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Mark Hagland
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Marietti, Charlene
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Raths, David
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All Publications
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2009: Hagland Mark
Money matters. Part I: A steady hand.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(10):36-8, 40, 42.
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2009: Hagland Mark
The key to image management. While PACS often takes center stage in imaging discussions, a renewed focus on workflow and accessibility is putting RIS in the spotlight.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(10):32, 34.
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2009: Hagland Mark
For all the right reasons. Approaching CPOE from a patient safety and care quality perspective is the first critical step toward success.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(9):40-4.
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2009: Hagland Mark
The heart of PACS. While most CIOs feel secure taking on the challenge of traditional radiology-focused PACS, cardiology PACS is another story.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(9):34, 36.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Watching, waiting & studying. While HITECH has providers studying their KLAS reports, a lack of clarity on meaningful use means few are pulling the trigger.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(9):suppl 3-6.
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2009: Hagland Mark
A glass slipper? For cash-strapped organizations with EMR dreams, open-source software may be a perfect fit.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(8):32-6.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Image explosion. In the wake of modality advances, CIOs must please radiologists, store huge amounts of data, and not lose sight of the bottom line.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(8):27-8.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Meet your new best friend. ClOs are realizing that successful clinical IT implementations are almost impossible without strong CMIOs.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(7):48-51.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Parsing the PACS market. Evaluating a PACS upgrade or replacement decision is all about understanding need.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(7):39, 41.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Nuance. The spoken word.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(6):68-70.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Athenahealth. Service first.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(6):60, 62, 70.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Back to school.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(5):44-8.
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2009: Hagland Mark
PACS administrators no more?
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(5):38, 40.
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2009: Hagland Mark
A model of innovation. Designing a medication-administration system for the smallest patients was a huge challenge.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(4):28, 30, 32-3.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Follow that pump. As medical devices grow more expensive, tracking them becomes absolutely imperative.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(3):42, 80.
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2009: Hagland Mark
A clear case. Selective investment in case management applications can yield significant returns.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(3):39-40.
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2009: Hagland Mark
A competitive edge. Whether for profit or not, CIOs are under pressure to make sure every IT dollar yields concrete benefits.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;26(3):20, 22-3.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Data integrity: the quest for meaningful, usable data is accelerating as a P4P surge sweeps healthcare.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;25(14):38-9, 41.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Clinical transformation: under pressure to alter the cost/quality paradigm, hospital organizations are turning to IT.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;25(14):24-6.
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2009: Hagland Mark
Show me the (grant) money. While grants can help fund IT projects, CIOs should start with defining the need, then look for the money, not the other way around.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;25(13):36-41.
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2009: Hagland Mark
The future of imaging, part II. IT leaders discuss the need to create "meta-level" software as imaging management moves outside radiology.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2009;25(13):33-5.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Relationship ROI: When it comes to partnering with vendors, CIOs say having the right culture and sharing the same strategic vision are critical.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(12):56-61.
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2008: Hagland Mark
The future of imaging, part I: How better to understand the challenges facing CIOs in the imaging realm than gathering the best and brightest for a discussion? Enjoy.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(12):46, 48, 50.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Nursing first. Smart CIOs are partnering with nurse executives for IT implementation success.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(11):48-53.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Island in the stream? CIOs are approaching surgery as either a standalone operation or a link in the EMR-enabled continuum of care.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(11):43-5.
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2008: Huvane Kate; Hagland Mark; Raths David
November and beyond: CIOs have a large role to play in the development of healthcare IT policy.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(10):40-4, 46-8, 50-4 passim.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Hearts and minds. When it comes to automating workflow and image management for cardiology, CIOs are finding radiology was a piece of cake.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(10):38-9.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Biomed joins the party. Savvy CIOs are considering biomedical devices in their overall strategic plans.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(9):44-8.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Turning data into improved care. A number of healthcare facilities are working to transform terabytes of raw data into a guide for better clinical care.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(8):58-61, 66.
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2008: Hagland Mark; Lawrence Daphne
Transforming data into directives. Operational intelligence innovations are breaking down performance-improvement barriers.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(8):56-7.
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2008: Hagland Mark
PACS partnering. Careful preparation and an enterprise-wide view of the organization are keys to properly selecting an imaging vendor.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(8):31-2.
