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Morning Headlines 4/4/25

April 3, 2025 Headlines No Comments

HSCC Calls for One-Year Consultative Process with Administration on Healthcare Cybersecurity Requirements

The Healthcare and Public Health Sector Coordinating Council Cybersecurity Working Group urges the White House to launch a one-year consultative process with healthcare leaders instead of proceeding with the planned HIPAA Security Rule update.

Senate confirms Oz as head of CMS along party lines

The Senate confirms former cardiologist and television show host Mehmet Oz, MD, MBA as administrator of CMS.

Oracle privately confirms Cloud breach to customers

Oracle acknowledges the previously reported breach of certain Cloud servers, telling customers that the FBI is investigating.

News 4/4/25

April 3, 2025 News No Comments

Top News

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Leaders from the Senate and House Veterans’ Affairs and Appropriations Committees ask the VA to submit an updated schedule and cost estimate for its Oracle Health EHR Modernization program. by September 30, 2025.

The group’s letter notes that “compliance with these laws, directives, and GAO recommendations is a critical step to ensuring EHRM’s success and accountability.”


Reader Comments

From HS CIO: “Re: Oracle breaches. Our Oracle Health rep said there was a call Monday evening where it was stated that the breach impacted legacy databases that were involved with migrations (I’m guessing Epic or the OCI instance of the EHR). On the cloud breach, the rep said that the message they were given is that no databases were breached, which seems to leave the door open. Wondering if you’ve heard anything similar from Oracle Health customers?” I invite those on the front lines to let me know what’s going on. Oracle has defended its claim that Oracle Cloud wasn’t breached because the incident apparently involved an older platform called Oracle Cloud Classic, although that is also an Oracle-managed cloud service. Meanwhile, a federal lawsuit that seeks class action status was filed against Oracle on Monday that involved both the cloud and Oracle Health breaches, accusing the company of violating Texas breach notification laws by not informing the alleged victims of the breach within the required 60 days. 


Sponsored Events and Resources

Live Webinar: April 15 (Tuesday) 1 ET. “Navigating ACO Quality in 2025: Lessons Learned and Future Directions.” Sponsor: Healthmonix. Presenters: Michael Lewis, VP of customer success, Healthmonix; Steven Tyson, senior account executive, Healthmonix.  Accountable care organizations (ACOs) must stay ahead of evolving quality requirements and reporting changes. Join us for an in-depth discussion on lessons learned from past ACO implementation, key areas for improvement, and the impact of Medicare Clinical Quality Measures (CQMs).

Contact Lorre to have your resource listed.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Business Insider profiles the 29-year-old executives who are leading Palantir’s healthcare business, neither of whom has prior healthcare experience.


People

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PeaceHealth hires Julie Eastman, MBA (UCI Health) as SVP/CIO.

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Healthcare IT Leaders hires Paul Cannon (5plus2) as CTO.

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Trimedx hires Neil de Crescenzo, MBA (Optum Insight) as CEO.

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Apree Health, which was formed in the 2022 merger of Castlight Health and Vera Whole Health, promotes Jonathan Porter to CEO and restores the Castlight and Vera brands.

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Advocate Health promotes Andy Crowder to SVP/chief digital officer.


Announcements and Implementations

A Stoltenberg Consulting survey of healthcare CIO members of CHIME finds:

  • The top priorities for 2025 are improving clinical workflows, improving the patient experience, and optimizing EHRs.
  • The #1 investment area is cybersecurity, privacy, and risk management.
  • Getting the most out of existing technology reached an all-time high of 62% of votes.
  • Clinician burnout rates are continuing their steady drop.
  • The top IT support frustration involves lack of training.
  • The biggest challenges are staff shortages, inadequate budgets, and EHR optimization.
  • More than half are exploring or using AI tools in areas such as revenue cycle management, clinical documentation improvement, and predictive analytics.
  • Health systems will continue to use hybrid or fully remote IT staffing.
  • IT budgets are flat or declining in 61% of respondent organizations.

Privacy and Security

The Healthcare and Public Health Sector Coordinating Council Cybersecurity Working Group urges the White House to launch a one-year consultative process with healthcare leaders instead of proceeding with the planned HIPAA Security Rule update.


Other

A class action lawsuit accuses a University of Maryland Medical Center pharmacist of installing webcam-activating software on at least 400 hospital computers over a 10-year period to spy on young female doctors and residents as they undressed or pumped breast milk. The six plaintiffs also allege that he installed keystroke logging software to steal their passwords, then accessed their home computers to watch them via webcam and to steal information from their cloud accounts. They are suing the hospital, who has fired the pharmacist, for negligence.


Sponsor Updates

  • Medicomp Systems releases a new “Tell Me Where IT Hurts” podcast titled “Live From HIMSS25 in Fabulous Las Vegas!”
  • AGS Health CEO Patrice Wolfe joins Verisma’s board.
  • CereCore publishes a new case study titled “Virtual CISOs Bring New Hope to Orgs Without Security Officials.”
  • A new analysis from Black Book Research identifies top global growth opportunities for OpenEHR adoption in 2025.
  • Symplr will accept nominations for its new Karlene Kerfoot Nursing Leadership in Technology Education Grant, named in honor of its late CNO, beginning June 1.
  • Clearwater announces the publication of its “Cyber Risk Benchmark Trend Report for Healthcare Vulnerability Management.”
  • WellSky announces CarePort Care Transitions Dashboard Suite.
  • The “Vanguards of Health Care” podcast features Capital Rx in an episode titled “How Capital Rx is Fixing America’s Broken Drug Pricing.”
  • Inovalon announces that its Safety Management solution is now available on the PointClickCare Marketplace.
  • Redox joins the CommonWell Health Alliance.
  • Ellkay will incorporate Dymo’s labeling solutions into its LKOrbit platform.
  • First Databank names Kelly Marino regional sales manager, and Thomas Pugh and Joseph Kuruvila software engineers.
  • FinThrive will present at the IPMI Healthcare Financial Institute April 7 in Orlando.
  • Infinx offers a new case study titled “New York Hospital Solves Prior Authorization & Scheduling Overflow With Tech-Enabled Patient Access Solution.”
  • WEDI’s “The Collective Voice of Health IT Podcast” features Linus Health Chief Strategy Officer John Showalter, MD.

Blog Posts


Contacts

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EPtalk by Dr. Jayne 4/3/25

April 3, 2025 Dr. Jayne 1 Comment

A blue and white logo

AI-generated content may be incorrect. 

I finally have some solid data from the recent residency match, as administered by the National Resident Matching Program.

For those who might not be familiar, this is where medical students indicate where they want to do their residency training; training programs indicate who they want to fill their allocated number of training slots; and an algorithm tries to bring them all together. This year’s match had 52,409 applicants, for which only 47,208 submitted a final rank order list. The candidates were competing for 43,237 positions. At noon Eastern time on match day, all the applicants learn where they’re going to be for the next three to seven years.

Different medical schools handle the big reveal in different ways, with some handing out sealed envelopes for class members to open privately. Others throw blowout match day celebrations complete with “walk-up” music like you might see at a major league baseball game, followed by live reveals as candidates open their notices. The latter can be a difficult environment for those who didn’t get their top choices, but everyone still acts thrilled regardless.

