Practice Fusion, a San Francisco-based electronic health records (EHR) vendor and a subsidiary of Allscripts, has agreed to a $145 million settlement with the federal government to resolve allegations ...
The New York Times has a piece today about Practice Fusion, a San Francisco startup that's using Flex and the concept of rich Internet applications to make a splash in the medical world by providing ...
Practice Fusion, a vendor of electronic health records software, will pay $145 million to resolve criminal and civil investigations, including a probe into a scheme to increase opioid prescriptions, ...
Electronic records software provider Practice Fusion will pay $145 million in damages to settle allegations that its services were used to influence doctors to prescribe opioid medication to US ...
Cloud-based EHR provider Practice Fusion has announced two new partnership deals, bringing the vendor's total number of partnerships to exceed 600. Practice Fusion's new deals are with consumer ...
Practice Fusion, a medical records startup that attracted more than $150 million from VCs, including at Founders Fund, Kleiner Perkins and Artis Ventures, has received its share of negative press ...
Chicago-based EHR vendor Allscripts has agreed to pay $145 million to settle a civil and criminal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice into alleged business practices by its subsidiary ...
SAN FRANCISCO, April 5, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Practice Fusion, the fastest growing EMR and healthcare community, today announced closing a $23 million Series B round of financing led by Founders Fund, ...
New integration unlocks Weave features to help streamline communication workflows Weave (NYSE: WEAV), a leading all-in-one customer experience and payments software platform for small and medium-sized ...
San Francisco-based medical records startup Practice Fusion allegedly developed software for pharmaceutical companies to help increase the number of prescriptions doctors wrote for pain medications, ...
To doctors opening patients’ electronic records across the U.S., the alert would have looked innocuous enough. A pop-up would appear, asking about a patient’s level of pain. Then, a drop-down menu ...