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Friday, November 15, 2019

eHealth news, feeds, business and intelligence sources

There is a lot of information about ehealth and health informatics. I am not talking specifically about academic research journals - that is a whole other sort of information. Sometimes it is difficult to sort out information about healthcare in general from information that is specific to ehealth, as both are so intertwined. I have been following ehealth news sources for over a decade. My inner ehealth journalist would feed on these sources for material - as would a blogger.

Here are "some" of the main sources of information that I have been receiving:

1. Blogs
2. Healthcare Technology Newsletters
3. Health Informatics Association Newsletters
4. Twitter and Facebook
5. Google News
6. Journal subscriptions
7. Business Intelligence

Blogs
Healthcare Technology Newsletters

Health Informatics Association Newsletters
Twitter and Facebook
Business Intelligence
Google News
  • Set a search criteria on "Health Informatics" in favourites



Thursday, November 14, 2019

CB Insights - Digital Health 150: The Digital Health Startups Redefining The Healthcare Industry

I have been trying to follow all the news from CB Insights: Technology Market Intelligence. They have extremely rich information on digital health. Here is a sample or intro:
https://www.cbinsights.com/research/

The most promising 150 private digital health startups working to transform the healthcare industry with new models of primary care to emerging tech solutions for providers.

CB Insights’ first ever annual cohort of Digital Health 150 startups is a list of 150 of the most promising private companies creating innovative products and services in the $5T+ healthcare industry, according to CB Insights’ Industry Analyst Consensus.
Our research team selected the 150 startups from a pool of 5K+ companies based on several factors, including patent activity, investor profile, news sentiment analysis, proprietary Mosaic scores, market potential, partnerships, competitive landscape, team strength, and tech novelty.
For the purposes of this report, digital health is defined as companies in the healthcare space that use technology/software as a key differentiator from their competition. This includes everything from disease diagnostics to tech-driven health insurance platforms to AI tools for drug discovery, and more.
Startups are categorized by their main focus areas. Categories in the market map below are not mutually exclusive.
Please click to enlarge.

Table of contents

150 startups in different stages of R&D

The Digital Health 150 companies span a wide spectrum of categories that involve all three key stakeholder groups for the healthcare industry — providers, payers, and patients.
These companies range from emerging startups to established unicorns (companies with $1B+ valuations). The selected companies represent a mix of startups at different stages of funding and product commercialization.

For example, China-based We Doctor has a valuation of $5.5B and provides primary care services that leverage its tech platforms and provider network.
In contrast, RDMD is an early-stage company specializing in drug discovery efforts for rare diseases. The company plans to aggregate data to help develop treatments for a range of conditions.
A total of 17 companies on the list are unicorns (private companies valued at $1B+). Of these, 12 companies are US-based, 3 are based in China, 1 is based in France, and 1 is based in the UK.
2019 Digital Health 150 Unicorn Startups
Company Category Country
We Doctor Providers: Primary Care China
GRAIL Genomics United States
Oscar Health Insurance & Benefits United States
Tempus Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence United States
GoodRx Pharma Supply Chain United States
23andMe Genomics United States
Babylon Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only) United Kingdom
Devoted Health Insurance & Benefits United States
HeartFlow Diagnostics: Imaging United States
Proteus Digital Health Digital Therapeutics United States
Butterfly Network Diagnostics: Imaging United States
Doctolib Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only) France
Hims Pharma Supply Chain United States
Calm Consumer Health & Wellness United States
LinkDoc Technology Drug R&D: Clinical Trials China
One Medical Group Providers: Primary Care United States
Tencent Trusted Doctors Providers: Primary Care China

Most well-funded companies

The most well-funded companies on the Digital Health 150 list span a broad range of categories. The top-funded company is genomics startup GRAIL, followed by insurance tech player Oscar Health and then China-based We Doctor.

Startups outside the United States

Of the 150 selected digital health startups, 116 are headquartered in the US. Those based outside the US include 17 from Asia, 16 from Europe, and 1 from Canada.

After the US, China is the second most-represented country on this list, with 7 of the selected companies, and Israel is third with 4 companies.

