KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 24, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cerner Corporation (Nasdaq: CERN), a global health care technology company, is now offering select U.S. health systems and academic research centers complimentary access to critical de-identified COVID-19 patient data to help fight the pandemic. This offering will provide eligible health care researchers free access to Cerner’s COVID-19 data set to support epidemiological studies, clinical trials and medical treatments related to COVID-19, in line with applicable laws and guidelines.
The de-identified patient data secured and stored on Cerner HealtheDataLab™, powered by Amazon Web Services Inc. (AWS), will include COVID-19-related demographics to help track spread and surge, underlying illnesses and chronic conditions, treatments, lab results and clinical complications and outcomes that could help drive important medical decisions. A committee including Cerner associates and industry advisors will review the applications and identify recipients that will benefit from the complimentary offering.“Cerner believes deeply in the power of clinical data to advance global research,” said Donald Trigg, president, Cerner. “The current COVID-19 pandemic compelled our team to develop a strategy to help leading health systems advance the search for critical solutions. When we ultimately move from crisis response to recovery, I am hopeful it will also demonstrate the promise of a ‘learning heath network’ to accelerate the next generation of discovery.”Cerner and AWS’ collaboration continues to focus on making health care better for patients and providers. Last year, Cerner worked to reduce re-admissions to hospitals leveraging de-identified data to help make early determinations of the cause of return hospitalizations using AWS services.“This is a pivotal moment in time when having access to the right information at the right time can help save lives,” Shez Partovi, MD, director of Worldwide Business Development for Healthcare, Life Sciences, and Genomics, Amazon Web Services, Inc. “By supporting complimentary access to Cerner HealtheDataLab there is an opportunity to bring health systems, academic medical centers and technology efforts together to securely share information and approaches to better understand, combat and contain COVID-19.”Prior to COVID-19, Cerner began working with research institutions to help clinicians more easily and efficiently gain health insights and guide care. Last year, Cerner announced the development of the Cerner Learning Health NetworkSM , piloting the program with Duke Clinical Research Institute. This work helps automate data collection from multiple sources, including the electronic health record (EHR), to rapidly give medical researchers secure and compliant access to important information that has the potential to transform patient care.Amid COVID-19, Cerner has taken steps to enhance and introduce new technology offerings and recommendations to support health systems as they fight the pandemic, waive license fees for expansion of hospital beds, establish new dashboards designed to summarize and display trends, among other community support efforts globally. Cerner has also launched a dedicated resource site giving clients access to new and updated offerings. More information on clinical research can be accessed at Cerner.com.About Cerner
Cerner’s health technologies connect people and information systems in thousands of contracted provider facilities worldwide dedicated to creating smarter and better care for individuals and communities. Recognized globally for innovation, Cerner assists clinicians in making care decisions and assists organizations in managing the health of their populations. The company also offers an integrated clinical and financial system to help manage day-to-day revenue functions, as well as a wide range of services to support clinical, financial and operational needs, focused on people. For more information, visit Cerner.com, The Cerner Blog or connect on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter or The Cerner Podcast. Nasdaq: CERN. Health care is too important to stay the same.Media Contacts:
Cerner
Misti Preston, Director of Public Relations, MediaRelations@cerner.com
Bay Street News