Best of LinkedIn: Health Tech CW 22/ 23
Health Tech activity over the past two weeks showed a clear shift from broad innovation messaging to operational execution. The strongest signals came from AI moving into clinical workflows, imaging platforms being upgraded or relaunched, and partnerships focusing on access, interoperability, and measurable care delivery impact.
Date
June 8, 2026
Health Tech
Thomas Allgeyer

Methodology: Every two weeks we collect most relevant posts on LinkedIn for selected topics and create an overall summary only based on these posts. If you're interested in the single posts behind, you can find them here: https://linktr.ee/thomasallgeyer . Have a great read!

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If you prefer listening, check out our podcast summarizing the most relevant insights from Health Tech Insights CW 22/ 23:

AI & Clinical Workflow

  • AI moved from broad innovation messaging into concrete workflow use cases across clinical documentation, patient navigation, surgical implementation, pharmacovigilance, and cybersecurity
  • Oracle Health’s Clinical AI Agent showed practical value through reduced physician documentation time and UK availability for AI-powered clinical notes
  • Novant Health launched Aubrey as an AI assistant for surgical patients, highlighting patient-facing navigation as a fast-emerging use case
  • Healthcare leaders framed AI success around implementation discipline, validated outputs, robust data inputs, and safe operating models

Imaging & Diagnostics

  • Imaging remained one of the most active areas, with new MRI, CT, ultrasound, cathlab, and enterprise imaging developments
  • Philips introduced Titanion, an ultra-high gradient MRI platform focused on precise biomarker quantification
  • Photon-counting CT gained attention for pediatric imaging by combining detailed visualization with ultra-low radiation exposure
  • Platform upgrades showed clear operational value through shorter scan times, life-extension of existing assets, and improved hospital throughput

EHR & Interoperability

  • Major EHR modernization activity highlighted the need for trusted, connected, and clinician-ready health data infrastructure
  • The VA Electronic Health Record Modernization program reinforced the scale and complexity of national health IT transformation
  • Ireland’s national maternity EHR and Nova Scotia’s health transformation pointed to growing focus on coordinated care and reliable information access
  • FHIR conversion and real-time lab result integration showed how interoperability can unlock clinical and financial value

Partnerships & Ecosystems

  • Partnerships increasingly focused on long-term operating models rather than isolated technology deployments
  • Philips and WellSpan Health advanced a strategic collaboration to expand access to advanced imaging
  • Philips’ Care Alliance with Sutter Health showed partnership execution at scale through broad technology installation activity
  • Mach7 and Oracle strengthened enterprise imaging through an AI-ready solution and Oracle Cloud certification

Regulation & Trust

  • Trust, regulation, and responsible implementation remained central themes across AI, medtech, and digital health
  • FDA guidance on cell and gene therapies was positioned as an accelerator for therapy development and patient access
  • CE marking was framed as a shared ecosystem priority requiring coordinated action across medtech stakeholders
  • AI-enabled wearable medical devices emerged as a regulatory focus area, reinforcing the link between innovation, compliance, and market access

Care Models & Access

  • Digital health activity showed rising focus on care models that extend beyond hospitals into remote, outpatient, and home-based settings
  • Virtual DSMES combined with CGM was linked to improved diabetes control and stronger chronic care management
  • Post-stroke monitoring highlighted the need for connected follow-up models between hospital and home
  • Ultrasound and AI were positioned as ways to bring liver care closer to patients and improve access outside specialist settings

Strategic Implications

  • Health Tech is entering a more execution-oriented phase where AI narratives require proof in workflow impact, governance, and adoption
  • Imaging continues to evolve from hardware innovation into broader diagnostic platforms combining software, AI, cloud, and clinical workflow
  • Partnerships are becoming a key scaling mechanism for access, productivity, and health system transformation
  • The defining theme is connected execution, with technology, data, regulation, and care delivery increasingly moving together

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Want to see the posts voices behind this summary?

This week’s roundup (CW 22/ 23) brings you the Best of LinkedIn on Health Tech:

→ 71 handpicked posts that cut through the noise

→ 36 fresh voices worth following

→ 1 deep dive you don’t want to miss