Most active investors

Over 850 unique investors have funded this year’s Digital Health 150 cohort, including corporations, CVCs, VC firms, and angel investors.
Below, we highlight the top 10 most active investors among the companies selected.
Investor Number of deals
F-Prime Capital 31
New Enterprise Associates 30
Google Ventures 29
Venrock 28
Founders Fund 27
Khosla Ventures 27
GE Ventures 22
Social Capital 20
.406 Ventures 19
Andreessen Horowitz 18

Track all the Digital Health 150 Startups in this brief and many more on our platform

The 150 private digital health startups working to recreate how healthcare is delivered. Look for The Digital Health 150 in the Collections tab.
Collections is the first collaborative work management solution purpose-built for corporate growth teams responsible for managing build, buy, or partner decisions.

Themes & trends

Across our 150 selected companies, we identified key themes and trends that highlight their efforts to transform the healthcare industry.
Below, we discuss a selection of these trends across different categories.

Artificial intelligence

Many companies on our list are leveraging AI and machine learning to help develop their respective software platforms.
From consumer health companies to imaging & diagnostics startups, AI is at the forefront of their products and services.
One example here is pathology — an area that AI has begun to transform. For instance, startups such as PathAI and PAIGE.AI are using AI to help speed up patient diagnosis.

Source: PAIGE.AI
AI is also being leveraged through drug discovery & development — accelerating the identification of new targets and therapeutic candidates.
An example here is OWKIN, a startup that develops algorithms to help interpret disease-related data and predict treatment outcomes.

Women’s health

As investments to women’s health startups have increased, we’ve seen startups targeting everything from egg freezing services to emerging tech for managing menopause.
In particular, fertility has gained traction as one of the main area of interest for women.
Startups such as Ava Science (fertility tracking device) and Carrot Fertility (fertility supplemental insurance) are providing novel services that aim to boost accessibility and convenience.
Virtual care clinics such as Maven Clinic are also helping women gain better access to providers that cater specifically to women’s health needs and concerns.

Source: Maven Clinic
Maven raised a $27M Series B round in September 2018 with participating investors including Sequoia Capital and Oak HC/FT Partners, among others.

Senior care

The growing size of the aging population is creating an increased demand for tech that aims to improve their health management.
This includes services targeted at both home care solutions and care coordination between providers.
One example here is ClearCare — a home care platform that aims to facilitate everything from administrative tasks to tracking patient hospitalizations.

Source: ClearCare

Social determinants of health

Population health has been generating a lot of buzz in healthcare. In particular, there’s a growing emphasis on leveraging social determinants of health (SDoH) to generate better health outcomes.
An example here is Unite Us, a New York-based startup working to build care networks that integrate SDoH into how healthcare is delivered.

Source: Unite Us
Its approach is to provide care coordination software that can handle external referrals and track patient outcomes, helping to connect healthcare with social services.

Value-based care

As more healthcare stakeholders look to collaboration to spur innovation in the industry, value-based care has come to the forefront.
In particular, payers and providers have established new care coordination networks to help reduce overall healthcare costs — with the goal of delivering care that provides better value to patients.
An example here is Vim, which provides patients with access to both payers and providers to make it easier to find appropriate care options.

Source: Vim
Vim raised a $24M Series B round in September, with participating investors including Optum Ventures, Premera Blue Cross, and Sequoia Capital, among others.

Concierge medicine

Concierge medicine startups, such as One Medical or Parsley Health, use a membership model to help offer patients an elevated healthcare services experience.
The approach aims to offer faster health visits with providers and more predictable associated costs.

Source: Galileo Health
Recently, Galileo Health — started by the founder of One Medical — launched an app-based concierge medicine platform geared towards providing a comprehensive level of care, including for chronic disease management.
It raised funding from Oak HC/FT Partners in May.

Telehealth

Telehealth services have expanded in recent years to become more differentiated.
Primary care platforms such as Ada Health and 98point6 are helping patients access more tailored care from their smartphones.
For instance, 98point6 offers a subscription on-demand telemedicine platform — touting 24/7 access to board-certified physicians — that’s delivered via a mobile app.