Those who didn’t match were notified earlier in the week and have the opportunity to compete in The Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP), commonly referred to as “the scramble,” where unfilled slots are offered and candidates have only two hours to accept a potential offer. If you saw a graduating medical student with their phone glued to their body March 17-20, chances are they were part of the scramble.

It’s a brutal process for those who have been through it, although some of my classmates who had top scores were largely unfazed. The final match data can be telling as far as what students think about a particular specialty, and following the worst parts of the COVID-19 pandemic we saw a significant drop in matches to emergency medicine as students saw what that specialty had become. After experiencing an 81.8% fill rate in 2023, emergency medicine rebounded to 95.5% in 2024 and landed at 97.9% for 2025.

Primary care specialties ended up with a 93.5% fill rate, even with an increase of 877 in the positions available. Family medicine matches fell from 87.8% to 85.0%, which means that we will continue to have shortages in that specialty for years to come. Unless healthcare payment policies change (and workloads shift), we’ll continue to see a decline as students choose specialties with higher compensation and better work-life balance.

A close-up of a ring

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

I had dinner with some friends last week, and one of them was showing off her Oura ring. She and her husband bought matching rings in an effort to use data to determine who was more disruptive during sleep. The company has been working to improve its sleep tracking algorithm, and although it’s better than competitor devices, it’s still not as accurate as formal polysomnography. Although it will probably be good enough to force one of the parties to consider seeking medical help, it’s not classified as a medical device, nor is it approved to diagnose, treat, or monitor health conditions. If you think your bed partner has apnea or another serious condition, it is best to see a licensed professional.

In another discussion, a friend asked me about this article on Gather Health, which aims to provide primary care services with a focus on keeping older patients out of the emergency department. Founded by an emergency physician who was tired of seeing patients seeking care in high-cost facilities when it could be better managed elsewhere, over 2,500 patients are enrolled, with the majority being covered by Medicare and Medicaid. The company has raised $17 million in funding and hopes to break even in 2025. The company pairs office-based care with home health, remote patient monitoring, and social opportunities to improve patient outcomes.

The article mentions revenue forecasts of $44 million this year. It hopes to expand from four to 17 sites in Massachusetts. Of course, when venture capital is involved, there’s an expectation that the services will yield a profit, and it would be interesting to learn more about how much money they think they can make on something like this. I’m not against people making a profit, but it’s the extreme focus on profitability that I’ve seen create a lot of issues in healthcare delivery organizations. Nearly every physician gathering that I attend features at least one horror story related to private equity or venture funding of care delivery organizations.

Caring for complex elderly patients is expensive and challenging. The company’s founder also served as chief operating officer of VillageMD, so it will be interesting to see what he does differently with this endeavor. From the patient perspective, I wish the company well and will be interested to see how it performs over the next few years.

A screenshot of a computer

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

The Open Payments program is a national system that creates transparency around payments made to physicians from drug companies, device manufacturers, and other regulated entities. Each spring, data is released so that physicians can review what is associated with their name and potentially dispute anything unexpected. It’s been many years since I attended so much as a drug company lunch, so I was surprised to see a significant amount of money posted against my name for the recent reporting period.

I’m glad I reviewed it, because the entry was from a company I don’t associate with and was tagged with a nebulous “food and beverage” category for a single event in the first few months of 2024. I’ve opened a dispute about the entry and hopefully it will be resolved quickly and with a minimum of extra work on my part. If you’re a provider subject to reporting, it might not be a bad idea to take a look at your account. Even if I’m unable to resolve it, my understanding is that my record will be flagged as “disputed,” which is good because I hate to break my record of perfect zeros.

Take-Back

Mark your calendar for the next DEA National Prescription Drug Take Back Day on Saturday, April 26. Communities will be holding collection events, often at local police departments or other health facilities. Unwanted and expired medications are a health hazard and also pose risks to the environment when people dispose of them incorrectly. Fortunately, my local law enforcement agency has a box that’s available for drop off around the clock, and I made good use of it when a relative passed away, leaving behind a cache of pain medications with a street value in the thousands of dollars. The program has collected 19 million pounds of medications over the years, which is pretty impressive.

Email Dr. Jayne.

Morning Headlines 4/3/25

April 2, 2025 Headlines No Comments

Leaders of the House, Senate VA Committee & VA Appropriations Request Cost Estimate for VA Electronic Health Record

Senator Jerry Moran (R-KS), chairman of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, spearheads an effort to request that the VA submit to Congress an updated schedule and cost estimate for its EHR Modernization program by September 30.

Deacon Health Launches to Bring Tech-Enabled Care Coordination Services to Specialty Care

Specialty care management company Deacon Health launches with $7 million in seed funding.

CareCloud Acquires RevNu Medical Management, Completing Second Acquisition in 31 Days

CareCloud acquires RevNu Medical Management, an RCM company focused on audiology providers.

Healthcare AI News 4/2/25

News

Amazon releases Nova Act, an AI model that can perform actions within a web browser. 

An Israel-based medical advocacy group urges the health ministry to develop AI usage guidelines and enforcement, citing cases in which clinicians misused AI tools and harmed patients. It says that faulty AI-generated medication dosing and diagnostic suggestions have caused life-threatening errors.

Apple will reportedly add an AI health coach to an updated Health app as early as 2026.


Business

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Layer Health, which offers an AI-powered EHR data abstraction tool, raises $21 million in a Series A funding round.


Research

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A new KLAS report finds that many health system executives are wondering if their organizations are falling behind their peers in using AI, but most are just getting started with strategy, governance, and choice of specific products. All executives from large health systems report that their organizations are using AI. EHR vendors are driving AI adoption through integration with their core products. AI use in imaging, operations, security, and revenue cycle is more focused but growing.

A small Dartmouth study finds that people with significant behavioral disorders improved after using a therapy-focused chatbot app. Depression symptoms dropped by 51%, while those with depression, anxiety, and eating disorders saw smaller but still meaningful improvements. The researchers say that chatbot-delivered therapy rivaled the results of traditional outpatient care and could help ease the mental health provider shortage.


Other

A woman in Australia files a complaint with the health regulator after her doctor used ChatGPT to interpret her lab results during a visit, which she called “lazy and unprofessional.”


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
Send news or rumors.
Follow on X, Bluesky, and LinkedIn.
Contact us.

HIStalk Interviews Justin Dearborn, CEO, Praia Health

April 2, 2025 Interviews No Comments

Justin Dearborn is founder and CEO of Praia Health.

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Tell me about yourself and the company.

Praia Health is celebrating our one-year anniversary of our spinout of the Providence health system and their incubation group. We are carving out a new space around consumer orchestration within health systems. Our primary customer is a health system that wants to improve their patient- and consumer-facing experiences, whether it be an app, web, or call center. We help with orchestrating all the touchpoints and coordinating those. It looks similar to how most consumers are used to interacting on the internet, being very personalized and removing friction where we can. It’s a new space of consumer orchestration.

