Know What's Happening in Healthcare

Today's Healthcare Pulse

Abridge teams with Eli Lilly and Nvidia to expand AI scribe platform

Abridge announced a strategic investment from Eli Lilly and a partnership with Nvidia to build a foundation model for clinical conversations. The AI‑scribe provider now serves over 300 health systems and plans to integrate its platform with payers and broader care settings.

Everdrone to Deploy Emergency Response Drones in Stockholm
NewsFeb 16, 2026

Everdrone to Deploy Emergency Response Drones in Stockholm

Everdrone and the Ambulance Services Administration in Region Stockholm have signed an agreement to roll out an autonomous emergency‑response drone system. The drones will transport defibrillators to suspected cardiac arrests and deliver early situational awareness at accident scenes. Placement of...

By Unmanned Systems Technology – News
The “Pilot Purgatory”: Why 80% of Pharma AI Projects Fail (And How to Fix It)
NewsFeb 16, 2026

The “Pilot Purgatory”: Why 80% of Pharma AI Projects Fail (And How to Fix It)

Artificial intelligence projects in pharma face a steep attrition rate, with roughly 80% of pilots never reaching production. The primary barrier is not algorithmic sophistication but fragmented data silos and delayed governance that hinder scalable deployment. Experts argue that interoperable,...

By HIT Consultant
Sword Intelligence Launches in the UK, Bringing Proven National-Scale AI Care Operations Set to Transform Healthcare in Greece
BlogFeb 16, 2026

Sword Intelligence Launches in the UK, Bringing Proven National-Scale AI Care Operations Set to Transform Healthcare in Greece

Sword Intelligence has launched its AI‑driven care‑operations platform in the UK, aiming to automate triage, coordination and scheduling to ease NHS waiting‑list pressures. The company is also building one of Europe’s first AI‑powered healthcare “front doors” in Greece for a...

By Journal of mHealth
2026 Could Mark a Turning Point for American Innovation
NewsFeb 16, 2026

2026 Could Mark a Turning Point for American Innovation

The United States faces a potential decline in biotech leadership as recent Supreme Court decisions blur patent eligibility and congressional price‑control measures under the Inflation Reduction Act force program cancellations. Proposals to seize university licensing revenue further strain tech‑transfer offices,...

By BioSpace
Siemens Healthineers, Mayo Clinic Expand Collaboration to Advance Imaging and Interventional Care
NewsFeb 16, 2026

Siemens Healthineers, Mayo Clinic Expand Collaboration to Advance Imaging and Interventional Care

Siemens Healthineers and the Mayo Clinic announced an expanded partnership aimed at accelerating imaging and interventional care across several high‑impact disease areas. The collaboration will integrate Siemens’ AI‑enhanced imaging platforms with Mayo’s clinical expertise to develop new diagnostics for neurodegenerative...

By HCB News (dotmed) – Healthcare Business News
How Checking Accounts Cut Cash Flow Woes in Your Clinic
NewsFeb 16, 2026

How Checking Accounts Cut Cash Flow Woes in Your Clinic

Medical clinics face chronic cash‑flow volatility due to delayed reimbursements, labor costs, and fragmented financial systems. The article argues that the structure of a clinic’s checking account is a core revenue‑cycle asset, not merely a passive fund holder. By integrating...

By HIT Consultant
First Chinese Orthopaedic Surgical Robot Trialled at Chengdu
NewsFeb 16, 2026

First Chinese Orthopaedic Surgical Robot Trialled at Chengdu

Yuanhua Tech’s HX Orthopaedic‑specific Robotic Arm has been clinically validated at West China Hospital of Sichuan University, marking the first domestically developed orthopaedic surgical robot in China. The system demonstrated zero‑lag, zero‑error performance and incorporates high‑precision zero‑gravity compensation, compliant control,...

By MobiHealthNews (HIMSS Media)
Neurophet Bags 510(k) for Alzheimer's Imaging AI and More Briefs
NewsFeb 16, 2026

Neurophet Bags 510(k) for Alzheimer's Imaging AI and More Briefs

South Korean AI firm Neurophet secured FDA 510(k) clearance for its AQUA AD Plus software, enabling quantitative MRI and PET analysis for Alzheimer’s treatment planning. Japanese health‑tech startup Ubie partnered with Mayo Clinic to roll out a unified digital front‑door...

By MobiHealthNews (HIMSS Media)
Who Qualifies for the New FDA PreCheck Pilot Program?
BlogFeb 16, 2026

Who Qualifies for the New FDA PreCheck Pilot Program?

