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Consumers’ Trust In Pharmacists As Providers Grows Along with Omnichannel Health Care

Health Populi

The pharmacy is all these things, and increasingly digital-first, we learn in The Rx Report: A new day in retail pharmacy , a consumer survey from CVS Health. By 2025, some 47% of healthcare workers plan to leave their positions by 2025, asserted in a report from Definitive Healthcare published in October 2022.

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Patient Engagement: Offer Telehealth or Risk Attrition

iSALUS Healthcare

One of the newest, most favored tools among busy, working patients is telehealth. Telehealth is one of the most used tools for providers looking to grow their patient base and increase patient engagement. By 2025, the Association of American Medical Colleges projects U.S. shortages of PCP’s will increase significantly.

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Most U.S. Physicians, Burned Out, Favor A Flavor of Single Payer Health System

Health Populi

Eight in ten physicians are working at full-capacity or are over-extended, the survey found. But consider the statistic that, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges, there will be a shortage of 65,500 physicians expected in 2020, and 90,400 in 2025. This is sobering through just the N=1 physician lens.

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The Goal of RPM is Management, Not Monitoring

Healthcare IT Today

When physicians were unable to see patients in person, telehealth and RPM became a necessary capability not a nice-to-have. RPM enabled providers to continue to support patient care from afar. And, by 2025, more than 70 million U.S. Perhaps the biggest driver in recent RPM adoption was the COVID-19 pandemic. patients – 26.2%

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79 Percent of Doctors Are Burned Out. Can Virtual Care Delivery Help?

GlobalMed

A new study from InCrowd paints a disturbing picture about provider burnout and its effect on patient care. The survey of 320 PCPs and 319 specialists reveals that 79 percent of primary care physicians (PCPs) describe themselves as burned out, as do 57 percent of specialists. faces by 2025. See solutions.

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2019: Telemedicine’s Year in Review

GlobalMed

billion by 2025. That confirms our observations that virtual care is becoming an ingrained part of medicine – but with that growth inevitably comes change. Telehealth is the market that never stops moving, so let’s look back and review the dynamics, announcements and updates that shifted our world in 2019.

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A Mid-Year Update on 2023 Healthcare Trends

Henry Kotula

Some telehealth flexibilities that were allowed under the PHE are also staying in effect, at least until the end of 2024. They include a report that says the US could see a deficit of 200,000 to 450,000 registered nurses by 2025. Within the next five years, another report also projects a shortage of more than 3.2