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2008: Hagland Mark
The CIO's cabinet. IT chiefs are finding that success depends on building a seasoned supporting team.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(7):46-51.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Winning the Trifecta. Seamlessly integrating RIS, PACs and EMR applications is the Holy Grail for today's CIO.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(7):34, 36.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Interfaces are for rookies. Moving to a second generation PACS or RIS is a great opportunity to achieve true integration.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(6):100-1.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Behind the curtains. Epic's unwavering commitment to its unique values has created an unusual recipe for success. What's behind Epic's gains in the clinical IT sphere?
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(6):22-4, 26, 28 passim.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Governance guidance. The growing involvement of boards in IT strategy means CIOs must learn to communicate in all directions.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(5):46-8, 50-1.
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2008: Hagland Mark
A massive undertaking. Cleveland Clinic executives have learned one main lesson during their RIS/PACS/EMR integration--coordinate and collaborate.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(5):40, 42.
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2008: Hagland Mark
The art of the project. Healthcare CIOs are under enormous pressure to manage a growing portfolio of ultra-complex projects.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(4):48-50, 52-3.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Imaging invades surgery. As imaging technologies become more intertwined with the OR, CIOs must have a sound strategy for how the two will meet.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(4):36, 38.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Researching integration. As academic medical centers push the envelope of patient care IT, it's important for CIOs to keep applications up to speed.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(3):36-8, 40-1.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Tapping imaging reports. A new set of standards looks to bring usability to imaging management reports, by letting clinicians mine the data they hold.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(3):32-3.
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2008: Hagland Mark
As I.T. and clinical continue to blend, the role of CMIO will grow. Sitting at the nexus of healthcare and I.T., CMIOs are in a unique position to ensure both sides of the aisle are on the same page.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(2):78, 80.
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2008: Hagland Mark
CIOs must develop strategic plans to support transparency initiatives. The coming data-transparency world of healthcare requires strong IT behind the scenes.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(2):74, 76.
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2008: Hagland Mark
Centralization will be key to image management. With skyrocketing storage needs, CIOs must work toward an image management strategy that hinges on centralization.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(2):62, 64.
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2008: Hagland Mark
RIS rocks at RSNA. With workflow on everyone's minds, radiology information systems took center stage at imaging's super-conference.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(2):34, 36.
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2008: Hagland Mark
2008 Innovators. Ken Lawonn.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(1):40-1.
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2008: Hagland Mark
2008 Innovators. Lynn Witherspoon, M.D.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(1):20, 22.
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2008: Hagland Mark
2008 Innovators. Patricia Skarulis.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2008;25(1):14, 16.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Pulling back the curtains. Quality and pricing transparency initiatives are appearing all across the country.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(12):38-40, 42-3.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Favoring the physicians. As PACS becomes a tool for all types of specialties, the rules of the game change.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(12):26, 28.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Looking for adventure. Anticipated regulatory changes may alter the entire landscape for ambulatory surgery center joint ventures.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(11):54A-56A, 58A, 60A.
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2007: Hagland Mark
A leading role. ClOs at large health systems may have larger budgets, but they also have larger constituencies to keep happy.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(10):34, 36, 38 passim.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Quest to be the best. Being a CIO in today's environment of massive IT implementations takes focus, communication and savvy--and that's just the beginning.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(10):32-3.
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2007: Hagland Mark
From struggles to success. Part technology, part cooperation and part good old fashioned trial and error are what it taikes to build--or break--a RHIO.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(9):34, 36-7.
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2007: Hagland Mark
After the storm. For organizations that made it through Hurricane Katrina, disaster recovery is even more meaningful.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(8):35-6.
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2007: Hagland Mark
On shaky ground. With the ever-present threat of earthquakes, having the proper disaster recovery plans in place is key.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(8):32, 34.
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2007: Hagland Mark
The long run. As the P4P race continues, providers integrate EBM with data-gathering systems to cross the finish line.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(7):36-9.
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2007: Hagland Mark
CORE values. Collaborative effort moves to simplify patient insurance verification.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2007;78(7):42.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Clinical is king. This year's HIMSS CIO Survey found that using clinical IT to improve patient safety was top-of-mind.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(6):16-7.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Organizations sign up and climb on board. Part III: connecting the docs.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(5):28.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Hospitals take action to help patients. Part II: the improvements.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(5):24, 26.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Performance improvement: EMR nirvana. Part I: the landscape.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(5):20-2.
