Sharing information—the payer’s perspective

In 2001 Humana, a health insurer headquartered in Kentucky with revenues of US$31bn in 2009, was looking into ways of automating its interactions with physicians’ offices. But it faced a quandary.

Going mobile at Methodist

When Methodist Hospital, a 460-bed facility serving the San Gabriel Valley near Los Angeles, wanted to create a computerised provider order entry system and digitise patient records, the IT department faced a number of challenges in coming up with a solution that would appeal to the doctors and nurses that had to use the new technology.

Virtua goes paperless

In late 2005 when Virtua, a diversified health-services company that operates four hospitals in the US state of New Jersey, decided to open a new hospital, the board decreed that it would be a paperless facility. By the time the IT department completed an assessment of what would be needed to make one facility paperless, the board decided that if the organisation was going to invest the money and human resources to do it in one facility, it may as well roll out the same technology in all its locations.

Broad: A new generation

Zhang Yue, the president and chief executive officer of Broad, a private Hunan-based manufacturer of air-conditioners, heating systems and air purifiers, is among China’s new generation of entrepreneurs. While many of China’s companies compete on price, Mr Zhang has put his faith in developing Broad’s technology and a strong service model to build his company.

Competition spurs innovation: Li Ning counts on R&D and supply chain management

Li Ning, China’s largest domestic sportswear brand, not only needs to fend off multinational sportswear giants Nike and Adidas, but also needs to stay ahead of its increasingly savvy domestic rivals, including brands such as Anta and 361°. Such mounting competitive pressure has turned into a major driver for innovation, confirms Guo Jianxin, Li Ning’s chief operating officer.

Delhi’s Mission Convergence: Welfare to the People

Launched in 2008, “Mission Convergence” is an ICT-driven, high-priority and award-winning initiative of the government of Delhi to bring welfare benefits to the city’s poorest residents. It “converges” Delhi’s nine social welfare departments and 46 welfare schemes into a single, eenabled delivery channel. Rashmi Singh, director of the mission, explains, “We are taking welfare entitlements to the poorest’s doorstep, not as a favor but as a duty.” With an estimated 4m of Delhi’s 17m residents now classified as economically vulnerable, this is a much needed effort.

Business with the lights out

Could the growing sophistication of automation one day lead to companies with no human labour?

Can artificial intelligence create art?

Computers are getting better at emulating human thought. Could they ever replicate our creativity?

Trigger ‘Appy

Why the end of mobile apps will be good for business

A helping (robotic) hand for the elderly

Will caring robots be welcomed by the elderly?

Enjoy in-depth insights and expert analysis - subscribe to our Perspectives newsletter, delivered every week