments.
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The state Department of Commerce’s Office of Artificial Intelligence Policy is working with an AI-powered health platform to support faster prescription renewals for state residents with chronic conditions.
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Cloud wins CJIS approval in Texas; Alabama implements hybrid cloud for HIX and Medicaid eligibility.
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The decision makes it official that Oregon will transition away from using the Oracle systems that it spent $240 million in federal funds to obtain and build.
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Instruction from the Center for Domestic Preparedness includes training for structural collapse, foodborne illness, explosions and chemical warfare.
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The bill that would guarantee future funding for the exchange didn't get a full vote in the House before the session ended, effectively killing the measure for the year.
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The health secretary of Maryland, the only state yet to adopt another state's technology, details the switch that led to a successful second-year launch after an initial glitch-ridden rollout.
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A surge in health insurer competition appears to be helping restrain premium increases in hundreds of counties next year, with prices dropping in many places where newcomers are offering the least expensive plans, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis.
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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services creates new lab to test startup techniques with federal health and safety services.
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As enrollment expands dramatically under the Affordable Care Act, the states' aging technology systems are under increasing pressure. There's a way to give them new life.
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In-home telemonitoring devices, mobile apps and wearable devices can tell a long-distance caregiver whether a relative has opened the refrigerator, as well as send out medication reminders and monitor someone’s health.
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Insurance companies and hospitals have begun working together to squeeze costs from the American medical system before a generation of baby boomers hits its peak years of health care consumption.
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Nearly a dozen researchers at the university collected almost 160,000 tweets containing the keyword “flu” from 11 U.S. cities.
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The site was supposed to be opened to the public Wednesday, but after two days of limited access through an enrollment fair, officials were confident enough to launch more widely.
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Governing magazine honored nine individuals for their continued commitment to public service, their remarkable leadership and their innovation -- with Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and Kentucky Kynect's Carrie Banahan and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter among them.
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The phones will allow relief workers to collect data in the field and transmit it back to the United Nations so that aid can be sent where it is needed most.
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Despite this year’s far smoother opening, the enrollment process continues to face plenty of uncertainties, including the response of a confused and still uninformed public.
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