Prior to coming to Praia, I was the CEO of another patient engagement company called Patient Bond that is now a part of Health Catalyst. Before that, I spent eight years at Merge Healthcare as CEO. They’re a publicly-traded medical imaging company that was acquired by IBM.

How much attention are health systems paying to the digital consumer experience compared to other industries?

There is interest and discussions. A lot is going on at the macro level that has maybe defocused some of those projects, but we’re still definitely in the early adopter phase of the market. Always good conversations with the chief strategy, chief digital, or chief transformational officer. Most of the meetings are very receptive.

There’s a lot that sometimes needs to happen on the back end to allow for a very elegant front-end experience. There’s some organizational change, some change management that is probably responsible for longer sales cycles, but we see receptivity to the message and everyone gets it and nods their head. We want a better consumer-patient experience. We want it to mirror Amazon, which is a tried and true analogy that everyone uses it because it’s a good analogy and it works.

It’s hard to say you wouldn’t want to deliver for your patients a very personalized experience at scale. If you and I were both using the Providence app, for instance, we could each open up our apps and we would have a different set of calls to action and information based on what they know that we want to see and don’t want to see. It expedites that and keeps you engaged. I don’t recall ever hearing, “I’m not interested, it doesn’t make sense.” It’s more about, do we have budget this year? Do we have resources? Is it on the roadmap? And now we’re going to try to figure out what’s going to happen with Medicaid and how that impacts our system. That’s not unique to Praia, of course, but just a little bit of distraction to start 2025.

How do you approach the return on investment questions?

This could fall into marketing, and not that those projects don’t need a tangible ROI, but absolutely, this is an ROI sale. We approach it that way. If something’s already been approved in a new project, a new website design, we could fold into that and enhance that. But overall, it is an ROI sale. We have incredible data from Providence that  we released a few months ago that shows a really compelling ROI. The ROI tool we use can scale up and down. Every system is not going to have the scale of Providence, but the same levers are in place across the board.

We’re very bullish on the ROI. We’ll actually contract around that, do some gain share and take some risks because we’re confident in the return. We definitely approach every opportunity or engagement that it has to have an ROI to get to the starting block.

What lessons have been learned from big companies in healthcare, such as chain drug stores or insurers, that could be applied to a health system?

We think it’s across verticals. It’s just loyalty and driving engagement. It’s been proven by some great research that’s out there that nudges within an app work. You have to be cognizant not to over message, which some industries have been guilty of, but keeping a patient or consumer engaged.

One of the theses for Providence, where this was designed five years ago, was that they were seeing only about 1.7 visits a year per adult, and the average adult has five different interactions with the health system. They found that most health systems don’t have compelling reasons for you to go back and visit the health system in between episodes of care. They can deliver up content that’s relevant to you. Every health system has a plethora of health and wellness data, but how does it get served up to you? How do you know about it? It could even  be spiritual in Providence’s case. They have a great library of material and they know who want to engage with that and who won’t.

It’s really just serving up content and making it relevant for you. When you have a health and wellness concern, go to the Providence app first, there might be something there for you even if they don’t deliver the service. They might have a network of providers. It could be physical therapy, it could be through a medicine partner. They can deliver you into that experience through the Providence app in a frictionless way. You don’t have to create another ID, log in, or manage 18 or 20 different apps. It can all be delivered within the Providence app, even if it’s not a Providence service, per se.

Do consumers feel aligned with a health system that is attempting to market to them or engage them between encounters with what might feel like a sales pitch?

There’s definitely that risk. But great data suggests that patients trust their health system, whether it be big brands like Cleveland Clinic, Mayo, and Providence. Maybe to the same extent, for independent pharmacists. Depending on where you live, there still are some independent pharmacies where you get to know your pharmacist and have a trusting relationship .

But otherwise, the research would suggest that people do want to get content a from a health system. I think that’s well earned. Over half of the health systems are non-profits and a lot of them are faith-based, so they are mission driven. They have to run businesses, but they really do have the patient’s benefit in mind. You can draw comparisons to some that are purely profit-driven and you could tell the difference in experience.  I think they are a trusted source.

Some maybe have been a little bit complacent with that status, and they are getting channeled into some new business models. One Medical is a great example. They do a great job, but they are forcing some systems to start moving and focusing on digital, because One Medical is a great digital experience. It’s only going to get better with Amazon owning them. That’s creating some pressure, and that’s sometimes what is needed to force some innovation. But health systems are trusted sources in the community, and they are more and more starting to leverage that.

A business would target those consumers who have the potential to be the most profitable. Do health systems look at providing services such as population health or do they focus on selling profitable services?

I’m sure that goes on. I would say that a lot of the non-profits we’re working with do focus on top of funnel. Once they are in this system, so to speak, and they’re a digital user, they will  interact with them around knowing that a care gap is coming up. I haven’t seen, “Let’s go target this audience because we need to fill up the ortho schedule for knee replacements,” but they will absolutely do a great job with tools like Praia targeting, “ You’re overdue for your colonoscopy” or “you’re overdue for your mammography exam.”

The click-throughs and actions are taken when it’s delivered through an app, and Providence has allowed us to publish on this, it’s three and four acts of a text message and email, et cetera. Phone calls are great as well, but they don’t scale as well, of course, and most people don’t answer their phone. It’s more targeted around care gap closures, I will say that some more nimble systems, if they know that they’re having a couple of open days, will reach out to folks that in the past who needs a knee replacement but didn’t schedule for whatever reason. Maybe nudging those along. There’s some incentive to do it because there’s going to be some openings in the schedule. But what we see predominantly is more around care gap closures. There’s enough of that to keep them busy.

What are the challenges in communicating with people who prefer texting or emailing to a phone call or vice versa?

You would naturally think that it’s going to be age driven, but we’re definitely seeing that it’s not. My grandmother was 92 and she was texting her clinician. It’s going to be more pronounced as everyone ages into it and has grown up texting and using email and app communications. It’s definitely a split.

AI comes up in every conversation, so every health system is analyzing how to use it, more on the back office side and the first line of interaction. But because it’s healthcare and it’s personal, a good mix should be available. There are people that want to talk to an empathetic caregiver and somebody who’s going to actually walk them through something and hold their hand, so to speak, over the phone. But they are more routine communication for sure.

Providence has another product they built internally around email. They analyzed the number of emails that their physicians get and it can be hours a day of cleaning out your inbox. They found is 80% were more routine and could be handled by a front office person or a password reset or something like that. Trying to make the clinicians more efficient, because they all recognize — especially the faith-based and non-profits — this is personal. Most people, when it comes down to something life threatening, want to talk to a human being.

What other data sources outside the EHR might be useful for a health system that is trying to address consumers rather than just episodic patients?

That is the key selling attribute of Praia. We leverage all the great work that the EHRs do. We see MyChart and they do a great job, but it’s really designed and focused on the clinical interaction. Even some of that could be done a little.

In a Praia experience, and I’ll use Epic again, MyChart will be will show up. At every screen, you can punch out and click through to MyChart if you want to look at your lab work. Depending on the system and the health system, you could schedule through Epic, but there’s a lot of other scheduling applications as well. We definitely leverage that and enhance the value, because more digital users in a system are better for the health system, better for the EHR, better for us. We absolutely drive adoption there.

