In 2017, bank statements and legal notices apparently will still arrive as paper almost twice as often as electronic documents. The slow-but-steady growth of paperless delivery has its upsides -- and ...
CHICAGO—February 8, 2016—Two Sides North America has released a new study outlining key facts on why paperless initiatives do not save trees. Findings point to mounting evidence that loss of markets ...
According to a recent “nudge” campaign by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), marketing messages touting the environmental benefits of going paperless are falling on deaf ears. The results of the CRA ...
Results from a large-scale Johns Hopkins study of more than 40 hospitals and 160,000 patients show that when health information technologies replace paper forms and handwritten notes, both hospitals ...
Innovative Paperless Clinical Trial Study to Be Highlighted Tomorrow When U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Senior White House Officials Unveil Administration's National Strategy for Trusted ...
There's been progress in an effort to show that paperless clinical trials can save time and money compared with traditional trials that involve hard copies of documents. A new white paper released on ...
Digital technology has not created the "paperless society" many predicted, at least not yet, but it does have people communicating more than ever, a new federal study has found. The Statistics Canada ...
Hospitals that replace paper forms with information technology systems are safer and more efficient, according to a large-scale Johns Hopkins study of more than 40 hospitals and 160,000 patients.
“Paperless” hospitals are better for patient care than those facilities that rely on paper forms and handwritten notes, according to a new study from The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Results from a large-scale study of more than 40 hospitals and 160,000 patients show that when health information technologies replace paper forms and handwritten notes, both hospitals and patients ...