Source: 98point6
The startup raised a $50M Series C in October 2018 from Goldman Sachs and Frazier Healthcare Partners.
Another example is Talkspace, which offers psychotherapy services delivered virtually. It has raised $109M in total disclosed funding from investors including Compound, Norwest Venture Partners, Spark Capital, and SoftBank, among others.
Other companies in this category use remote monitoring technology to supplement virtual care services.

Table of the Digital Health 150 companies

2019 Digital Health 150 Companies
Company Category
Ava Science Consumer Health & Wellness
Calm Consumer Health & Wellness
CarePredict Consumer Health & Wellness
Ciitizen Consumer Health & Wellness
Dreem Consumer Health & Wellness
Headspace Consumer Health & Wellness
higi Consumer Health & Wellness
Oura Health Consumer Health & Wellness
TytoCare Consumer Health & Wellness
Aidoc Medical Diagnostics: Imaging
Arterys Diagnostics: Imaging
Butterfly Network Diagnostics: Imaging
eXo Imaging Diagnostics: Imaging
HeartFlow Diagnostics: Imaging
icometrix Diagnostics: Imaging
IDx Diagnostics: Imaging
Lifetrack Medical Systems Diagnostics: Imaging
Lunit Diagnostics: Imaging
Niramai Diagnostics: Imaging
Viz.ai Diagnostics: Imaging
VoxelCloud Diagnostics: Imaging
Zebra Medical Vision Diagnostics: Imaging
Athelas Diagnostics: Other Diagnostics
Cue Health Diagnostics: Other Diagnostics
Healthy.io Diagnostics: Other Diagnostics
Letsgetchecked Diagnostics: Other Diagnostics
Deep Lens Diagnostics: Pathology
PAIGE.AI Diagnostics: Pathology
PathAI Diagnostics: Pathology
Proscia Diagnostics: Pathology
Akili Interactive Labs Digital Therapeutics
Biofourmis Digital Therapeutics
Cara Care Digital Therapeutics
Click Therapeutics Digital Therapeutics
CureApp Digital Therapeutics
Glooko Digital Therapeutics
Kaia Health Digital Therapeutics
Lark Health Digital Therapeutics
Neurotrack Technologies Digital Therapeutics
Noom Digital Therapeutics
Omada Health Digital Therapeutics
Pear Therapeutics Digital Therapeutics
Pivot Digital Therapeutics
Proteus Digital Health Digital Therapeutics
SWORD Health Digital Therapeutics
Vida Health Digital Therapeutics
Virta Health Digital Therapeutics
Vivante Health Digital Therapeutics
AiCure Drug R&D: Clinical Trials
Emulate Drug R&D: Clinical Trials
LinkDoc Technology Drug R&D: Clinical Trials
Teckro Drug R&D: Clinical Trials
Atomwise Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
Benchling Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
Insitro Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
OWKIN Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
RDMD Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
Recursion Pharmaceuticals Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
Vineti Drug R&D: Drug Discovery & Development
Aetion Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
Evidation Health Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
GNS Healthcare Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
Medbanks Network Technology Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
Syapse Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
Tempus Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
TriNetX Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
Verana Health Drug R&D: Real-World Evidence
23andMe Genomics
Color Genomics Genomics
Freenome Genomics
Genome Medical Genomics
GRAIL Genomics
Luna DNA Genomics
Nebula Genomics Genomics
Sophia Genetics Genomics
Viome Genomics
Accolade Insurance & Benefits
Alan Insurance & Benefits
Beam Dental Insurance & Benefits
Bend Financial Insurance & Benefits
Bright Health Insurance & Benefits
Carrot Fertility Insurance & Benefits
Cedar Insurance & Benefits
Collective Health Insurance & Benefits
Devoted Health Insurance & Benefits
Grand Rounds Insurance & Benefits
LEAGUE Insurance & Benefits
Modern Health Insurance & Benefits
Nomad Health Insurance & Benefits
Oscar Health Insurance & Benefits
Stride Health Insurance & Benefits
GoodRx Pharma Supply Chain
Hims Pharma Supply Chain
Nurx Pharma Supply Chain
Pill Club Pharma Supply Chain
Ro Pharma Supply Chain
TruePill Pharma Supply Chain
ClearCare Providers: Administrative Tools
ClearDATA Providers: Administrative Tools
HealthVerity Providers: Administrative Tools
Human API Providers: Administrative Tools
Jvion Providers: Administrative Tools
Kyruus Providers: Administrative Tools
Notable Providers: Administrative Tools
Olive Providers: Administrative Tools
Protenus Providers: Administrative Tools
Redox Providers: Administrative Tools
Solv Health Providers: Administrative Tools
SYNYI.AI Providers: Administrative Tools
Weimai Providers: Administrative Tools
DocPlanner Providers: Clinical Tools
Gauss Surgical Providers: Clinical Tools
KenSci Providers: Clinical Tools
MDClone Providers: Clinical Tools
MORE Health Providers: Clinical Tools
Oncology Analytics Providers: Clinical Tools
PatientPing Providers: Clinical Tools
Quartet Health Providers: Clinical Tools
Solera Providers: Clinical Tools
Suki Providers: Clinical Tools
Unite Us Providers: Clinical Tools
Welkin Health Providers: Clinical Tools
Vim Providers: Clinical Tools
Cityblock Health Providers: Primary Care
Iora Health Providers: Primary Care
One Medical Providers: Primary Care
Parsley Health Providers: Primary Care
Tencent Trusted Doctors Providers: Primary Care
We Doctor Providers: Primary Care
Galileo Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Halodoc Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
98point6 Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Ada Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
American Well Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Babylon Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Buoy Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Doctolib Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Doctor On Demand Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
K Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Kry Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Lyra Health Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
MDLIVE Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Zava Providers: Primary Care (Virtual-Only)
Cricket Health Providers: Specialty Care
DispatchHealth Providers: Specialty Care
Kindbody Providers: Specialty Care
Xiaolu Yiguan Providers: Specialty Care
AbleTo Providers: Specialty Care (Virtual-Only)
Maven Clinic Providers: Specialty Care (Virtual-Only)
Talkspace Providers: Specialty Care (Virtual-Only)