Rock Health did a great paper on this last year. About 80% of health and wellness happens outside the clinical visit. How do you get into more of that? We have a couple of partners on the Praia platform, Foodsmart being one of more food is medicine. That’s a very rightfully popular area right now. That’s a separate company. But Providence has a relationship and we can serve that up in the Praia app, make it seamless for a consumer-patient within Providence app to leverage that. There are other companies like Rosarium, where if you’re qualified from your insurance or Medicaid and will be using a wheelchair for six months, they will build a ramp and make it accessible in other areas. The ecosystem of partners is unlimited, but that’s outside the clinical interaction. Providence and forward-thinking systems want to be a part of that and keep you engaged with them to make your life easier with just one application.

Amazon is using AI in its health assistant to push specific products based on a user’s profile and their use of its website. Could AI be misused in an attempt to personalize the healthcare consumer experience?

The systems we’ve interacted with are very cognizant of overreaching there. Providence, for example, has a governance committee. They are focused on AI  in the background. Administratively looking at whether the bill’s coded correctly. Can we answer some of these questions around like password reset, or what’s my insurance deductible? They use AI for that, but as far as interacting, anything touching clinical, anything that could be seen as practicing medicine, systems haven’t, for the most part, taken that leap. I think they are conscious of what you just said.

Another example is Abridge. It has been in the news a lot and they’ve done a great job with ambient listening, which is making the physicians more efficient. Most systems and patients are comfortable with things like that. They do a lot of voice of customer, voice of patients research around this and  are comfortable. Does anyone want to interact directly with an AI bot yet? Not for clinical. Where’s my bill, or I have a question about it, maybe. They are being methodical about how AI interacts.

On the Praia side, our platform can ingest any AI agent or application that a system has built and deliver that. But we’re also taking a very measured approach around that. Hype is probably unprecedented, but there’s not a lot of tangible ROI yet. Every health system is experimenting and piloting, but there’s not a ton of great use cases outside of the couple that I mentioned.

What factors will be most important to the company over the next couple of years?

More customer input, and customer being the health system. This was built at Providence. It was intended to be commercially facing me, not solving a Providence-only problem. We just need more data points, more customers on the platform.

Unfortunately for first half of the year, a lot of systems have been reluctant for systems to move forward, which is not just a Praia concern. With the potential cuts in Medicaid, and other grants have been cut, we’ve been interacting with a lot of systems and we’re pretty far down the road. Then budgets have been frozen because of the some of the NIH grants that roll downhill.

But I think there will be a tipping point where a couple of big, notoriously skeptical, hard-to-hard-to-get-on-board health systems will come on board with Praia. Then it will be like what happens with a lot of startups, where the momentum will move fast from there. But really, it’s it’s around knocking down those next group of health systems so we can continue to increase the the R&D spend and get additional perspectives on what will be helpful.

What we’ve found so far is that once the platform is in place, a lot of use cases come up. We’re trying to be careful to only bring to market use cases that have applicability across every health system. Like it can be vaccine scheduling with Walgreens, or we announced a partnership and investment from Labcorp streamlining the way lab ordering works from the physician pen, so to speak, to the patient and making sure they show up knowing what’s expected of them so they show up at the right facility at the right time and have done the right preparation in advance. Things like that will continue drive use cases and, frankly, value from the platform. But really, for us, the focus is just onboarding more customers in 2025 so we can continue to build that knowledge base.

Morning Headlines 4/2/25

April 1, 2025 Headlines No Comments

ATA Action Acquires Digital Therapeutics Alliance, Launches New Advancing Digital Health Coalition

ATA Action, the advocacy group of the American Telemedicine Association, acquires the Digital Therapeutics Alliance and creates the Advancing Digital Health Coalition.

Vaco Holdings rebrands as Highspring

Vaco Holdings, whose brands include MorganFranklin Consulting, Pivot Point Consulting, Focus Search Partners, and Built, renames itself Highspring, with the talent solutions platform taking the name Vaco by Highspring.

Inside a Toronto mall, a new kiosk is changing how families access health care

Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children opens a staffed virtual urgent care kiosk in a shopping mall to ease ED wait times.

News 4/2/25

April 1, 2025 News 1 Comment

Top News

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The VA names nine facilities that will go live on the department’s Oracle Health-based EHR next year.

Medical centers and associated clinics in Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio will join four locations in Michigan as part of the VA’s accelerated deployment plan.

The VA expects to complete full implementation at all VA facilities nationwide as early as 2031.


Reader Comments

From Tressa: “Re: Oracle. It seems strange for the cloud and the legacy databases to be compromised at the same time. Also, I hadn’t heard if our data was affected and texted our CMIO with the information you posted. He contacted our Cerner account executive, who claimed to know nothing about it. It seems bizarre for the account execs to not be made aware of something that has been publicly reported on.”


Sponsored Events and Resources

Live Webinar: April 15 (Tuesday) 1 ET. “Navigating ACO Quality in 2025: Lessons Learned and Future Directions.” Sponsor: Healthmonix. Presenters: Michael Lewis, VP of customer success, Healthmonix; Steven Tyson, senior account executive, Healthmonix.  Accountable care organizations (ACOs) must stay ahead of evolving quality requirements and reporting changes. Join us for an in-depth discussion on lessons learned from past ACO implementation, key areas for improvement, and the impact of Medicare Clinical Quality Measures (CQMs).

Contact Lorre to have your resource listed.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Virtual care company AvaSure acquires Nurse Disrupted, which offers virtual nursing services for hospital and home-based care. Nurse Disrupted founder and CEO Bre Loughlin, MS, RN will join AvaSure as executive director of virtual care innovation.

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Well Health Technologies will take control of Healwell AI as Healwell acquires New Zealand’s Orion Health. Well Health, which invested in Toronto-based Healwell and bought its clinical assets in 2023, saw its shares drop 30% Monday after it disclosed a US federal investigation into billing practices at its subsidiary Circle Medical Technologies that will delay its fiscal year reporting. WELL.TO shares rose 19% in the past 12 months, valuing the company at $1 billion.

Automated chart review startup Layer Health raises $21 million in a Series A funding round.

ATA Action, the advocacy group of the American Telemedicine Association, acquires the Digital Therapeutics Alliance and creates Advancing Digital Health Coalition.


Sales

  • Ballad Health (TN) selects specialty pharmacy analytics software from Loopback Analytics.
  • Providence Swedish (WA) implements remote patient monitoring software and services from Starlight Health as part of a new post-discharge pilot program at its First Hill hospital.
  • Columbus Public Health will implement Epic through an arrangement with Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.

People

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ReferWell names Kevin Healy (Chicago Pacific Founders) CEO.

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Dale Sanders joins Unite Us as chief product and technology officer.

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Hippocratic AI names Hollie Vugrinovich (Notable) chief growth officer and Brij Aswani, MBA (MD Clarity) VP of sales.