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2007: Hagland Mark
At your service. As consumer-driven healthcare shifts into a higher gear, organizations are putting the patient first.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(4):26-8, 30, 32.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Image is everything. No longer solely the domain of radiologists, imaging is taking hold throughout the hospital.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(3):34-6, 38, 40.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Lessons from Hurricane Katrina. One HIM director's experience.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2007;78(3):58-9.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Nebraska's far-flung HIEs move forward.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2007;78(3):42.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Rewarding good behavior. With medicare as a major proponent, pay-for-performance programs are gaining traction across the country.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(2):36, 38.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Here to stay. The electronic medical record is the cornerstone of tomorrow's healthcare system.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(2):32-3.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Contract language that suits your needs.
Behavioral healthcare 2007;27(1):26-7.
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2007: Hagland Mark
Methods to the madness. When it comes to quality improvement methodologies, CIO leadership will be essential.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(1):30-3.
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2007: Hagland Mark
RSNA rising. Already one of the biggest shows in healthcare, RSNA is becoming a show of choice, widening its appeal to include CIOs and CFOs.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2007;24(1):16-7.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Decision support is in its infancy.
Behavioral healthcare 2006;26(12):22-3.
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2006: Hagland Mark
RHIOs and health information ownership.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2006;77(10):62-3, 68.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Catching the P4PWave. Healthcare organizations must start preparing today for pay-for-performance initiatives.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(11):28-30, 32-3.
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2006: Hagland Mark
What's going on with meth?
Behavioral healthcare 2006;26(10):20, 22-3.
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2006: Hagland Mark
What's next for EHR certification? And what product certification means for HIM.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2006;77(9):52, 54, 56.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Bedside manners. Mobile computing goes bedside to increase safety at the point of care.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(10):32, 34-6.
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2006: Hagland Mark
The heart of the matter. Whether for the hospital or the office, cardiologists need IT solutions as flexible as they are.
Postgraduate medicine 2006;119(3):81.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Right patient, right dose... Medication management is getting an IT makeover at safety-conscious healthcare organizations.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(9):52, 54-7.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Dream team. Glenn Miller and Robert Rubeck have been spreading health services access across the Great Plains.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(9):46.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Surgery, safety and IT. Care quality, efficiency and integration emerge as ongoing themes in surgery IT.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(9):20.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Guaranteed certified. CCHIT announces its first wave of certifications in the outpatient arena.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(9):14, 16.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Aiming to stimulate better outcomes.
Behavioral healthcare 2006;26(8):19-21.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Safety when it counts. Patient safety moves forward in some hospitals but, seven years after the "Quality chasm" report, progress is still spotty.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(8):30, 32-4.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Time to move. As various market and policy forces change, providers are gravitating to EMR environments.
Postgraduate medicine 2006;119(2):82-5.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Therapy's migration to the Internet.
Behavioral healthcare 2006;26(7):40-1.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Automating the ED. Greater focus on emergency department efficiency has CIOs looking for new technologies.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(7):17.
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2006: Hagland Mark
What's in a Web site? Years into the Internet revolution, hospitals continue to struggle with their online presence.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(7):14.
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2006: Hagland Mark
The perfect time for documentation improvement.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2006;77(7):46-8, 50.
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2006: Bauer Jeffrey C; Hagland Mark
Consumer-directed health care: what to expect and what to do.
Healthcare financial management : journal of the Healthcare Financial Management Association 2006;60(7):76-8, 80, 82.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Time to move. As various market and policy forces change, providers are gravitating to EMR environments.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(5):18-20, 22, 24.
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2006: Hagland Mark
What direction will consumers take? Thought leaders wonder how these plans will affect use of behavioral health services.
Behavioral healthcare 2006;26(5):43-5.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Nursing takes center stage. Hospitals are realizing that a singular focus on the needs of physicians can leave nurses out in the cold.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(4):46.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Readying for the RHIO revolution.
Behavioral healthcare 2006;26(3):47-9.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Room service. Function is fueling new forms in the medical cart sector.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(2):72.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Calculated risks pay off. Mitchell Adams' financial vision steers Massachusetts toward 100 percent CPOE.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(2):65-6.
