Small- to medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are always looking for new ways to enhance financial management and digital capabilities, according to a September study titled “Improving Financial Performance: Taking Advantage of Early Payments Discounts.”
According to the poll, 77% of corporate Software-as-a-Service firms believe that a big issue is a lack of knowledge of non-payroll expenditure. The necessity of non-payroll financial management is shown by this.
However, by offering SMBs a way to automate their financial management, BILL and Finmark are meeting a demand that businesses scream for in order to operate as effectively as possible.
Medical imaging is undergoing a digital shift away from CD-ROM optical mediums and toward digital platforms that decrease friction while enhancing user experience and therapeutic outcomes.
For the J.P. Morgan Global Innovators in Payments Series, Rishi Nayyar, co-founder and CEO of PocketHealth, spoke with Karen Webster about the advancements being made to an outdated imaging methodology that needed COVID-19 and a contactless movement to dethrone CDs from their throne.
By just launching an app, Nayyar’s platform will make it simpler for patients to share their medical scans with other doctors, giving them more access to and understanding of their scans.
PocketHealth developed new registration and sign-in techniques that can recognize information that is only known by medical professionals and patients in order to meet the demand for a robust platform that firmly authenticates users in order to transact sensitive and strictly controlled medical data.
Along with the basics like name, date of birth, social security number, and medical record number (MRN), PocketHealth verifies users’ identities by asking them to name referring physicians, specific scans they had performed, and other information that makes it difficult for fraudsters to compile a false profile.
After logging in, users can send scans to other practices using secure links, or, in a move that recognizes the non-digital nature of many practices today, the PocketHealth app can fax the doctor an “access page” with platform instructions.