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California health data network Manifest Medex hires three executive directors: Eva Williams, PhD (Centene), Southern Inland region; Ednann Naz, MD, MPH, MBA (ProNexus Advisory), Central and Northern region; and Erin Henke (Engaging Solutions), Bay region.

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Risant Health hires Jessica Bartell, MD, MS, MBA (UnitedHealthcare) as CMIO. 


Announcements and Implementations

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Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children opens a staffed virtual urgent care kiosk in a shopping mall to ease ED wait times. Families can connect with the ED team, print documents, or be referred to a nearby hospital. The site, which is open daily, includes a private room for virtual consults and live interpreter access. It targets low-income areas to address gaps in technology and privacy.

Vaco Holdings, whose brands include MorganFranklin Consulting, Pivot Point Consulting, Focus Search Partners, and Built, renames itself Highspring, with the talent solutions platform taking the name Vaco by Highspring. The company has 10,000 employees who work from 45 global offices and seven delivery centers.


Government and Politics

A federal judge in Florida sentences Colton Neal to two and a half years in prison for stealing a physician’s professional and digital health credentials that he used to issue 144 controlled substances prescriptions. He advertised on the dark web, used an EHR and telehealth service to issue the prescriptions, and collected payments via cryptocurrency.


Other

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Epic’s April 1 announcements include an Epic Aerospace rocket launch, a telehealth bloopers TV series titled “America’s Funniest Video Visits”, a short-form video function for clinician notes called TikDoc, and a MyChart enhancement for lung training and hearing assessment named Care-oke.


Sponsor Updates

  • AGS Health will exhibit at Healthcon 2025 April 6-9 in Orlando.
  • Black Book Research survey-takers rank InteliChart as the top end-to-end patient engagement solution vendor.
  • Healthmonix will exhibit at the NAACOS Spring 2025 Conference April 22-24 in Baltimore.
  • CereCore releases a new podcast episode titled “CNO Day in the Life: Leading through Change.”
  • Barwon Health in Australia will implement Agfa HealthCare’s Enterprise Imaging Platform.
  • The “HealthTech with Purpose” podcast features Arrive Health COO Christie Callahan.
  • Capital Rx will exhibit at the AMCP Annual Meeting through April 3 in Houston.
  • Censinet will sponsor the 2025 Health-ISAC Spring Americas Summit May 19-23 in Naples, FL.
  • Clinical Architecture partners with Velox Health Metadata to help health plans navigate clinical data management.
  • The “Health Innovation Matters” podcast features DrFirst CMO Colin Banas, MD, MHA.

Blog Posts


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
Send news or rumors.
Follow on X, Bluesky, and LinkedIn.
Contact us.

Morning Headlines 4/1/25

March 31, 2025 Headlines No Comments

AvaSure Acquires Nurse Disrupted to Advance Clinically-Developed Virtual Nursing Across Care Settings

Virtual care company AvaSure acquires Nurse Disrupted, which offers virtual nursing services for hospital and home-based care.

Well Health to Exercise Call Right and Acquire Majority Controlling Interest in Healwell AI concurrent with Healwell’s Proposed Acquisition of Orion Health

Canadian healthcare technology and care delivery company Well Health Technologies will acquire a controlling interest in Healwell AI, concurrent with Healwell’s forthcoming $116 million acquisition of Orion Health.

VA names nine additional facilities that will deploy Federal EHR in 2026

The VA identifies the nine additional medical centers and associated clinics that will go live on the department’s Oracle Health-based EHR next year.

Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne 3/31/25

March 31, 2025 Dr. Jayne 5 Comments

As someone who is knee deep in healthcare on a daily basis, there are a lot of things going on in the world that I follow with varying levels of attention. Sometimes these move more into or out of focus depending on the kinds of consulting engagements that I’m doing.

For example, if I’m working on quality improvement projects, I do a lot of reading to make sure that I’m up on the current metrics. If I’m working on a project involving order sets, I make sure that I’m up on the latest and greatest guidelines and treatment plans for whatever conditions I’ll be addressing.

As an HIStalk contributor, I try to keep up more broadly with everything that is impacting healthcare and healthcare IT as a whole, including worldwide health conditions, new scientific discoveries, emerging technologies, and where organizations are spending their money, whether they’re hospitals, healthcare systems, solution vendors, or independent physician practices.

There are dozens of other CMIO and CMO level consultants who are in the same position. Most of us are also keeping a close eye on what’s happening in government, especially where it comes to changes in staffing levels for the Department of Health and Human Services, the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and similar state-level organizations.

Changes in those organizations have a trickle-down effect on the patients who have trusted me with their care, along with every other person in the US. With changes to the US participation in the World Health Organization and withdrawal of funding for global vaccination programs, changes to health policy in the US also impact people around the globe.

These changes have also impacted me as a patient. I recently learned that a clinical trial to which I have been accepted has lost part of its funding. I have met the qualification criteria, but they aren’t randomizing any new patients into cohorts.

It has been months since I started the process to be part of this trial. It was an emotional rollercoaster as I went through the qualifying process, having to send medical records from multiple institutions and hoping they not only got there in a timely fashion, but were accurate and not full of a bunch of EHR-generated nonsense.

Once all the records finally made it there and were reviewed, I went through an intake process that included genetic counseling as well as testing beyond what I’ve already had. I’ve received the results and was in the final stages of being assigned to a trial arm, only to have the rug pulled out from under me.

When people talk about the “waste” in clinical trials in hyperbolic and abstract ways and imply that funding cuts were deserved, it makes my stomach clench. I’ve spent a significant amount of my professional career doing process improvement and eliminating millions of dollars of waste from healthcare organizations, so I know what waste is. I know how to identify programs that aren’t running efficiently and those that are doing well. I know how to lead change and how to strip significant dollars out of organizational budgets in a compassionate way.

None of that has ever been done by just walking into a hospital or health system and announcing sweeping cuts without any consideration whatsoever. There are consultants who do that, but I’m not one of them, nor will I ever subscribe to that philosophy.

Many of the clinical trials that are being impacted by slash-and-burn cuts affect real live patients. We’re not fruit flies in a lab, or some futuristic technology that someone just cooked up to draw down funds.

Fortunately, the study in question has multiple sources of funding, including a number of private ones, so it hasn’t had to shut down completely. Those who were already randomized into a cohort will continue to receive the intervention to which they’re assigned. It’s just the rest of us that are in limbo. I’m happy that it’s continuing to run because hopefully I’ll be able to benefit from the results of the study once they’re known, but watching this unravel has been truly depressing.

When you agree to participate in a trial, you realize that you might receive “standard care” and not the intervention, and you have to come to terms with that. Now I’m definitely receiving standard of care, and it’s not the missing out on the intervention that I’m really sad about as much as having been excited to participate and to be able to make some kind of good come out of my situation. Not to mention that the results of this trial will impact women for decades to come and may yield a change in direction for the care that is received by millions of mothers, sisters, grandmothers, aunts, and daughters.

Some of you may be asking, “What does this have to do with healthcare IT?” or commenting that I’m on my soapbox again. Indeed, I’ll admit it. After nearly 1,500 posts that span more than a decade, I reserve the right to share the patient experience, even if it is my own. I also reserve the right to write about things that might be construed as “political” when they impact patients, because everything that impacts patients is in my physician lane. I will also keep calling out waste when I see it, whether it’s in the form of unnecessary testing and treatment or the misalignment of healthcare resources, incentives, and technologies.

