HITshow Daily: January 9, 2026 (Friday)
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Today on HITshow:
Healthcare’s AI moment is turning into infrastructure, while policy and capital markets help decide what scales and what gets funded. OpenAI launches a healthcare-specific product set with enterprise controls for protected health information, the House passes a 3-year ACA subsidy extension, and Apella raises $80M for ambient AI focused on operating room performance. Plus: Walmart launches Better Care Services as a digital health front door, and dealmakers signal an active M&A year ahead as JPM Healthcare Conference gets underway.
HOST: RHONDA BROOKS
📍 Strategy & Transformation — Teresa Vaughn
OpenAI is now packaging a healthcare-specific product set aimed at organizations needing enterprise controls, clearer governance, and handling of protected health information. The platform targets documentation support, care team coordination, patient communication drafts, and operational tasks. Before scaling beyond pilots, executives should demand clear data controls (what’s logged, retained, and who can access outputs) and evaluation in real workflows with measurement beyond satisfaction.
📍 Healthcare Policy & Advocacy — Anika Shah
The U.S. House passed a bill to extend enhanced Affordable Care Act premium tax credits for three years, affecting marketplace coverage affordability and hospital payer mix, charity care pressure, and collections. The bill faces a tougher path in the Senate, requiring scenario planning from revenue cycle and access teams for either renewals/re-enrollment surges or coverage churn.
📍 AI & Machine Learning — Nate Collier
Apella raised $80M to expand a platform using ambient AI and computer vision to measure operating room timing, workflow steps, turnover patterns, and bottlenecks. The platform creates a single source of truth for OR operations beyond just scheduling, with health systems participating strategically in funding to influence where the category goes.
📍 Digital Health — Nate Collier
Walmart launched Better Care Services, a digital health front door connecting consumers to third-party care options including urgent care and behavioral health. The move nudges patients toward convenience-first decisions, creating potential leakage risk for systems with fragmented, hard-to-navigate entry points.
📍 Finance & Capital — Logan Stokes
As the JPM Healthcare Conference gets underway, early signals suggest 2026 could be active for healthcare M&A driven by capability gaps, margin pressure, and competitive urgency. Watch for scale and portfolio reshaping, AI and automation acquisitions (especially revenue cycle, clinical productivity, and operational analytics), and vendor consolidation that changes pricing leverage and support. Hospital executives should review critical vendor contracts for change-of-control protections and identify top five mission-critical dependencies with real contingency plans.
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