Licensing and Reuse of Content:
 Contact our official partner, Wrights Media, about available usages, license fees, and award seal artwork at cbinsights@wrightsmedia.com. Please note that Wright’s Media is the only authorized company that we’ve partnered with for CB Insights materials.

Friday, October 25, 2019

Axe the fax

From the Globe and Mail December 2018 Health reporter Andre Picard:
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-the-british-are-axing-the-fax-will-canada-follow-suit/

It’s not often that a seemingly mundane ministerial announcement reduces one to jealous tears, but this one fits the bill.

On Sunday, Matt Hancock, the British health and social care secretary, banned the purchase of facsimile machines by the National Health Service effective Jan. 1, 2019. He also ordered that faxes be phased out completely in hospitals and physicians’ offices by April, 2020.

Oh, but how Canada – a country even more in the poisonous grip of the fax than Britain – could use this common sense initiative.

“We don’t underestimate the enormity of the challenge to remove all our machines in such a short time, but we cannot afford to continue living in the dark ages,” Mr. Hancock said in the release.

Amen.

In July, the Royal College of Surgeons released a report that revealed the NHS, the country’s publicly-funded national healthcare system, had more than 8,000 fax machines in service. A group of hospitals in Newcastle Upon Tyne had a mind-boggling 603 facsimile machines in use.

To cap it all off, the NHS had the dubious distinction of being the largest purchaser of fax machines in the world.

Richard Kerr, chair of the committee that prepared the report called the situation “farcical” and called on government to invest in 21st century technology.
The government actually listened.

In addition to the fax ban, there are two other important aspects of Sunday’s announcement. Come 2020, communication will be by secure e-mail or apps and, just as importantly, all communication technologies will have to meet a standard that ensure that they can talk to each other across organizational boundaries. 

There will also be some additional money for hospitals and physicians to replace their fax machines – £200-million (about $340-million) – in addition to what the NHS is already spending on IT. 

But we do know that the fax machine is still ubiquitous. A 2017 survey found that two-thirds of Canadian physicians use the fax as their primary means of communication with other health care professionals, such as doctors, pharmacists, and hospitals.

So why do we continue to use technology that is almost universally acknowledged to be absurdly outdated?

Some claim that the fax is more secure than alternatives like e-mail. Our privacy rules also consider the fax the safest form of communication. That’s simply not true, especially with readily available encryption. The continued use of fax machines is bad for privacy and bad for patient safety.