I think that all of us that work in healthcare IT have the opportunity to do better and be better when we consider how our daily actions can impact patients in our world, our nation, and even our neighborhood. We are literally all connected in ways that we might not imagine.

I have a friend who sells interventional radiology solutions that are highly reliable and come from a trusted manufacturer. Physicians prefer them to the competition and feel they they support higher-quality procedures. When he gets tangled up in his company’s sales processes, he focuses on a mutual friend who recently had a procedure that falls within his solution’s scope. He reminds himself that even though he doesn’t like some of the things he has to do in his job, they need to be done to get the best solution to the point of care in more places every year. With the assistance of this mindset and keeping the patient at the center of his work, he routinely meets his company goals, and when you hear him talk about his job, it’s easy to understand why.

There’s an episode of “The Simpsons” called “And Maggie Makes Three” where Homer explains why there are no pictures of Maggie in the family photo albums. He tells Bart and Lisa that the pictures are where he needs them, which is in his office at the nuclear power plant. They cover some letters on a company placard to change “Don’t forget, you’re here forever” to “Do it for her.”

Let’s all remember why we do what we do and remember that there’s a patient on the end of every decision, and eventually we will all be patients. Be aware, be informed, and be involved in understanding what happens in industry segments other than your own. When you’re the one on the exam table in 10 or 20 or 30 years, you’ll be glad you did. 

Email Dr. Jayne.

Readers Write: AI to the Rescue: Revolutionizing Efficiency in Healthcare Workflows

March 31, 2025 Readers Write No Comments

AI to the Rescue: Revolutionizing Efficiency in Healthcare Workflows
By Caleb Manscill

Caleb Manscill, MBA is president of Vyne Medical.

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The healthcare industry is at a tipping point. With rising demands for high-quality care, increasing financial pressures, and widespread staffing shortages, healthcare providers face an uphill battle to maintain efficiency while meeting patient needs.

Operational bottlenecks and administrative burdens have long weighed down progress, but a game-changing shift is underway: the rise of AI and machine learning. These cutting-edge technologies are not just tools. They are a jumping point for innovation, set to change healthcare workflows, optimize decision-making, and deliver better care outcomes.

The Role of AI and Machine Learning

The adoption of automation technologies in clinical and administrative workflows is accelerating at a fast pace. By 2029, the global workflow automation market is projected to surge to $34 billion, up from $21 billion in 2024, reflecting the pivotal role these technologies play in healthcare transformation. At the heart of this revolution, AI and machine learning are taking on the most pressing inefficiencies, reshaping operations to unlock productivity, accuracy, and cost savings.

Impact on Administrative Workflows and Resource Optimization

AI-powered solutions address some of healthcare’s most persistent challenges by automating time-intensive administrative tasks, allowing staff to focus on higher-value activities. For example, data transcription, a necessary yet manual process, can now be completed in just 30 seconds with over 90% accuracy, compared to the five minutes it once required. These gains drastically reduce errors and boost productivity without sacrificing quality.

Though the front-end processes are critical to getting things right, they’re only half the story. Beyond administrative tasks, AI also optimizes documentation, scheduling, and claims processing to ensure that back-end operations run smoothly. By streamlining these processes, organizations can eliminate redundancies, reduce operational overhead, and achieve greater financial stability. AI further enables leaders to strategically allocate resources, improving patient flow and enhancing revenue cycle management. Together, these improvements drive measurable efficiency and cost-effectiveness.

Enhancing Decision-Making and Clinical Workflows

AI also enhances clinical workflows by enabling smarter, data-driven decision-making. Through advanced algorithms, AI analyzes patient data to identify patterns, predict outcomes, and recommend treatment options, supporting clinicians in providing more personalized care. Process automation helps streamline clinical workflows by reducing manual processes, allowing care teams to spend more time with patients and less on administrative tasks.

For example, AI can prioritize urgent tasks, reduce delays in patient care, and foster collaboration across departments. The impact of these efficiencies includes improved patient experiences, reduced clinician burnout, and better overall care delivery.

Take a surgery order workflow as an example. When a hospital system receives a surgery order, teams traditionally need to extract key details manually and link them to the patient’s electronic medical record (EMR). By using AI and machine learning, much of this process is now automated. AI extracts data from the order, indexes it to the appropriate patient record, and forwards it seamlessly to the EMR system.

However, the next step, leveraging Generative AI, takes this automation to a higher level. Gen AI can resolve more complex challenges, such as identifying and associating the correct patient record when multiple entries exist in the EMR. Traditionally, humans spend significant time verifying patient information, such as matching dates, MRNs, or account numbers, across hundreds of transactions daily. Gen AI can take over this decision-making process for straightforward cases, sending the data directly to the EMR.

By tackling inefficiencies, reducing administrative burdens, and empowering smarter decision-making, this technology is setting a new standard for operational excellence. As healthcare systems continue to navigate workforce pressures and resource limitations, the integration of AI is no longer a luxury — it is an urgent necessity. With its potential to streamline workflows, enhance outcomes, and drive sustainability, AI is the key to building a more resilient and efficient healthcare ecosystem.

Morning Headlines 3/31/25

March 30, 2025 Headlines No Comments

Oracle has reportedly suffered 2 separate breaches exposing thousands of customers‘ PII

Oracle deals with a breach to its Oracle Health systems and the theft of patient data, and a separate breach of its Oracle Cloud servers that has led to the login credentials of 6 million users being put up for sale.

Bankruptcy judge: MercyOne should produce records related to Mercy Iowa City downfall

A federal judge orders MercyOne to produce records related to its management of the now bankrupt Mercy Iowa City, including those pertaining to the troubled roll out of an EHR that may have contributed to the hospital’s financial troubles.

Update Regarding Medical Transition Services at Premier Health

Premier Health (OH) will end its transcription services since most providers have shifted to Dragon speech recognition and built-in Epic tools.

Monday Morning Update 3/31/25

March 30, 2025 News 4 Comments

Top News

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A hacker has breached Oracle Health systems and stolen patient data with the intention of extorting providers, according to a customer communication from Oracle. The FBI is investigating.

Oracle says the intruder used a customer’s stolen credentials to access legacy Cerner servers that hadn’t yet been moved to Oracle’s cloud. The company didn’t say how one user’s credentials could have been used to access the information of other clients.

Oracle said it became aware of the breach on February 20, 2025. Customers learned of the breach only when they received notification from Oracle’s external law firm. Oracle reportedly told those hospitals that they, rather than Oracle, are responsible for determining whether the stolen data violates HIPAA, and if so, for notifying affected patients.

In related news, a hacker claims to have breached Oracle Cloud servers and is offering the login credentials of 6 million users for sale. Oracle denies the claims of the threat actor, who provided a sample of the stolen data that customers verified as belonging to them.


Reader Comments

From Redzenskyca: “Re: Baptist Health South Florida. Moving away from Cerner to Epic.” Unverified. Nothing new so far in job postings or UserWeb accounts.

