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Slovenia is currently presiding the council of EU until 2022. In the first week of September, the members of the Slovenian health tech ecosystem organized a conference about examples of good practices in healthcare digitalization across Europe. In one of the previous episodes, you were able to listen to the panel discussion on the healthcare strategy in Catalonia. Today's episode is an adapted recording of the panel about Germany, and the upcoming two episodes will be the adapted discussions about healthcare digitalization in Israel and Finland. In the past two years, a lot of efforts have been put in place to accelerate the progress on the digitalization of the healthcare digital infrastructure in Germany. Many laws were passed, the country received a lot of international attention about the DIGA process, which enables startups to make their apps reimbursable. The bigger national projects which saw the day of life this year, however, were the introduction of electronic patient records, telemedicine, and e-prescriptions. On the funding side, the federal ministry of health and the federal states are investing EUR 4,3 billion for concrete projects that work towards the digitalization of hospitals. In this discussion, we're going to scratch the surface of the design of the national strategy and digital health infrastructure in Germany. and look at the practical example of the Medical informatics Initiative. Medical Informatics Initiative is a separate project to improve medical research and patient care. You will hear more from five speakers. The panel discussion was moderated by Maja Dragović, a former journalist for digitalhealth.net, now a Business Developer at Better. She will also present the speakers. Speakers: Dr. Michael Marschollek - professor for Medical Informatics at Hannover Medical School (Germany) and executive director of the Peter L. Reichertz Institute for Medical Informatics of TU-Braunschweig and Hannover Medical School. Johannes Starlinger, an MD, working as an Interdisciplinary Digital Health Consultant, Howto Health GmbH, Germany Mark Langguth, eHealth Consultant, Former Senior Product Manager at Gematik Fabien Prasser, Professor of Medical Informatics at the Berlin Institute of Health at the Charite University Hospital Berlin We were also supposed to be joined by Anka Bolka, Head of Director of Field for Development and Analysis, Health Insurance Institute of Slovenia, but since she couldn't make it, Tomaž Mračun, who manages the application development department at Health Insurance Institute of Slovenia (HIIS). Recap of the Days of eHealth: https://www.facesofdigitalhealth.com/blog/days-of-ehealth-healthcare-digitalization-in-catalonia-germany-finland-and-israel Join the EPF Congress: https://epfcongress.eu/ Podcast Website: www.facesofdigitalhealth.com
Der Markt bietet immer mehr Gesundheits-Apps, die unseren Zuckerspiegel analysieren, den Zyklus tracken und Hilfestellungen für Asthma-PatientInnen bieten. Haben unsere HausärztInnen ausgedient? Machen uns digitale Tools zu Hypochondern? Wie gehen PatientInnen mit den neuen Informationsquellen um? Welche Daten sollten wir teilen? Katja Weber diskutiert mit Verena Kretschmann (Medicus), Regina Vetters (BARMER.i) und Thomas Deserno (Peter L. Reichertz Institut für Medizinische Informatik).
Petra Knaup-Gregori hat bereits 1986 das Studium der Medizinischen Informatik begonnen, heute ist sie Leiterin der Sektion Medizinische Informatik am Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg. Sie hat fast von Anfang an die Digitalisierung der Medizin begleitet und gibt in unserer Sendung einen Einblick, was sich in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten da alles getan hat - und wohin die Reise gehen könnte. Antje Wulff wurde 1992 geboren, sie hat zunächst Wirtschaftsinformatik studiert und dann in der medizinischen Informatik vertieft. Heute ist sie am Peter L. Reichertz Institut für Medizinische Informatik an der TU Braunschweig und der Medizinischen Hochschule Hannover tätig. In ihrer Arbeit geht es unter anderem darum, Kinder auf der Intensivstation präventiv mit der Hilfe von Daten vor dem sogenannten "SIRS", einer schlimmen Entzündungsreaktion des Körpers, zu bewahren.