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Morning Headlines 10/22/24

October 21, 2024 Headlines No Comments

Medbridge Acquires Rehab Boost, Launches Medbridge Motion Capture as Part of Medbridge AI

Medbridge acquires AI-enhanced rehab app development company Rehab Boost.

HealthEx Raises $14M led by General Catalyst to Empower Patients and Health Systems to do more with Health Data

Patient health data access and consent startup HealthEx launches with $14 million in funding.

CopilotIQ and Biofourmis Merge to Create the First End-to-End Platform for AI-Driven In-Home Care

Remote patient monitoring company CopilotIQ acquires competitor Biofourmis to offer tech-enabled, home-based care to seniors with chronic conditions.

Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne 10/21/24

October 21, 2024 Dr. Jayne No Comments

When I decided to pursue a career in family medicine, I saw the specialty as promoting three primary goals: health promotion, disease prevention, and helping patients live longer and healthier lives. As a third-year medical student, I had little understanding of all the factors that would be working against me in that pursuit.

I knew that there would be insurance companies that would put prior authorizations and other blockers in the way of recommended treatments. I knew that I would have challenges finding resources for patients who are without insurance and with low health literacy. I didn’t know that I would also be fighting an uphill battle against corporate America in the form of tobacco companies, giant food conglomerates, and many others that are reaping profits from reinforcing unhealthy behaviors and addictions.

As I moved into clinical informatics, we saw ways in which technology could help us do more with less and to better identify patients who were in need of health interventions. When we started looking for the needle in the haystack trying to find patients who had fallen through the cracks on preventive screenings, more often we found a giant pile of needles needing attention because so many patients had fallen through the cracks. Even after we had identified the patients, we still had to convince them to adopt healthy behaviors and undertake recommended screenings and treatments, which was an entirely different undertaking. It became discouraging to watch data pile up and not have the resources to act on it.

Fast forward to the world of wearables and the quantified self. We became excited about the ability to put data in patients’ hands on a daily basis, motivating them to make changes in their health status. The rise of wearables highlighted economic disparities when some patients had multiple different kinds of devices – from step counters to sleep trackers – and others were struggling with basic subsistence needs. As a primary care physician, that evolution created a bit of whiplash in the office as I moved from room to room. Some contained patients who brought printouts and jump drives so I could see their data. Other room had patients who were lucky to take a blood pressure reading at Walgreens once or twice a month. Although some employers and insurance companies developed programs to get devices to their patients, those were few and far between in my practice.

We are now 15 years past the release of the Fitbit, which made tracking more accessible for many, but I’m not sure that we are any healthier. Recent articles that looked at life expectancy show that the improvement curve of the last century has hit a slowdown, even in economically advantaged nations. Public health interventions and new medical treatments have been a primary driver of those improvements, but we still haven’t cracked the code on how to help our patients overcome many of the challenges that they face, from lack of health resources to the ability to cope with the decreases in function that come with normal aging.

Ten years ago, when getting together with physician colleagues over drinks, we could expect to talk about interesting cases that we had seen at the hospital, or we might be kvetching over student loan repayment. Now, we’re more likely to discuss how we are juggling our own health issues or the challenges of managing health needs for aging parents and loved ones. As part of a family whose members routinely approach 100, it’s a topic with which I have experience.

The article contains a discussion of research around life expectancy that has been done over the last three decades. The authors conclude that we’ve reached a point where it’s increasingly difficult to drive life expectancy upward. I found their discussion of the percentage of patients that could be expected to live to be 100 years of age most interesting. To make this happen, they note that we would need ways decelerate death rates among older people, and due to the costs involved in such a project, I’m not sure the world is ready to spend that kind of money.

Additionally, having been around plenty of people who are in their mid to late 90s, the ones I know aren’t terribly interested in radically longer lives. Although they have had tremendous life experiences, they have also had to grow used to living without their friends and loved ones and sometimes seeing their children and grandchildren predecease them. One of my relatives continually asks why she’s still here when so many others have gone, and it’s terribly sad. It’s certainly something that should be considered when we’re talking about changing how we look at medical interventions.

In thinking through this topic with the understanding of where we are with healthcare spending in the United States, it makes me wonder whether we have the right information to try to solve the problem of truly helping people live longer healthier lives, or whether we will continue spinning in circles.

We certainly know that some relatively inexpensive interventions, like vaccinations, help. However, we’re fighting an often losing battle in convincing patients to partake of these interventions due to conspiracy theories, fears related to debunked not-so-scientific research, and for some, a genuine belief that doctors only recommend vaccines because of personal profits. As a primary care physician, I can attest that the latter is most certainly false, but it’s difficult to convince patients. Improving nutrition is one of the areas that has the most potential to boost health, but it’s not sexy or exciting, so it languishes as a not-so-hot topic. 

We know that it costs money to improve patient health, whether through improved nutrition, health coaching, medications, or procedural treatments. However, because of our fragmented healthcare finance system, insurance companies pay for those interventions on younger patients but don’t realize the long-term savings, which sometimes don’t happen until patients are covered by Medicare. This phenomenon, along with our profit-driven insurance companies, drives the willingness of payers to try to deny treatment, which starts a cascade of activity by patients and physicians that unfortunately in some cases leads to everyone giving up before the patient actually receives the care that they need.

I’m still looking for the technology silver bullet that cuts through all this mess and matches the right patient with the right treatment at the right price at the right time. Maybe AI will help create that solution, but it’s also going to require a lot of individual commitment and political will that seems to be lacking.

