Corporate espionage allegations hit HR payroll companies
Ethan Mollick of the Wharton School says employees are reluctant to tell their bosses if they use AI: “Everyone is trying to not show that they’ve automated their work.”
Clinician nudge at suspected ovarian cancer diagnosis improves oncology referral rate
A study by Anna Jo Smith of the Perelman School of Medicine and colleagues found that a clinician nudge for referral to a gynecologic oncologist at the time of a suspected ovarian cancer diagnosis improved referral rates by 20%.
BlackRock CEO suggests changes to Social Security
Olivia Mitchell of the Wharton School says that early 2000s proposals for voluntary adoption of personal accounts into Social Security would have required some transition funding in the short-term but returned the system to solvency in the long-run.
Ambient scribe tool increases efficiency, reduces documentation burden for clinicians
A study by Anna Schoenbaum of the Perelman School of Medicine and colleagues found that ambient scribing technology significantly decreased clinical documentation burden for health care professionals at an academic medical center.
‘Conservative girl’ fashion is definitely a thing — and not just in the U.S.
Kathleen M. Brown of the School of Arts & Sciences says that politically-conservative fashion for women approximates a “corporate-feminine” style.
Pennovation Works 2024 Year in Review

nocred
Bringing together passions for nursing, community, and policy

nocred
2024 PEP and PIP winners: Where are they now?

nocred
Kathryn Griffo named Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations at Penn

nocred