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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Lawmakers want to create an electronic system to monitor who is being prescribed potentially addictive drugs, but critics are concerned with privacy risks.
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Grant funds to rural providers for electronic health records are now exhausted and without further support from state government, the movement toward full exchange implementation will be stalled.
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Federal probe of the only exchange in the country to not enroll anyone electronically.
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Still "a ways to go" before big test March 31 when open enrollment ends.
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Delays mounted as the state tried to build a "an absolute Rolls Royce" health exchange.
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An additional $33 million is required to fix the website and triple the staff is needed to help the public sign up.
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Medical-related identity theft accounted for 43 percent of all identity thefts reported in the United States in 2013.
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Data mining and predictive analytics will make social service agencies more effective.
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A consulting group’s report identified major blunders in the development of the costly health insurance gateway.
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Several startups see potential in the technology to heal wounds and save lives.
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Lima took a donated bus from the regional transit authority, gutted it and rebuilt it with food racks and sales system that allows people to use credit cards or food stamps to purchase locally grown produce.
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Four of the 17 states running their own insurance marketplaces lost their health exchange directors in the last few months.
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Consumer-oriented information such as the costs of various procedures at each hospital will be in the next wave of data added to the website.
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The Houston Department of Health and Human Services is taking an approach that mirrors how the Federal Emergency Management Agency might react to a catastrophe.
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For those who sign up for care, he says there's nothing consumers can do to protect themselves.
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