Foundation president, Harvey Fineberg, and chairman emeritus and co-founder, Gordon Moore, discuss the Statement of Founders’ Intent with staff.
Two academic medical centers, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Johns Hopkins Medicine, are using big data to identify potential harms and minimize risk for patients in the intensive care unit. Reporter, Zack Budryk, from FierceHealthcare writes about their work stemming from an article in The Wall Street Journal.
Read the fill article here.
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Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
$6,721,883
44 months
Optimizing ICU Safety through Patient Engagement, System Science and Information Technology
Nov 2013
Johns Hopkins University, Armstrong Institute
$457,000
12 months
Planning Grant to support Acute Care/ICU Multi-center Feasibility Study
Mar 2012
$9,372,943
24 months
Intensive Care Unit (ICU)/Acute Care Multi-site Demonstration Project
Aug 2012
$2,209,619
10 months
Implementation and Evaluation of Project Emerge
Aug 2014
University of California, San Francisco, Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care
$397,848
Planning and Implementation of Project EMERGE at UCSF
Jun 2013
$999,996
6 months
UCSF Interim Implementation Grant
Mar 2014