From Jimmy the Greek: “Re: comments. I’ve commented on Dr. Jayne’s Curbside twice now, but the comments don’t appear. What gives?” I found your comments. They were sent to suspected spam because they included several links. I’ve activated them.


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

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About one-fourth of poll respondents say that their employer’s support for work-life balance has declined over the past two years. Two poll commenters say that theirs improved because they changed jobs for that reason.

New poll to your right or here: Which initiative is burning the most time and money while delivering little improvement to patients?

There’s little health tech news happening, so let’s give you some free time after a brief musical mention. Listening: Postmodern Jukebox, a “rotating musical collective” that reimagines pop hits into retro-style covers that are weirdly compelling. Examples: “Ain’t Talkin’ ‘bout Love” as a 1960s girls group or “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” as Sam Cooke might have done it. In that same vein of interesting weirdness is Flaming Lips, a trippy, psychedelic musical art project that I regret not seeing when they played near me a while back.


Sponsored Events and Resources

Live Webinar: April 15 (Tuesday) 1 ET. “Navigating ACO Quality in 2025: Lessons Learned and Future Directions.” Sponsor: Healthmonix. Presenters: Michael Lewis, VP of customer success, Healthmonix; Steven Tyson, senior account executive, Healthmonix.  Accountable care organizations (ACOs) must stay ahead of evolving quality requirements and reporting changes. Join us for an in-depth discussion on lessons learned from past ACO implementation, key areas for improvement, and the impact of Medicare Clinical Quality Measures (CQMs).

Contact Lorre to have your resource listed.


Announcements and Implementations

Premier Health (OH) will end its transcription services since most providers have shifted to Dragon speech recognition and built-in Epic tools.


Sponsor Updates

  • Black Book Research publishes the “2025 Black Book of Patient Engagement and Healthcare Consumer Communications Technology.”
  • The Alliance for Health Information Operations and Standards re-elects HealthMark Group CEO Bart Howe president and elects MRO CFO Nate Eastman treasurer.
  • PerfectServe publishes “How to Reduce Missed Calls with an Effective Answering Service” featuring Women’s Health Associates (TX).
  • Praia Health achieves SOC 2 Type 2 certification.
  • RLDatix supports the ACHE Congress as a premier corporate partner.
  • WellSky will present at the Minnesota Home Care Association Leadership Summit April 2 in Maple Grove.
  • Vyne Medical publishes a paper titled “From Costly Paper Processes to Streamlined Operations: How Healthcare Can Build a Better Future.”

Blog Posts


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
Send news or rumors.
Follow on X, Bluesky, and LinkedIn.
Contact us.

Morning Headlines 3/28/25

March 27, 2025 Headlines No Comments

Kennedy to slash 10,000 jobs in major overhaul of US health agencies

HHS will eliminate 10,000 full-time positions and close half of its regional offices, and will merge Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), and other groups under the newly created Administration for a Healthy America.

Taxo Raises $5M from Y Combinator, General Catalyst, and Character to Build Out Autonomous Systems for Healthcare

Taxo, which offers a data extraction and workflow automation engine for healthcare administration, raises $5 million in seed funding.

Layer Health Raises $21 Million Series A to Transform Medical Chart Review Using AI

Automated chart review startup Layer Health raises $21 million in a Series A funding round led by Define Ventures.

Marit Health Launches Groundbreaking Community-Powered Platform for Salary Transparency in Medicine, Secures $3.2M Seed Round

Several former leaders of Glassdoor launch Marit Health, a salary transparency website for doctors and advanced practice providers, and announce $3.2 million in seed funding.

News 3/28/25

March 27, 2025 News No Comments

Top News

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HHS will eliminate 10,000 full-time positions and close half of its regional offices, with past and planned cuts expected to reduce its FTE count from 82,000 to 62,000.

The largest number of cuts will occur at FDA and CDC, which will lose 6,000 positions.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also announced plans to merge Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), and other groups under the newly created Administration for a Healthy America. HHS will also merge the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality to create the Office of Strategy.

HHS will also create a position of Assistant Secretary for Enforcement that will oversee the Departmental Appeals Board, the Office of Medicare Hearings and Appeals, and the Office for Civil Rights.


Reader Comments

From Cynical C-Suite: “Re: ASTP/ONC. Being gutted and maybe folded into CMS. Guess that makes it official that interoperability is now just a billing problem.”


Sponsored Events and Resources

Live Webinar: April 15 (Tuesday) 1 ET. “Navigating ACO Quality in 2025: Lessons Learned and Future Directions.” Sponsor: Healthmonix. Presenters: Michael Lewis, VP of customer success, Healthmonix; Steven Tyson, senior account executive, Healthmonix.  Accountable care organizations (ACOs) must stay ahead of evolving quality requirements and reporting changes. Join us for an in-depth discussion on lessons learned from past ACO implementation, key areas for improvement, and the impact of Medicare Clinical Quality Measures (CQMs).

Contact Lorre to have your resource listed.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Solace, which connects Medicare patients with virtual support advocates, raises new funding at a $300 million valuation. The company pivoted from a cash-only model to serving Medicare beneficiaries last year, when the program began covering advocacy services. Advocates help with scheduling appointments, communicating with doctors, reviewing medical bills, managing insurance appeals, and researching treatment options. Co-founder and CEO Jeremy Gurewitz previously worked as a marketing VP for a kids book club company.

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Investor Halle Tecco checks in on the 65 health tech-adjacent unicorns that were born during the 2020–2022 ZIRP frenzy. She predicts that companies have been forced to accept unlabeled or down rounds, have undertaken cost-cutting programs, and are trying to extend their runway to reach profitability.

  • 89% are still operating.
  • Two-thirds haven’t raised additional funding.
  • One went public (SomaLogic), and another plans to (Hinge Health).
  • Four were acquired or merged (CareBridge, Truepill, MindMaze, ClassPass).
  • Two shut down (Forward, Olive AI).

Taxo, which offers a data extraction and workflow automation engine for healthcare administration, raises $5 million in seed funding.

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Several former leaders of Glassdoor launch Marit Health, a salary transparency website for doctors and advanced practice providers. It offers anonymous, verified data on salaries, bonuses, benefits, and shifts. Investors in its $3.2 million seed funding round include the founders of several health tech companies.


People

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Mount Sinai Health System promotes Robbie Freeman, DNP, MS to chief digital transformation officer.


Announcements and Implementations

Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre in Ontario, Canada integrates four local hospices into its Meditech Expanse EHR.

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Akido Labs will provide fast, clinician-supervised medical care to New York ride-share drivers using its ScopeAI diagnostic and treatment tool. In addition to its AI technology, the company operates a network of primary care and specialty care providers in California and Rhode Island.

Truveta adds administrative data to its EHR-sourced database, including billing details, provider resource allocation, and patient movement information.

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Penn Medicine’s elimination of 300 positions includes six employees of Center for Health Care Innovation at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health, which includes an accelerator program and innovation lab. The center’s website lists eight employees.