The FDA has opened submissions for its PreCheck Pilot Program, targeting new U.S. drug‑manufacturing facilities that will begin construction by the March 1 2026 deadline. Eligible sites must be stand‑alone plants, located in the United States or its territories, and commit to...

By FDA Law Blog
DailyRounds Delivers Rs 363 Cr Profit on Rs 641 Cr Revenue in FY25
NewsFeb 16, 2026

DailyRounds Delivers Rs 363 Cr Profit on Rs 641 Cr Revenue in FY25

DailyRounds posted a Rs 363 crore profit on Rs 641 crore operating revenue for FY25, marking a 13% rise in both profit and revenue from FY24. The company’s flagship subscription platform Marrow contributed 88% of revenue, while non‑operating income added Rs 132 crore....

By Entrackr
Handgrip Strength Forecasts Depression in Chinese Elders
NewsFeb 16, 2026

Handgrip Strength Forecasts Depression in Chinese Elders

A new BMC Geriatrics cohort study of Chinese seniors finds handgrip strength inversely predicts incident depression. Participants with lower baseline grip were significantly more likely to develop depressive symptoms over several years, even after controlling for age, gender, socioeconomic status...

By Bioengineer.org
Ultrasound Enables In Vivo Acoustoelectric Neural Recording
NewsFeb 16, 2026

Ultrasound Enables In Vivo Acoustoelectric Neural Recording

Researchers have demonstrated in‑vivo acoustoelectric neural recording in mice using ultrasound‑induced frequency mixing, achieving high‑fidelity, non‑invasive monitoring of brain activity. The technique converts neuronal electrical fields into detectable frequency shifts, delivering millimeter‑scale spatial resolution and millisecond‑level temporal precision. By calibrating...

By Bioengineer.org
Fujifilm Biotechnologies Opens Largest Single-Use CDMO Facility in the UK
NewsFeb 16, 2026

Fujifilm Biotechnologies Opens Largest Single-Use CDMO Facility in the UK

Fujifilm Biotechnologies has opened an expanded UK site in Teesside, marking the launch of the country’s largest single‑use biopharmaceutical CDMO facility. The £400 million investment adds 2,000 L and 5,000 L single‑use bioreactors, delivering up to 19,000 L of small‑ and mid‑scale antibody manufacturing...

By GEN (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
China’s Biotech Boom: 5 Hidden Drivers & Future Forecasts
SocialFeb 16, 2026

China’s Biotech Boom: 5 Hidden Drivers & Future Forecasts

5 Hidden Themes Driving China’s Biotech Surge | Ep. 314 ...and 5 Bold Predictions for What’s Next https://t.co/TxBhvw5PG8 https://t.co/jTR63o431j

By BowTiedBiotech
How AI Innovations Like DeepSeek Are Revolutionizing Emotional and Mental Health Support for Chinese Youth
NewsFeb 16, 2026

How AI Innovations Like DeepSeek Are Revolutionizing Emotional and Mental Health Support for Chinese Youth

DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup, has launched a conversational platform that delivers real‑time emotional and mental‑health support to teenagers. Leveraging large‑language models tuned with culturally specific data, the service offers 24/7 chat‑based counseling, crisis detection, and personalized coping strategies. Within...

By Bioengineer.org
CMS Posts Proposed NBPP 2027. Be Afraid; Be Very Afraid (Part 1)
BlogFeb 15, 2026

CMS Posts Proposed NBPP 2027. Be Afraid; Be Very Afraid (Part 1)

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services released its proposed 2027 Notice of Benefit & Payment Parameters, a 577‑page rule outlining changes to ACA implementation. Key proposals include stricter marketing restrictions, removal of the gender‑identity definition of sex, lowering the...

By ACA Signups
What Makes an Agentic AI System Safe for Medical Records Management?
NewsFeb 15, 2026

What Makes an Agentic AI System Safe for Medical Records Management?

The episode explores how Non‑Human Identities (NHIs)—machine credentials like tokens and keys—are reshaping cybersecurity in healthcare, especially as cloud adoption and Agentic AI expand. It outlines a lifecycle‑focused NHI management strategy that includes discovery, classification, continuous threat monitoring, and context‑aware...

By Security Boulevard
Nanopillar-Studded Plastic Films Physically Destroy Viruses, Cutting Infectivity by 94% without Chemicals
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Nanopillar-Studded Plastic Films Physically Destroy Viruses, Cutting Infectivity by 94% without Chemicals

Researchers at RMIT and international partners engineered flexible acrylic films stamped with dense nanopillar arrays using ultraviolet nano‑imprint lithography. The 60 nm pitch configuration reduced human parainfluenza virus type 3 infectivity by up to 94 % within one hour, achieving mechanical rupture of...

