Walking the HIMSS conference floor is an experience unto itself. It’s noisy with conversations while some of the flashier booth displays caught my eye. All this happens amidst the steady movement of thousands of attendees. It’s not quite frenetic but certainly the event felt like an energized momentum.
No big surprises this year in theme, as interoperability was clearly the dominant topic across the conference. The nuanced shift here was that rather than focusing solely on standalone products, many booths emphasized cross-vendor collaborations and integrations, highlighting how different technologies can work together across systems and networks.
Also unsurprising was the CMS presence as they continue to reinforce their policy direction around national data exchangeand the aligned network agenda. Conversations about how these initiatives will shape the future of interoperability bubbled in multiple sessions and hallway discussions. Policy holds an important and growing role in driving technical adoption.
Big tech left a significant footprint, with Microsoft, in particular, showing a very large presence and signaling continued interest in the sector.
More broadly, the conference reflected a level of affluence that speaks to how high the stakes have become in healthcare data, platforms, and infrastructure.
All this innovation and information left me with some important questions. How much of this technology will translate into everyday operations inside healthcare organizations? And what about the timelines? HIMSS is very good at showcasing what’s possible, but when does possibility translate into meaningful change within the daily healthcare experience for patients and clinicians?
To that end, if HIMSS is looking for input for improvement, perhaps there may be an opportunity for the industry to focus less on the promise of interoperability and more on how it actually shows up in real workflow. I’m interested in each provider’s rollout. This goes beyond implementation. It requires systemic adoption and training for every provider. This is not a light lift.
HIMSS is so good at bringing together the ideas and people shaping the future of healthcare technology. It offers an impressive view of where the industry is heading. I’m excited to see how that momentum translates into systems and processes that work just as well outside the conference hall as they do on the demo floor.

