Four years ago, hosts Chris Boyer and Reed Smith discussed the impacts that the “disruptive healthcare trifecta” - Google, Facebook and Amazon - were predicted to have on the industry. In this episode, they reflect back on how these organizations have evolved and changed their strategies. They cover Google Health’s recent announcement of expanding the AI capabilities to organize patient data, Facebook’s shift to an ad-centric model (and the challenges of misinformation), and Amazon’s recent acquisition of One Medical as a cornerstone in their strategy from more than five years ago. Are these three companies still causing as much disruption as was predicted four years ago? Tune in to find out!
Mentions from the Show:
Why Health Care Is Ripe for Digital Disruption
Customers, Tech Drive Health Care Disruption
Google is developing its own prescription for U.S. health-care costs: smarter artificial intelligence
Project Baseline: Alphabet's five-year plan to map the entire journey of human health
ViVE 2022: Google Health expands AI capabilities of Care Studio to organize patient data
Verily's clinical research and healthcare businesses are growing, execs say, as company eyes post-pandemic opportunities
Facebook Says Its Update Will Make It 'Better' for Your Mental Health. Here's What You Should Know.
Turn Off Messenger Kids, Health Experts Plead to Facebook
Facebook Users Press Privacy Claims Over Tracking At Health Sites
Facebook Is Receiving Sensitive Medical Information from Hospital Websites
Facebook is bombarding cancer patients with ads for unproven treatments
Removing Certain Ad Targeting Options and Expanding Our Ad Controls
Here's How Amazon Could Disrupt Health Care (Part 1)
Amazon in healthcare: disruption in motion or a nothing-burger?
Amazon Wants to Be Your Doctor, Too
Amazon will see you now: reading between the lines of the One Medical acquisition
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