By Nanowerk
Healthcare Costs Abroad — How Travelers Prepare For Medical Expenses
NewsFeb 15, 2026

Healthcare Costs Abroad — How Travelers Prepare For Medical Expenses

Travelers increasingly recognize that medical expenses abroad can quickly derail a trip, prompting a shift toward proactive financial planning. Costs range from modest clinic visits to emergency‑room bills that run into thousands, while most domestic health policies offer limited overseas...

By eTurboNews
Mobile Wound Care in 2026: Navigating Regulatory Pressures
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Mobile Wound Care in 2026: Navigating Regulatory Pressures

Mobile wound‑care providers face tighter Local Coverage Determinations, heightened CMS surveillance, and expanded documentation mandates in 2026. These regulatory shifts narrow reimbursement, limit visit frequency, and force clinicians into defensive practices. The burden disproportionately impacts high‑acuity, home‑bound patients who rely...

By KevinMD
Government Reports on Healthcare Require a Closer Look
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Government Reports on Healthcare Require a Closer Look

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a 3.6% rise in hospital compensation costs and a 3.2% increase for nursing homes in 2025, while January 2026 saw healthcare add 82,000 jobs, the bulk of total payroll growth. The January CPI showed...

By The Keckley Report
Physicians Evolve Into AI‑Guided Medical Orchestrators
SocialFeb 15, 2026

Physicians Evolve Into AI‑Guided Medical Orchestrators

Think AI will reduce demand for doctors? Consider this: Claude writes 100% of its own code, yet Anthropic's engineering team is exploding. We aren't looking at the end of the physicians, but the birth of Medical Orchestrators. When asked why Anthropic...

By Joshua Liu, MD
Why Smaller Hospitals May Be Faster for Cancer Diagnosis
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Why Smaller Hospitals May Be Faster for Cancer Diagnosis

A rural Taiwanese patient faced a 20‑day wait for a diagnostic mammogram at a large tertiary hospital, while a community hospital in Taipei provided immediate evaluation and treatment. The article attributes the delay to fragmented administrative structures, global‑budget constraints, and...

By KevinMD
120 Biomarkers for $99 and Nationwide CT Calcium Scans
SocialFeb 15, 2026

120 Biomarkers for $99 and Nationwide CT Calcium Scans

This is how I test 120 biomarkers for $99 and get CT calcium scans anywhere nationwide. Vitals Vault. https://www.vitalsvault.com/

By Robert Lufkin, MD
🎧 The GLP-1 Business Model Problem, Ep. 1 with Prof. Alex Miras
PodcastFeb 15, 20260 min

🎧 The GLP-1 Business Model Problem, Ep. 1 with Prof. Alex Miras

In the inaugural episode, host Alex discusses the GLP‑1 business model with obesity expert Prof. Alex Miras, who emphasizes that the drug itself drives the bulk of weight loss—about 20% versus 2.5% from behavioral support—making extensive multidisciplinary care unnecessary for...

By GLP-1 Digest
Missed Diagnosis Visceral Leishmaniasis: A Tragedy of Note Bloat
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Missed Diagnosis Visceral Leishmaniasis: A Tragedy of Note Bloat

Louis‑Hunter Kean, a 34‑year‑old, died in November 2023 after a year of high fevers, organomegaly, and multiple hospitalizations. Although clinicians repeatedly noted “visceral leish” and ordered a PCR, the test was never completed and his travel to Tuscany was buried in...

By KevinMD
From Pain Points to Progress: Medtronic’s Procurement Evolution
BlogFeb 15, 2026

From Pain Points to Progress: Medtronic’s Procurement Evolution

Medtronic is revamping its indirect procurement model to become a strategic, business‑focused function. By segmenting its supplier base, the company concentrates resources on high‑risk, high‑spend vendors while using digital pathways for low‑complexity suppliers. Leadership emphasizes speaking the language of EBITDA...

By Art of Procurement
Modern Bluetooth Pacemakers Continuously Broadcast When Disconnected
SocialFeb 15, 2026

Modern Bluetooth Pacemakers Continuously Broadcast When Disconnected

Regarding this, there was a couple questions on does the pacemaker continue to advertise - most BLE implantable devices go into a sleep type mode. In this case, we are lucky - it does not. We know based on law enforcement...

By Dave Kennedy
Carl Zeiss Meditec: When the Thesis Gets Punched in the Mouth
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Carl Zeiss Meditec: When the Thesis Gets Punched in the Mouth

In this episode, the host revisits his deep‑dive analysis of Carl Zeiss Meditec, using the company’s Q1 FY2025/26 earnings call as a live case study to demonstrate how investment theses should evolve with new data. He critiques the common practice...

