Press Page
Press
More than 1,500 Iowa health care professionals and volunteers attended the Iowa Hospital Association (IHA) Annual Meeting. Annual meeting attendees explored innovative approaches and perspectives through 48 breakout sessions and engaged with more than 85 exhibitors.
The annual meeting featured an engaging lineup of four internationally recognized keynote speakers including Indu Subaiya
The conversation isn't just about apps anymore – it's about robust, patient-centered platforms that are changing the calculus for care delivery in a consumer-centered age.
“At the 13th Health 2.0 Annual Fall Conference here on Tuesday, co-founder Indu Subaiya thought back to its founding dream, way back in 2007: a healthcare space shaped by technologies that are user-centered, data-driven and play well with each other.
"Fast-forward 13 years and in many ways that dream is reality," she said.”
The co-founder and President of Catalyst @ Health 2.0 on entering the healthtech space and what lies ahead for the future of healthcare.
“In hindsight, going into medicine was a bit of an unexpected decision. During high school and college, I was strongly drawn to the social sciences, communication, and writing. But behind my true motivation toward medicine was the appeal of working with people in a way that would make the world a better place.”
““I’d always been aware of the issue of human trafficking, and it is something happening in our backyards and not something happening out there in other countries,” Indu Subaiya, senior advisor and co-founder of Health 2.0, told MobiHealthNews.
Subaiya will be hosting the Unacceptable event at Health 2.0 conference in Santa Clara, California, on September 17, a yearly panel discussion that brings to light challenging topics that have traditionally fallen through the cracks in the healthcare system. This year the panel is zeroing in on human trafficking, homelessness and maternal mortality.”
The Aspen Institute today announced the members of the 2018 Class of its Health Innovators Fellowship – 21 senior health care leaders who were selected to join a network of entrepreneurs and innovators from across the US health care ecosystem who are committed to strengthening their leadership and developing new approaches to improve the health and well-being of Americans.
“You could say that Indu Subaiya, MD, MBA, operates at the leading edge of healthcare innovation. In her job as executive vice president of Health 2.0, a conference and media company she co-founded, she is exposed to emerging technologies, solutions, and the leaders of companies who are seeking to transform the healthcare system. In 2017, Health 2.0 was acquired by HIMSS and the 2019 conferencewill take place September 16‒18 in Santa Clara, California.
…
I caught up with Subaiya at HIMSS19, and spoke with her about the impact of innovation on healthcare systems. She shared six wide-ranging insights that will help healthcare organizations hone their approach to innovation.”
“Developers of digital health tools are recognizing the need to involve physicians in the design and use of their products, but doctors also need to find the time to participate in the process.
That was one of many messages delivered by Indu Subaiya, MD, a co-founder of the Health 2.0 digital media company that connects entrepreneurs, developers and health care stake holders….”
Data privacy has long been a concern in healthcare, but the past year has seen consumers increasingly concerned about whether or not their devices are always listening. Speaking onstage at Health 2.0's Fall Conference this week in Santa Clara, California with Health 2.0 cofounder and EVP Indu Subaiya, Ricardo Prada, principal UX researcher at Google, said that his company is well aware of the public’s sentiment, both within healthcare and without…
The modern patient experience features flavors of consumerism combined with healthcare data. Giving patients greater access to that information is one area in which technology options thrive.
Indu Subaiya, co-founder of Health 2.0 and executive vice president at HIMSS, discusses the value of bridging the gap between the start-up community and European hospital IT leaders.
Health 2.0 co-founder Indu Subaiya said she sees healthcare as a living, learning, interconnected system, and the future of healthcare innovation will come from collaboration.
“In this world where health happens everywhere, we are thinking a lot of this metaphor of a cell and the fact that a cell membrane in permeable,” Subaiya said during her keynote address at the Innovation Symposium at HIMSS18. “It exists within a living system and ideally it responds in real time to our actions and represents an interconnected and continuously learning and living system.”
Indu Subaiya, M.D., talks about digital transformation, the intersection of healthcare and consumer tech and how directing short films has informed her work in health IT.
Indu Subaiya, M.D., converses easily about how hospital and consumer technologies interact with, and influence, each other. Within the digital healthcare world, she serves as executive vice president at Health 2.0, a division of HIMSS that produces market research and runs conferences about new health technologies and vendors. She's also a filmmaker who writes and directs short pieces, such as the drama The Apartment.
EHR trends were among the news at HIMSS 2018. Cerner and Salesforce are teaming to bring patient data into healthcare CRM. Meanwhile, Epic and Nuance promoted an AI assistant.
“Doctors use magnetic fields and swallowable pill cameras to look inside patients’ bodies. Surgeries are performed with robots and pill-mounted cameras. Yet, in other avenues, the field of medicine seems to be too archaic. Some doctors still carry pagers. Some still write their patients’ diagnosis. Patients still have to call to make appointments, or fill up paperwork at every clinic or hospital they visit.
