article thumbnail

Optimize Pharmacy Outcomes and Simplify Operations with the Cloud

Omnicell

It's estimated the worldwide healthcare cloud computing market will increase at an annual growth rate of 17 percent by 2027. Since Omnicell manages, protects, upgrades, and backs up OmniCenter data, the pharmacy is less dependent on in-house IT resources and has access to what they need to run their business effectively.

article thumbnail

Optimize Pharmacy Outcomes and Simplify Operations with the Cloud

Omnicell

It's estimated the worldwide healthcare cloud computing market will increase at an annual growth rate of 17 percent by 2027. Since Omnicell manages, protects, upgrades, and backs up OmniCenter data, the pharmacy is less dependent on in-house IT resources and has access to what they need to run their business effectively.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

The Inflation Reduction Act: The Impact of Medicare Negotiation of Prescription Drug Prices on Hospitals and Health Systems

Omnicell

Ken Perez Vice President of Healthcare Policy and Government Affairs, Omnicell In August, H.R. The number of drugs with MFPs set will increase by 15 in 2027 (all from Part D) to 25 in total. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) In 2029 and each year after, 20 drugs from Part D or Part B will be added.

article thumbnail

Key Takeaways from New Medicare Law and Its Implications for 340B Stakeholders

Omnicell

That number will grow by an additional 15 Part D drugs in 2027. The Omnicell Blog is the leading source for pharmacy care, exploring emerging trends, successful best practices, and ideas and insights focused on the digital transformation of pharmacy. Part D covers drugs dispensed at a pharmacy and taken home.

article thumbnail

Implications of Recent Federal Actions to Address High Prescription Drug Costs

Omnicell

Ken Perez Vice President of Healthcare Policy, Omnicell The United States spends much more on healthcare on a per capita basis than other high-income countries, due in large part to the high cost of prescription drugs, and polls consistently show that high drug costs are the number one healthcare issue for Americans.