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2006: Hagland Mark
E-prescribing.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(2):38, 40.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Electronic medical records.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(2):34, 36.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Pay-for-performance programs show results, spur development.
Health care strategic management 2006;24(2):1, 3-4.
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2006: Hagland Mark
The cancer care niche. Providers take matters into their own hands.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(1):38.
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2006: Hagland Mark
More to store. Hospitals, health systems and health plans face the volume issue.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(1):33-4, 36.
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2006: Hagland Mark
Six sigma practices. A strategy based on data is perfect fit for healthcare.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2006;23(1):27-8, 30.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Six sigma: it's real, it's datadriven, and it's here.
Health care strategic management 2005;23(12):1, 13-6.
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2005: Hagland Mark
In and out of surgery. For now, niche vendors fill the needs.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(11):44.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Patient to partner. Will PHRs change the physician-patient relationship?
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2005;76(10):38-40.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Better outcomes of hard labor. Niche vendors offer automated tools to improve safety in obstetrics.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(10):56.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Follow your passion. John Glaser's special strength is building collaborations and bringing them to life.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(10):49-50.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Direct route to better care. For healthcare to arrive at next-generation disease management, IT must be the driver.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(10):45-6, 48.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Supply traffic control. A consolidated materials management system enhances savings, processes and time for patient care.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(9):43-4, 46.
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2005: Hagland Mark; Marietti Charlene; Van Beusekom Mary
Healthcare innovators. Readers' leaders.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(9):25-6, 28, 30-2.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Credentialing tools. The need is there, waiting to be met.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(8):40.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Safety in numbers. Organizations across the country are backing patient safety initiatives.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(8):26-9.
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2005: Hagland Mark
When seconds count. EDIS radar screens show increased demand, integration and vendor consolidation.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(7):39.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Partners in profits. Vendors, realizing they can't do it all, are partnering with other vendors.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(7):25-8.
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2005: Hagland Mark
M & A activity. Buyers will be ready when the right deal comes along.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(6):75-6, 78.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Up & Comers. Innovation and growth are all around.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(6):69-72.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Transformation in the lab: hospitals are gearing up to automate.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(5):50.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Interoperability conundrum: EMR implementation options go beyond core vendor and best of breed.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(5):28-30, 32, 34.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Leading from the middle.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2005;76(5):34-7.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Document management systems. Evolution is seen in a fuzzy developmental field.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(4):46.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Power plans. Enlighten your organization to the importance of preparedness.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(4):26-8.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Pharmacy benefit management. Co-opetition fosters a national e-prescribing standard.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(3):42.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Fast track to rewards. In the pay-for-performance event, everyone wins.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(3):26-8, 30.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Revenue cycle management. Hospital leaders see opportunities and needs in a crucial area.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(2):92.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Integrating PACS.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(2):50, 52, 54.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Bar coding and RFID.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(2):36-7.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Cardiology connections. Some industry experts predict integration within the decade.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2005;22(1):42.
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2005: Hagland Mark
Bridge builders: HIM professionals blend core skills and new opportunities to meet the future.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2005;76(1):34-7.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Automation in cancer care: even sophisticated technology finds the treatment as perplexing as the disease.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(11):46, 48.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Reshaping radiology: change management and workflow optimization give PACS new punch.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(11):24-6, 28.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Guides and prompts for safety. Just out of the starting gate, decision support is expected to advance steadily.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(10):62.
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2004: Hagland Mark
CIOS feel the heat. Former "IT people" arriving at the executive table may find themselves on the hot seat of intensified demands.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(10):26-8, 30.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Emergency automation: staff report plenty of reasons to implement a clinical information system in the ED.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(9):60.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Safe ways. Hospitals looking to improve patient safety are turning to CPOE, bar coding and e-prescribing.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(8):20-5.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Long-term care closes IT gap. Automation can boost safety and efficiency if the system is tailored to the facility's needs.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(7):36.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Sorting out pharmacy systems. As hospitals consider all the realities, best-of-breed gives way to integrated systems.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(7):29-30.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Point-of-care protection. Hospitals move to enhance patient safety in common but high-vulnerability situations.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(6):80.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Up & comers. Whether with newer tools or familiar technology with a new twist, companies have a solution for everything.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(6):67-71.