A principal reason the fax endures is habit. Change is always slow in the ultra-conservative health system, especially when it costs money.

But the single biggest impediment to banning the fax is that the computer systems and electronic health records that we have are rarely able to communicate with each other. Interoperability has not been a priority and that has left us beholden to largely paper-based technology.

Many will look at what is going on in Britain with envy. But, in true Canadian fashion, we will find countless excuses for not doing the same.

Expect to hear that, because Britain has a centralized national health-care system, ministerial directives are a lot easier to issue and implement. There is some truth to that; Canada’s 14 ministers of health can barely agree on the time of day, so an initiative to ban fax machines may be a stretch.

But we shouldn’t forget that Britain’s “axe the fax” campaign was a grassroots initiative. The College of Surgeons gave the initial push by providing data that generated a lot of media coverage and made it easy for government to act.
There were also hospitals that showed impressive initiative. For example, the Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust committed to eliminating its 340 fax machines within three months, sending a message to others that it was doable.
There is no doubt that fax machines can be eliminated, and they must be, sooner rather than later. The only question is who is going to show leadership? What health care organization, hospital, or politician is going to make axing the fax their legacy and drag Canada out of the dark ages?

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Happy Birthday JMIR: Call for Papers 20th Anniversary Issue

Happy Birthday JMIR: Call for Papers 20th Anniversary Issue

20yr JMIR

Happy Birthday: 20 Years of JMIR

In August 1999 we published the very first issue of the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), pioneering a new type of journal for an emerging field – originally, JMIR's scope was the use of the Internet and related technologies as an enabler and infrastructure for health innovations, although todays' scope of digital medicine or digital health goes well beyond "the Internet", and includes emerging technologies such as 3D printing, games, wearables, and home sensors, etc. (all technologies that would be unthinkable without the Internet as infrastructure foundation). 
The field went through several name changes – what we first called “cybermedicine” was later called “eHealth” (electronic health), then came “cHealth” (connected health), and these days people sometimes use “digital health” or “digital medicine” (despite Twitter length restrictions) – but the underlying ideas remain the same: The use of information and communication technologies and the web helps to empower patients (not least through peer-to-peer communications), provides a platform for communication, clinical information and telemedicine (these days often through mobile devices), and revolutionizes information access and medical education [1]. While most medical informatics journals focused on clinical informatics, hospital IT and electronic health records, JMIR recognized the ubiquitous and pervasive nature of emerging technologies outside of traditional health care settings.  

We were not only innovating on content, but also on form. And as we wrote 20 years ago, “As publishers of a journal about the Internet, we are also dedicated to using and experimenting with the Internet as a medium itself.” [1] – and experimented we have: We were the first open access electronic-only journal in medical informatics or even medicine (pre-dating BioMed Central and PloS), we were the first to mine “tweetations” from Twitter to calculate what is now known as “altmetrics”, we were the first journal offering a fast-track payment option for guaranteed decision making within 3 weeks, we experimented with web archiving cited webpages (WebCite), we were one of the first journals openly crediting reviewers by name (and now rewarding them with Karma credits), we pioneered new ways of knowledge dissemination through social media and cofounded TrendMD, and we continue to experiment with open peer-review, preprints, registered reports and even crowdfunding.

Today, JMIR Publications publishes 30 journals, has a modern Google-like office at Toronto’s waterfront, has a staff of 20, and was just named one of Canada’s top 500 companies.
Four of our journals have an impact factor (ranging from 3.2 to 5), and are ranked among the top 8 medical informatics journals.

20th Anniversary Special Issue – Call for Papers 

To celebrate our milestone and exit from the teenage years, we are preparing a special issue, to be published at the end of 2019. This special issue will consist mainly of invited papers written by leaders in the field, but we are also soliciting papers from the academic community. 
This will be an unusual high-profile issue that will be widely disseminated with press releases and as a special print publication at conferences.
We specifically encourage papers (reviews, viewpoints) that comment on major developments from the past 20 years or provide an outlook on the possibilities or challenges of digital health for the next 20 years. We also welcome high-quality original research or systematic reviews. Possible topics for viewpoint papers or reviews could be “Where will we be in 20 years – what will health care look like in 2039?”, or “What is the biggest achievement or research breakthrough in the past 20 years?”. 
We would like to have the submission by September 15, 2019, although we may be able to make arrangements to extend this deadline. Contributions will be peer-reviewed. 
Potential authors interested in submitting should file a pre-submission enquiry by sending an email with the subject line “20th anniversary article proposal” to ed-support@jmir.org outlining their paper idea (title and abstract). 
All article processing charges will be waived for papers appearing in the 20th Anniversary Issue.

