Cerner Corporation (NASDAQ:CERN) and Fusionetics have entered into a definitive agreement within which they will combine Fusionetics assessment programming with Cerner’s HealtheAthlete. The duo’s collaboration will primarily be beneficial to sports organizations and athletes, who will have access to Fusionetics benchmarking. The HealtheAthlete, which is a web-based platform, is responsible for sharing athletes’ health and treatment-related data with the training staff.
People expect a user-friendly platform to manage their health
The world is quickly embracing digital operations as the demand for enhanced services increase. It is no wonder that people are so expectant of techniques that will help them move better, perform greater and recover faster. This is the more reason that Peak performance, which is a function of optimal health, has been added to Fusionetics programming to HealtheAthlete.
Fusionetics COO Ben Tucker says, “With this agreement, Fusionetics brings our professionally field-tested and elite-level practitioner knowledge to more athletes and their caregivers.”
Critical decisions that will enable organizations to manage health of populations
Cerner has been pushing for advanced technology for the last four decades. Fusionetics’ system, which was designed under the leadership of a group of scientists, sports medicine professionals, and coaches, is utilized globally in enhancing an athlete’s performance as well as alleviating future injury.
The user-friendly Fusionetics’ system is scientifically valid having taken the company decades of proven scientific research and field-testing to actualize it.
Cerner has been at the center of connecting people and providing information to more than 25,000 provider facilities globally. The company also has an integration of a financial system, which comes in handy for organizations, which are seeking to manage their revenue in a more consistent way.
All in all the general manager of HealtheAthlete, Cerner, Nate Hogan agrees to the need of helping athlete’s progress toward reaching their athletic goals. In the meantime, Cerner’s stock closed at $64.61 a fall of $0.28 or 0.43%.