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Which health systems partnered with Amazon, Google + Microsoft

Which health systems partnered with Amazon, Google + Microsoft unknown

Hospitals and health systems continue turning to Big Tech to help them with digital transformations. Here are 12 partnerships Becker's reported on in the past month.

1. Tacoma, Wash.-based MultiCare Health System collaborated with Microsoft to organize multitudes of health data from sources including fitness trackers and phones, the Big Tech company said Oct. 23.

2. Baptist Memorial Health Care, based in Memphis, Tenn., activated its Epic Cloud instance on Amazon Web Services, the health system's CIO said Oct. 22. 

3. Houston Methodist went live with a pilot Oct. 19 that connects Amazon's Echo Dot with its Epic EHR system. 

4. Durham, N.C.-based Duke Health continues to grow its partnership with Amazon's One Medical, the health system's CEO told Becker's for an Oct. 18 story.

5. Pittsburgh-based Highmark Health is employing generative artificial intelligence from Google to create marketing materials and document encounters on both its provider and payer sides, Becker's reported Oct. 17.

6. Chicago-based Northwestern Medicine plans to employ Microsoft's Fabric data analytics platform for clinical data integration, information exchange mandates, and to decipher insights with artificial intelligence, the tech giant said Oct. 10.

7. Charlotte, N.C.-based Atrium Health plans to expand the use of an artificial intelligence "copilot" from clinical documentation company Nuance, according to an Oct. 10 Microsoft blog post.

8. Duke Health continues to explore uses of Microsoft's generative AI, the tech company said Oct. 10.

9. Edison, N.J.-based Hackensack Meridian Health has moved its EHR playground workload from its on-premise environment to Google Cloud, the Big Tech company said Oct. 9. 

10. Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic said Sept. 28 it is deploying generative artificial intelligence technology from Microsoft to automate tasks for clinicians.

11. St. Louis-based Mercy is partnering with Microsoft to use the tech giant's OpenAI generative AI tools within its workflow, the company said Sept. 27.

12. As New York City-based Mount Sinai moves its Epic EHR system to Microsoft's cloud, the health system said Sept. 27 has been able to use new technologies such as artificial intelligence to drive greater efficiencies, as well as improve its cybersecurity posture.