Indu Subaiya, co-founder and CEO of Health 2.0— a company that promotes new healthcare technologies—recognised the need to fill that gap. Partnering with the US government, she launched the first health hackathon at a national scale in 2010. It provided a playground for innovation, experimentation and solution-building that was sorely needed in the healthcare industry. “
Women innovators from CMS, NASA, IBM Global Healthcare, Cleveland Clinic and Health 2.0 -- among a long list of others -- will share insights from interoperability to patient engagement at the annual health IT conference in Las Vegas.
Meet the scientists and technologists who are transforming, extending and saving our lives.
Humanity’s pursuit of science is one of discovery but also of self-preservation. With every advancing decade, we are living longer lives thanks to the kind of remarkable medical advances dreamed up by some of these innovators. There are also those developing the science and technology to ensure these lengthening lifespans can be happy and healthy ones.
“Meet Indu Subaiya, who has paved her way both as an entrepreneur, and as a filmmaker. She is also greatly known as a keynote speaker and a moderator, for example, at the Clinton Foundation Health Matters Initiative. Wow — Welcome Indu!”
Health 2.0 co-chairs Indu Subaiya and Matthew Holt said these factors pose big questions to healthcare companies, including "What is your job in the new healthcare ecosystem?"
“On Saturday, February 9th, stakeholders in the Indian healthcare space gathered at the CMR Institute of Technology in Bangalore to discuss the opportunities and challenges of healthcare in the 21st century. The event, Health 2.0, was the second of its kind hosted in India, but one of a series of regional events that have taken place since 2007 in cities including San Francisco, Paris, Berlin, and Dubai.”
"I was quite privileged to talk to the leaders of Health 2.0, Dr. Indu Subaiya and Matthew Holt, in the busy days after their announced merger with HIMSS. I was revving to talk to them because the Health 2.0 events I have attended have always been stimulating and challenging. I wanted to make sure that after their incorporation into the HIMSS empire they would continue to push clinicians as well as technologists to re-evaluate their workflows, goals, and philosophies…”
Lives of Women: Intimate portraits of the women in our world.
"I just knew something wasn't quite right." - Indu S
“Tech Tonics, the Podcast, is a twice-monthly program focused on the people and passion at the intersection of technology and health. Hosted by Lisa Suennen and David Shaywitz… So every year at Health 2.0 Indu Subaiya and Mathew Holt bring together everyone on earth whose interested in digital health…”
El congreso eHealth 2.0 que tuvo lugar en Barcelona sirve de escenario de presentación de proyectos sanitarios que incorporan nuevas herramientas digitales
"As the co-chairman and CEO of Health 2.0—a company that promotes, showcases and catalyzes new technologies in health care—Indu Subaiya is at the forefront of a movement revolutionizing the medical industry. Since launching the organization seven years ago, she's helped support everything from a website to compare health care prices to watch sensors designed for fitness management. Up next, she sees innovations like Google Glass and apps for bar-code scanning further transforming health and wellness in ways not imaginable even a few years ago..."
“We had the chance to speak with the Co-founder and CEO of Health 2.0 conference, Indu Subaiya, an American entrepreneur born in Bangalore. Speaking about the event, she said, “Health 2.0 is a conference and a media company that I co-founded in 2006 with Matthew Holt. We began as a conference to showcase the most cutting edge technology in digital health….””
“It's a $2.6 trillion industry that almost every one of us has struggled with -- health care. But there is new hope, thanks to Bay Area technology. Scott Budman reports.”
“At the end of the Health 2.0 Conference earlier this month, I sat down with the event’s co-founders Matthew Holt and Indu Subaiya to discuss the big trends. I’d been impressed and excited by the innovation demonstrated at Health 2.0. It turns out much of it was driven by Big Data….
“As the chief executive officer of Health 2.0, Indu Subaiya ‘95, MBA, MD, is a leading proponent for applying technology to improve health care. Her company hosts multiple international conferences annually to showcase online and mobile products and to unite leaders from medicine and technology to brainstorm how to make healthcare more effective and efficient…”
“Sometimes it just takes time or the right turn to find your sweet spot. I have heard from countless people who journeyed to the tech start-up communities of SF and NYC that for the first time ever they knew they had found their people. Indu Is definitely one of those people and her education through medical school kept her focused on disrupting the medical industry which is in need of massive change.”
“On the Sunday before Thanksgiving, Barb Lighthall was walking into church when her feet slipped out from under her and she hit her head on the parking lot's black ice.
"You know how most people break their fall with their hands? I broke my fall with my head," says Lighthall.
An ambulance took her to the emergency room, where she was prescribed pain pills, discharged, and told to check in with her regular doctor in the next three days.
But that would prove impossible…”