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2004: Hagland Mark
IT stitches up surgery data. The surgical suite can put automation to good use.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(5):54.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Reality EMRs. Coming soon to an organization near you--electronic record keeping.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(5):34-8.
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2004: Hagland Mark
What CFOs want.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2004;75(5):44-6.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Controlled medical vocabularies. A long-fallow field gets ready to bear important fruit.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(4):44.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Data mining. Stronger computer tools allow deeper analysis of medical research, patient care and insurance data.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(4):33-6.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Customized automation. Ob/Gyn practices are finding EMR systems designed specifically for them.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(3):44.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Data overflow. Options are available to hold the tide of images and information.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(3):26-30.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Special safeguards for critical care. New technologies are advancing safety and helping clinicians.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(2):90.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Incoming! With new IT assets arriving and existing ones aging, organizations need a system of keeping track.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(2):72-4, 76.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Harnessing efficiency.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(2):64-6, 68.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Responding to customer demands.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(2):34-7.
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2004: Hagland Mark
An "old" trend heats up.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(2):30-2.
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2004: Hagland Mark
Electronic record, electronic security.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2004;75(2):18-22.
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2004: Hagland Mark
On the heart beat. Needs are complex, and so are solutions.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2004;21(1):48.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Arrested development. Early medical management improves the outcomes of diseases, even chronic ones.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2003;20(11):41-4.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Pick your own pocket. Today's CIOs can often find their successors within their own IT ranks.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2003;20(10):39-41, 44.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Team effort, major victory. How to meet IS halfway in vendor selection process.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2003;74(8):50-4.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Self-help returns. Hospitals and health plans can power up HR functions with corporate intranets and online self-service tools.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2003;20(9):49-52.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Reduced errors ahead. Organizations are moving down the road to patient safety, despite bumps and curves.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2003;20(8):31-4, 36, 38 passim.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Insuring satisfaction. Health plans are steadily upgrading their customer relationship management capabilities.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2003;20(7):26-8, 30.
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2003: Hagland Mark
Clinic EHR streamlines HIM department.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2003;74(3):27-30.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Moving forward with document imaging and never looking back to paper.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2002;73(9):40-3.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Claiming the future. Clearinghouses are working to reinvent themselves for tomorrow's market.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2002;19(9):51-2, 56.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Straightening out the supply chain. The biggest dividends come from aligning all the business processes--from requisition to consumption.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2002;19(8):25-8.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Getting serious about it asset management. Tracking and protecting your inventory requires a systematized, comprehensive approach.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2002;19(7):29-32.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Revolution in progress: how technology is reshaping the coding world.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2002;73(7):32-5.
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2002: Hagland Mark
The 2002 Healthcare Informatics 100. International IT mergers and acquisitions. Do they indicate a trend or just a shrinking corporate universe?
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2002;19(6):91-2.
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2002: Hagland Mark
The 2002 Healthcare Informatics 100. Up & comers. Smart strategies, emerging markets and new technology fashion tomorrow's top players.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2002;19(6):83-5.
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2002: Hagland Mark
A chief privacy officer's day: the passion and pressure to succeed.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2002;73(5):40-3.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Taking pages from other notebooks: what lessons can chief privacy officers learn from other industries?
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2002;73(2):20-2, 24; quiz 25-6.
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2002: Hagland Mark
Disease management. IT displays its potential.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2002;19(2):38-40.
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2001: Hagland M
Getting more personal.
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2001;72(8):32-6.
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2001: Hagland M
The journey of 1,000 miles: are providers really ready for HIPAA's privacy requirements?
Journal of AHIMA / American Health Information Management Association 2001;72(2):28-32.
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2001: Hagland M
Major HIPAA compliance efforts underway, despite uncertainty.
Healthplan 2001;42(1):46-9.
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2000: Hagland M
Smart cards knock at healthcare's door.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2000;17(10):77-8, 80, 82.
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2000: Hagland M
The many hats of a CIO.
Healthcare informatics : the business magazine for information and communication systems 2000;17(5):69-72, 74, 76.
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2000: Hagland M
Getting it together: integrating disease management.
Healthplan 2000;41(1):42-6.
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