At Axios Future Of Health, The Real Story Was Infrastructure Debt
•InnovationHealthcareAt Axios Future Of Health, The Real Story Was Infrastructure DebtByDemetri Giannikopoulos,Contributor.Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights.
•Health AI leader focused on tech innovation and patient experience.Follow AuthorMay 15, 2026, 08:05am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI.
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هذا الخبر من Forbes. خبر يقدم أدوات ذكاء اصطناعي للتلخيص والترجمة والاستماع.
InnovationHealthcareAt Axios Future Of Health, The Real Story Was Infrastructure DebtByDemetri Giannikopoulos,Contributor.Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Health AI leader focused on tech innovation and patient experience.Follow AuthorMay 15, 2026, 08:05am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.Moving scans between hospitals still often revolves around carrying CDs from one health system to another.gettyThe fax machine dates back to the 1840s. The CD arrived in the early 1980s. Both remain strangely central to how healthcare information still moves today.That reality sat quietly underneath nearly every conversation at the Axios Future of Health Summit in Washington, D.C. this week. Whether the topic was artificial intelligence, prior authorization, maternal health, transplant coordination or healthcare affordability, conversations that began around modernization eventually collided with the same hard limit: the underlying architecture of American healthcare still struggles to move information reliably between people, platforms and institutions.This became especially visible during a discussion with CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, M.D., who announced a new expansion of the CMS initiative colloquially called “Axe the Fax” alongside major health systems including Cleveland Clinic, Ochsner Health, Sanford Health, Providence and others, as well as EHR vendors including Epic Systems, Oracle and athenahealth. Dr. Oz described a system where nearly half of prior authorization communications still move through fax machines, creating delays, lost documentation and enormous administrative drag across care delivery.He joked that physicians collectively spend enough time managing prior authorization each year to rewatch every episode of The Simpsons twice (69 days!). The line landed because everyone in the room understood the workflow underneath it. The comment tr...المصدر: Forbes | Source: Forbes
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This article was originally published by Forbes. Khabr is a licensed Jordanian AI-powered news platform (Registration #82086). We add editorial value through: AI-powered news analysis, automated summaries, AI audio narration, multi-language translation (Arabic, English, French, Turkish), and AI fact-checking. Our mission is to make news more accessible and understandable for Arabic-speaking audiences worldwide.