By Boredom Baron
Insurance Doesn't Prevent Massive Medical Debt, Even for Celebrities
SocialFeb 15, 2026

Insurance Doesn't Prevent Massive Medical Debt, Even for Celebrities

When a celebrity tragically dies with massive medical debt, I’m left with the questions. Did they have insurance? People with insurance absolutely have medical debt, but out-of-pocket costs are capped. Debt may be from out-of-network care, claims denials, or unocvered...

By Larry Levitt
Mifepristone Restrictions: How Bans Force Patients Into Riskier Care
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Mifepristone Restrictions: How Bans Force Patients Into Riskier Care

Mifepristone is banned in 14 states and restricted in another 10, forcing patients to rely on misoprostol‑only regimens. The dual‑drug protocol achieves 95‑98% success with less than 0.5% serious complications, while misoprostol monotherapy raises emergency department visits to 7.9% and...

By KevinMD
Saudi‑US Biotech Tie Is Just a Pay‑for‑promotion Scheme
SocialFeb 15, 2026

Saudi‑US Biotech Tie Is Just a Pay‑for‑promotion Scheme

This is not a Saudi-USA Biotech Alliance, it’s a Saudi @DrPatrick $IBRX “you pay we pay” marketing campaign. Anktiva is stalled in the US because he can’t generate the clinical data to move the drug forward, so he goes to...

By Adam Feuerstein
15‑PDGH Inhibition and Ozempic May Restore Cartilage
SocialFeb 15, 2026

15‑PDGH Inhibition and Ozempic May Restore Cartilage

Two things that may help restore cartilage —15-PDGH inhibition https://t.co/chCj9Lj5qk —Semaglutide (Ozempic), independent of weight loss https://t.co/fqbrQQYfRt https://t.co/6CRdY1QtC1

By Eric Topol
Pediatric Care in Ghana: Addressing Malnutrition and Sickle Cell Disease
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Pediatric Care in Ghana: Addressing Malnutrition and Sickle Cell Disease

In Ghana, child mortality has fallen but remains high, with 37 per 1,000 children not reaching age five and neonatal deaths at 21 per 1,000. Malnutrition still affects roughly 17‑18% of under‑five children, while 15,000‑20,000 newborns are born with sickle...

By KevinMD
Flickstop
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Flickstop

On February 15, 2026, a blog post announced the first deployment of the Toumai robotic surgery system at Orsi Academy. The post features an image of a surgeon in blue scrubs operating the robot from a console, underscoring the hands‑on...

By SurgRob
What Medicines Are Kept on the International Space Station, and Why?
NewsFeb 15, 2026

What Medicines Are Kept on the International Space Station, and Why?

The International Space Station maintains a structured “space pharmacy” organized into color‑coded medical kits that address convenience care, minor illnesses, and emergency stabilization. Medications are selected for stability in radiation‑rich microgravity, versatility across multiple symptoms, and ease of use by...

By New Space Economy
Sabbaticals Provide a Critical Lifeline for Sustainable Medical Careers [PODCAST]
BlogFeb 15, 2026

Sabbaticals Provide a Critical Lifeline for Sustainable Medical Careers [PODCAST]

Physicians rarely receive formal sabbaticals, yet burnout data shows they need extended breaks. A 2021 American Journal of Medicine survey found only 51% of medical schools reported any faculty sabbaticals, typically senior white‑male researchers rather than clinicians. Christie Mulholland’s experience...

By KevinMD
Curing versus Caring in Medicine: Bridging the Gap in Patient Trust
BlogFeb 14, 2026

Curing versus Caring in Medicine: Bridging the Gap in Patient Trust

The article argues that modern medicine’s obsession with cures has sidelined genuine caring, eroding patient trust. It highlights how women experience chronic pain yet often have their symptoms dismissed, and how minority groups remain invisible in clinical research. Evidence shows...

By KevinMD
DNA Nanomachine Inside Living Cells Measures How Aggressive a Cancer Is
BlogFeb 14, 2026

DNA Nanomachine Inside Living Cells Measures How Aggressive a Cancer Is

Researchers at Wenzhou and Fuzhou Universities unveiled a three‑wheel DNA nanomachine (TW‑harvester) that rides a gold‑nanoparticle track inside living tumor cells. The device uses a DNA tetrahedron with an aptamer targeting nucleolin and miR‑21‑triggered wheel activation to cleave fluorescent substrates,...

