Remove 2002 Remove Compliance Remove Innovation Remove Technology
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Can You See What I See?

Lead Change Blog

Many years later I learned the technique for using black light technology. This was the time to bring paint in 50 gallon drums, roll out a canvas the size of Texas, and put brushes in the hands of innovative designers. If you remember the eras of 1987 or 2001-2002 or 2007-2008 your experience might be similar.

Attrition 317
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How Digital Health Care Can Help Prevent Chronic Diseases Like Diabetes

Harvard Business Review

We studied Omada’s program as part of our Harvard Medical School initiative to identify and share knowledge about innovative approaches to major health challenges that primary care providers play the lead in treating. Design the service for the patient. Omada encourages members to establish a routine for weighing in every day (e.g.,

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IBM Focuses HR on Change

Harvard Business Review

In their role of stewards of policy compliance, they can tend to be a brake on change. In growth markets like Kenya and Malaysia, people needed to develop marketing and innovation skills. This is about using the technology of "business analytics" within the workforce, bringing vital statistics to the art of performance reviews.

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The Downside of Health Care Job Growth

Harvard Business Review

Demand and supply are not growing in tandem: from 2002 to 2012, inpatient days per capita decreased by 12% while the workforce in hospitals grew by 11%. As Ari Hoffman and Ezekiel Emanuel argue in the Journal of the American Medical Association, reengineering is very different from implementing new technologies.

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The New New International Economic Order

Harvard Business Review

It's stunning today to read the NIEO demands—because they are almost exactly the same as what Supachai Panitchpakdi, head of UNCTAD and previously Director General of the WTO (2002-2005), is now calling for. But where's the evidence for convergence?