Invited authors (as of August 21, 2019):

Alex Jadad From a digital bottle: A message to our selves in 2039
Enrico Coiera The last mile: The challenge of bringing digital health into real-world settings
Paul Wicks The rise and fall of online patient communities
Bertalan Mesko The art of medicine in the era of artificial intelligence
John Powell Trust me I’m a chatbot: Why AI in healthcare won’t pass the Turing test
Danny Sands Title TBD
Dave DeBronkart Open access as revolution: Knowledge alters power
Susan Michie On the dimensional structure of engagement with digital behaviour change interventions (DBCIs): Psychometric evaluation of the ‘DBCI Engagement Scale’)
Jeremy Wyatt Title TBD
Tricia Greenhalgh Infrastructure revisited: Ethnographic case study and (re)theorisation of the ‘installed base’ of healthcare IT
   
John Torous
A systematic review of smartphone apps for prodromal and early course psychosis and schizophrenia
Beyond impact factor: JMIR's 20 years of engaging and encouraging high-quality digital health research from diverse authors
Bradford Hesse The internet’s role in solving the last mile problem in medicine
Kenneth Mandl TBD
Helen Christensen TBD
Laurie Buis Implementation: The next giant hurdle to clinical transformation
Qing Zeng, Stuart Nelson Will AI translate big data into improved medical care or be a source of confusing intrusion? – A discussion between a physician and a medical informatics researcher
Rita Kukafka Digital health citizens on the road to the future
Renato M.E. Sabbatini Federated intelligence, the internet and medical decision-making
Ricky Leung TBD

   

Call for Video Submissions

Alternatively (or additionally) we are inviting short video messages from researchers, authors, editors, and reviewers, commenting on the impact of JMIR on the field or you personally, or just wishing us happy birthday. We will be accepting video clips recorded by you, but we are also happy to have an interview with you over Skype. If you do not have time to write an article, providing comments in a short video or interview might be a good option. Snippets from the videos will be distributed through our social media channels (such as Twitter and YouTube), and some might even be published in the 20th anniversary theme issue. You can reflect on (or we can interview you) about your own research, or on a topic of your choosing. 

Submit a Quote

As a final option we are soliciting succinct quotes from researchers and the public which we may use in an editorial for the anniversary issue. Authors of these quotes will be credited and we may use their headshots as well.
We are seeking your 1-3 sentence answers to the following questions:

  • What significant developments happened in the past 20 years, e.g. what is the biggest achievement or research breakthrough in the past 20 years?


  • Where will we be in 20 years – what will health care look like in 2039?

If you want to contribute in this part of the anniversary issue, please answer at least one of these questions in this form before Sept 15, 2019.
If you have more to say about this then please consider submitting a full viewpoint article instead (see above).
References

1. Eysenbach G. Welcome to the Journal of Medical Internet Research. J Med Internet Res 1999;1(1):e5; URL: https://www.jmir.org/1999/1/e5 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.1.1.e5.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Infoway - Patient Scholarships at 2019 Partnership Conference - Apply by June 12!

Patient Scholarships at 2019 Partnership Conference — Apply by June 12!
The 2019 Infoway Partnership Conference is accredited as Patients Included, and we are committed to ensuring that patients have a strong presence. Patients, caregivers and family members are invited to apply for scholarships to attend the conference on November 12-13 in Ottawa. Applications close June 12.

Registration for the conference is now open and discounted rates are in effect.

The Delta Ottawa is our designated venue for the Conference, and it is now taking reservations. Book directly with the hotel today by calling 1-888-236-2427 and quoting Canada Health Infoway Partnership to take advantage of the special rates. Delegates may also take advantage of discounted flight and train rates from Air Canada, WestJet and VIA Rail. To access the discount codes, please visit our website.