Government and Politics

Politico reports that potential candidates to lead ASTP/ONC include Ryan Howells, MA (Leavitt Partners, The CARIN Alliance) and former ONC senior advisor Thomas Keane, MD, MBA. It also says that the White House is reportedly considering reducing the office’s staff from 180 to 30 and possibly merging it into CMS.


Privacy and Security

The UK government fines Advanced Computer Software Group $4 million after ransomware hackers breached its systems that lacked multifactor authentication.


Sponsor Updates

  • CloudWave’s Managed Cloud Hosting solution again achieves the “Best Practice” rating following its completion of the Meditech Infrastructure and Supporting IT Process Assessment.
  • Black Book Research probes the fate of healthcare technology in the NHS based on insights from Digital Health Rewired 2025.
  • The Aga Khan University profiles its work with Meditech to roll out an EHR across Kenya.
  • Five9 announces that Five9 AI Agents has been named a winner for Innovative AI Products in the 2025 Artificial Intelligence Excellence Awards, presented by the Business Intelligence Group.
  • Inovalon will exhibit at AMCP Annual March 31-April 3 in Houston.
  • Linus Health will present at AD/PD April 1-5 in Vienna, Austria.
  • Mednition will exhibit at AONL 2025 March 31-April 1 in Boston.

Blog Posts


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
Send news or rumors.
Follow on X, Bluesky, and LinkedIn.
Contact us.

EPtalk by Dr. Jayne 3/27/25

March 27, 2025 Dr. Jayne 2 Comments

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It looks like I’m one of the users who have been selected to test the beta version of the new Amazon Health AI digital assistant.

According to news articles, the tool is designed to field health and wellness questions, and of course to suggest products. Some responses have a “clinically verified” indicator that shows that the information has been “reviewed and confirmed as accurate by medical experts.” I couldn’t find any indication of their definition of “experts,” which can vary widely. It also didn’t indicate how often such information is reviewed or how long ago this particular excerpt was reviewed.

I tried a number of scenarios, including questions about an ongoing cough and a query about what a measles rash looks like. For the cough question, it suggested that I might be interested in purchasing Lipton tea or an over-the-counter inhaler.

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For the measles question, I was shocked that it answered the question by providing a correct answer, but for a different question than the one that I actually asked. If I’m asking what a measles rash looks like, I would expect to see a photo of a measles rash (there are dozens out there that are easily accessible from search engines) rather than a description of a vaccine-associated rash.

Initially, when I read the answer, I missed the word “vaccine” because I skipped over the regurgitated question directly to the bullets. I would want to read more carefully next time. I also thought it was odd to add a disclaimer about “while I cannot provide an exact cause for your symptoms” when I didn’t indicate that I was asking about symptoms. I was just asking a health educational question, so the system isn’t sophisticated enough to understand that and probably assumes everyone has a symptom. Users have the ability to provide feedback on the responses, so you can bet I gave that one a thumbs down.

Next, I specifically asked whether the tool had a picture of a measles rash. It apologized for not having an image, but then went on to again discuss a rash that is related to a measles vaccine. It then offered me the opportunity to join Amazon One Medical, which I guess is not surprising.

I also asked how to care for a sprained ankle. The output was missing key information in the form of sentences that didn’t populate correctly: “Over-the-counter like or can also help manage pain and inflammation.” I guess the model forgot to throw in medication names like “acetaminophen” or “ibuprofen.” This search generated a suggestion that I may be interested in buying an elastic bandage as well as visiting Amazon One Medical. I repeated these questions in another search engine and frankly got better answers, so overall I’m going to give Amazon’s new tool a D-minus. Try again, folks.

From Primary Care: “Re: this article Did you see this article in JAMA Network Open? It talked about the fact that states with less regulation of health insurance offerings have higher rates of diagnosis for late-stage cancers. I don’t understand how people can see this data and not think we need payment reform or overall healthcare reform.” I can’t say that I’m surprised. Here’s the full scoop: the study looked at 1.3 million patients in states that had either no regulations or limited regulations on short-term, limited-duration (STLD) insurance plans. These are sometimes purchased by patients who are between jobs or who lose coverage for other reasons. They’re usually pretty poor plans and have waiting periods and other elements within the policies that essentially discourage the patient from receiving care. They typically have high deductibles and high out-of-pocket costs for patients. They are not compliant with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requirements, which results in higher patient responsibility for tests that would have been fully covered by an ACA-compliant plan.

The study was led by the American Cancer Society and looked at adults aged 18-64 years who had a cancer diagnosis between January 2016 and February 2020. It covered 47 states plus the District of Columbia and used information from the National Cancer Database. States were classified as to whether they prohibited these plans before and after 2018, stopped them after 2018, allowed them with restrictions, or had no additional regulation of the plans. The study adjusted for social and demographic factors, year of diagnosis, and state random effect.

The authors found that in states with no additional regulations of STLD plans, there was a net increase of 0.76 percentage points in late-stage cancer diagnoses compared to those states that continuously prohibited such plans. States with some regulations had a net increase of 0.84 percentage points compared to those with continuous prohibition.

The authors concluded that “the 2018 federal policy loosening restrictions on STLD plans was associated with an increase in late-stage cancer diagnoses in states without or with inadequate additional STLD plan regulatory protections. Findings were consistent among cancer types with recommended screening tests (i.e., female breast and colorectal cancers) and extended prior research conducted in a limited number of states, underscoring the importance of state policies and federal efforts to limit STLD plans.”

This illustrates the difference between allowing healthcare and healthcare finance to be regulated at a state level versus at the federal level. The latter would promote more consistent care delivery across our population. Looking at my own state, the level of education of many of our legislators varies greatly and very few have any firsthand experience with healthcare policy. The year is 2025 and I can’t believe we haven’t gotten on board with the idea that everyone in the US deserves high quality healthcare and that a state patchwork of rules isn’t going to do that for us.

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Doctors’ Day is March 30 in the US, celebrated on the day when ether was first used for general anesthesia back in the 1840s. It’s on a weekend this year, so hopefully hospitals and healthcare institutions are planning to do something either before or after. It’s been a while since I worked anywhere that had any kind of formal recognition of the day, so if you have doctors in your life, please consider doing something nice for them or at least just wish them a Happy Doctors’ Day.

How does your organization celebrate Doctors’ Day? Is there a pizza party or a challenge coin involved? Leave a comment or email me.

Email Dr. Jayne.

Morning Headlines 3/27/25

March 26, 2025 Headlines No Comments

ProsperityEHR Debuts Next-Gen EHR to Keep Behavioral Health Practices Thriving

TheraManager rebrands and officially launches as ProsperityEHR to offer behavioral health practices EHR, RCM, and practice management software.

Amazon Tests ‘Interests’ AI shopping tool, Health Chatbot

Amazon is testing a health-focused chatbot that answers wellness questions and recommends products, with offered responses reviewed by a US-based “clinically verified” clinician.

Morningside Ventures Makes Strategic Investment in Xealth to Accelerate Digital Health Ecosystem

Digital health integration company Xealth announces new funding from Morningside Ventures.

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Which initiative is burning the most time and money while delivering little improvement to patients?

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