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April 7 @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Event Description
Until recently, telehealth services were expensive, rarely available, and often of limited scope and quality. But the COVID-19 pandemic forced a rapid, radical expansion.
To promote the adoption of telehealth services, the Office for Civil Rights within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) relaxed the requirement that providers communicate with patients through HIPAA-compliant platforms. Health care providers took their services online, and novel platforms connecting patients with providers proliferated. In short order, telehealth became more accessible and less expensive. From general practice specialties, such as family medicine, to highly specialized fields, such as dermatology, patients can now access a variety of services through websites and smartphone apps.
The Seed 25: The best female early-stage investors Cowboy Ventures; Floodgate; Structure Capital; Uncork Capital; Insider This story is available exclusively to Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.
There are thousands of seed investors but only a few who succeed repeatedly.
This list of the 25 best female seed venture capitalists is based on an analysis by Tribe Capital.
The venture-capital industry is still an overwhelmingly male one, but progress is being made.
Across the venture-capital industry, women hold just 16% of the investment-partner roles, according to the National Venture Capital Association s newly published VC Human Capital Survey.
These statistics are gradually improving, up from 11% in 2016. But the low representation means that when panning among the tens of thousands of active seed investors to find the ones who have proven themselves over time, the results will r
Law school lecture will look at emergence of AI, machine learning in health care
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by Pete Rosenbery
CARBONDALE, Ill. – One of the nation’s leading experts on medical ethics and health law will discuss the evolving issues with integrating artificial intelligence and machine learning into health care in a virtual lecture on March 22 hosted by the SIU School of Law.
Glenn Cohen, deputy dean and the James A. Attwood and Leslie Williams Professor of Law at Harvard School of Law, will present “Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in Health Care: Legal and Ethical Issues” for the 2021 John and Marsha Ryan Bioethicist in Residence Lecture.
Seminar Series: COVID-19 and the Law: The Health Care System in the Age of COVID-19 harvard.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from harvard.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Law professors and health experts explored how the coronavirus pandemic exacerbated social inequalities during Wednesdayâs fourth installment of a Harvard Law School seminar series on the intersection of Covid-19 and the law.
The Law Schoolâs Petrie-Flom Center â which promotes interdisciplinary scholarship in health law policy, biotechnology, and bioethics â hosted the event, which was moderated by Yale Law School senior research fellow Ryan P. Knox.
The virtual panel â titled âThe Disparate Burdens of COVID-19â â brought together legal scholars including Berkeley Law professor Daniel A. Farber, Middlesex University senior lecturer Joelle Grogan, and Yale Law professor Judith Resnik. Amherst College political science professor Tess E. Wise also spoke at the event, in addition to two health experts â American Medical Association Chief Health Equity Officer Aletha Maybank and Erik J. Rodriquez, a biobehavioral epidemiologist at the Nation