By Nanowerk
Beyond the Fitbit: Why Your Next Health Tracker Might Be a Button on Your Shirt
BlogFeb 14, 2026

Beyond the Fitbit: Why Your Next Health Tracker Might Be a Button on Your Shirt

Scientists at King’s College London discovered that loose‑fit clothing can track human movement more accurately than tight wearables, delivering 40% higher precision while using 80% less data. The research, published in Nature Communications, suggests that simple fabric elements—such as a...

By Nanowerk
When Patients Win, Hospitals Lose
NewsFeb 14, 2026

When Patients Win, Hospitals Lose

A senior hospital administrator convened an emergency summit after heart‑failure admissions fell dramatically, not because care quality suffered but because outpatient improvements reduced inpatient volume. The meeting’s hidden agenda was how to restore admissions, exposing a financial model that profits...

By Forbes – Healthcare
Guernsey Medical Practice Sanctioned After Cyber Criminals Access Patient Data Through Email Account
NewsFeb 14, 2026

Guernsey Medical Practice Sanctioned After Cyber Criminals Access Patient Data Through Email Account

Guernsey’s Data Protection Authority has sanctioned First Contact Health after a phishing attack compromised an employee’s email, exposing confidential patient data. The breach was discovered by the practice, which reported it to authorities, but regulators found the organization lacked adequate...

By DataBreaches.net
AI Docs Tools Expand Into Health System Enterprise
SocialFeb 14, 2026

AI Docs Tools Expand Into Health System Enterprise

Those “direct-to-physician” CDS AI tools like OpenEvidence and DoximityGPT? They're now going after health systems too. My 5 thoughts on how this will all play out: First, the gist of what was announced: → Sutter Health will integrate OpenEvidence with Epic, allowing...

By Joshua Liu, MD
The $800B Open Secret: What the New Medicaid Spending Dataset Means for Health Tech Builders and Investors
BlogFeb 14, 2026

The $800B Open Secret: What the New Medicaid Spending Dataset Means for Health Tech Builders and Investors

The episode breaks down the release of the largest publicly available Medicaid claims dataset, detailing its composition, gaps, and immediate utility for health‑tech builders and investors. It quantifies the scale of Medicaid spending (~$849 B) and improper payments (over $30 B annually),...

By Thoughts on Healthcare Markets & Tech
Journalists Unpack Impact of ICE Arrests on Families and Caffeine’s Effect on Dementia Risk
NewsFeb 14, 2026

Journalists Unpack Impact of ICE Arrests on Families and Caffeine’s Effect on Dementia Risk

KFF Health News experts appeared on multiple broadcast platforms in February, covering a range of pressing health topics. Elisabeth Rosenthal discussed soaring cancer‑care costs on ABC News Live, while Claudia Boyd‑Barrett highlighted families’ difficulty locating hospitalized ICE detainees on KQED’s...

By KFF Health News (formerly Kaiser Health News)
Cannabis Hyperemesis Syndrome Cases In Virginia ERs Up By Nearly 29%
NewsFeb 14, 2026

Cannabis Hyperemesis Syndrome Cases In Virginia ERs Up By Nearly 29%

Virginia’s emergency departments have seen a sharp increase in cannabis‑related visits, with overall cases climbing to an average of 31,000 per year between 2020 and 2024. Specifically, diagnoses of cannabis hyperemesis syndrome (CHS) jumped nearly 29%, rising from 4,027 cases...

By Forbes – Healthcare
Age‑Restricted Longevity Drugs: Accept Risks After 70
SocialFeb 14, 2026

Age‑Restricted Longevity Drugs: Accept Risks After 70

We should have a class of drugs you can only sell to people over 70 —super aggro longevity stuff, muscle regeneration, etc - tolerate more possible bad side effects given you don’t have much time left for effects to manifest...

By Jason Kelly
3D‑Printed Brain Phantoms Replicate Gray and White Matter
SocialFeb 14, 2026

3D‑Printed Brain Phantoms Replicate Gray and White Matter

Printing brain phantoms in a support gel and selectively replicates gray and white matter https://t.co/9rIVOPCjd2 https://t.co/LFwa9Qlqjc

By Brian Ahier
US Infectious‑Disease Center Halts Pandemic Preparedness Efforts
SocialFeb 14, 2026

US Infectious‑Disease Center Halts Pandemic Preparedness Efforts

But this is such treachery. Doesn’t our govt understand pandemic threats? New waves of zoonotic flu, SARS-3 coronavirus; arboviruses from climate change; bioweapons from our enemies: Russia, DPRK, Iran; return of measles, pertussis, soon polio. What’s going on? Exclusive: Key US...

By Peter Hotez