Hospitals are absorbing robotics, AI, telemedicine, and automation at speed, and the real test is no longer novelty but whether these tools improve care without widening gaps in trust, cost, and responsibility.
Digital health is moving away from isolated hospital software and toward interoperable systems, turning data exchange, continuity of care, and access control into one shared technical problem.
As the Fascicolo Sanitario Elettronico, telemedicine, and regional interoperability move toward a more unified model, the security question is no longer theoretical: it is operational.
Spending is climbing, but the decisive test is whether telemedicine, electronic records, and e-prescriptions can work as one operational chain.
Italy’s SSN is moving telemedicine toward routine care, but the hard part is no longer the video visit - it is making data, professionals, and territorial services work as one system.
A discussion of digital health is really a discussion of governance: records, data spaces, telemedicine, and the institutions that decide who can see what, when, and why.
ASL Salerno’s new community virtual clinics point to a different healthcare map: closer access for inland and peripheral towns, with telemedicine, physical service points, and human support working together.
As digital medicine, wearable tech, and artificial intelligence converge, the quest for longer, better lives is shaking up healthcare, privacy, and what it means to grow old.
As pioneering projects prove digital healthcare’s worth, Italy faces a race against time to turn pilot successes into a national standard.
Postponed treatments and missed diagnoses are quietly building a health debt that digital medicine could help repay-if we act now.
As European nations grapple with rising healthcare costs and an aging demographic, Italy’s telemedicine push for the elderly exposes both innovation and inertia.
A recent ransomware attack on polymedicurecom exposes the growing vulnerability of healthcare platforms to cybercriminals.
As Europe rethinks defense, the human body is the next frontier for military resilience and strategic dominance.
As Italy’s territorial healthcare faces digital transformation, can new data flows finally cure the chaos of duplication and fragmentation?
As Campania’s hospitals buckle under pressure, digital health promises relief-but can it deliver?