Before we had so much data, we didn’t know if  we were doing a good job for our patients. Now we have lots of information, and although it shows that we do a lot of good things, it also shows ongoing deficiencies that still need attention. Maybe I can convince some of the smart folks who I work with to create an app to give me a weekly reminder of “great things we’ve found in the data and have been able to act on” so that the other findings we encounter don’t seem so discouraging. Although it might have been easier back when we knew less than we do now, knowledge is power, and it just reminds us of what is yet to be done.

How well does your organization drive outcomes using data? Are you helping move patients to improved health or are people running in circles? Leave a comment or email me.

Email Dr. Jayne.

Readers Write: Harnessing the Full Potential of AI in Healthcare Requires Carefully Prepared and Clean Data

October 21, 2024 Readers Write No Comments

Harnessing the Full Potential of AI in Healthcare Requires Carefully Prepared and Clean Data
By Brian Laberge

Brian Laberge is solutions engineer at Wolters Kluwer Health.

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Artificial intelligence (AI) implementation in healthcare is gaining more and more traction. However, messy data can lead to challenges in training these platforms and helping uncover bias to ensure they offer the most impact. With 80% of healthcare data existing in unstructured formats, there’s often an extra step required to map these insights to more structured standards, enabling AI algorithms or large language models to parse through the information and distill takeaways in a clear and comprehensive way.

As the saying goes, garbage in means garbage out with these platforms. To fully embrace large language models in healthcare and capitalize on the opportunities for AI, it’s important to acknowledge the data quality challenges to overcome and tips for maintaining clean data for optimal use of advanced technologies.

When considering the use of AI in healthcare, there are two phases to consider — the training of the technology and the implementation and insights that will ultimately be delivered. When thinking about training the technology, one of the biggest challenges with healthcare data in particular is consistent data quality and accuracy. With multiple standards across healthcare, and valuable information stored in unstructured fields, it can be difficult to map insights from one care setting to another and ensure that data doesn’t lose meaning amid these bridges.

Additionally, lab or medical data often comes back with portions incomplete, inaccurate, or lacking validity, which skews the data from showing AI models the full picture. Adding further complexity, physicians often use different clinical verbiage to mean the same medical term. All of these data quality issues can result in a hallucination, where the model perceives a pattern that doesn’t exist, which results in made-up, incorrect, or misleading results. Knowing what those synonymous phrases are and being able to address them when training new models or tuning an existing large language model can help increase accuracy.

Another challenge comes from deciphering clinical notes. When you get a mix of data, these notes need to be extracted and properly codified to an industry standard. If this process cannot be completed, it’s often recommended to exclude them, as the data will lead to noise and bias within the AI models. This gap could represent a huge loss of insights that could be incredibly impactful for patient care and outcomes reporting.

In general, human error, or simply the large amount of disparate verbiage used in healthcare, doesn’t always translate easily for a uniform standard to train AI. In order to avoid this, healthcare organizations should make sure they have tools or processes in place to assess the quality of their data, clean their data, and standardize it before implementing LLMs.

Though it can be challenging to fully prepare data before training an AI model, it’s imperative to ensure that future AI use and insights are purposeful and accurate. It can be dangerous to train an AI with messy data for a number of reasons. Missing, incomplete, or incorrect information can reduce the accuracy and insert bias, which could lead it to infer incorrect assumptions that are then built into the core of the model.

Additionally, low quality or overly simplified data for minority populations could cause a bias to be built into the model. In data, race and ethnicity often are jumbled together. Sometimes, because of biases within the healthcare system itself, there is not as much data for certain groups compared to another. While addressing those care gaps is a much larger discussion, staying ignorant about the fact that the data gaps exist is also dangerous.

For example, if you are building a model to predict the most effective drug for a patient based on historical administration of various drugs, and the data used to train the model has data quality issues with race, then it is more likely not to detect a situation where a drug is more effective for a particular race and would result in a bad recommendation.

Maintaining the data, including knowing where the gaps are, and evaluating training data to address these gaps is a challenge. However, it’s essential to address from the get-go as bias or inaccuracy in the model will make the system harder to use, and ultimately, these biases will then be intrinsic to the AI platform and future insights.

Integrating data, particularly high-quality data, is proven to save hospitals money and reduce risks to compliance and industry standards. There are six core elements to maintaining data quality that organizations should consider when preparing to implement AI tools:

  • Accuracy is important in reflecting the true outcomes of healthcare.
  • Validity assesses the appropriateness of the data to support conclusions.
  • Data integrity ensures the reliability of the data.
  • Having complete data helps to identify any possible gaps within the data set.
  • Consistency is important to maintain uniformity across the set.
  • Timely data helps to harness the full potential of the data for meaningful actions.

All of these qualities will strengthen the data and create an easier AI implementation with less room for error.

While maintaining clean data for use by advanced analytic platforms can be challenging, there are steps that organizations should take to keep data ready for use in AI models. First, it’s important to have a strong data governance process to ensure accurate data, and to decipher good versus bad data before feeding it to an AI model. It’s also important to verify lab results against the appropriate codes to eliminate errors and incorrect codes being built into the model. We have found in one data set that the data quality was as low as 30% accurate as it contained invalid codes and incorrect codes for the labs.

Ensuring alignment of data, and validating codes to an industry standard, will help to streamline the process. The richer the data used to train the AI, the better the outcome will be. Normalizing and mapping the data can help to streamline data from multiple sources and authors. Mapping the information ensures accuracy in the data and helps break down any discrepancies between sources.

Lastly, constantly assessing and ensuring an understanding of data from the team that is responsible for training the model will help to identify gaps or potentials for biases within the data itself. It’s important for the team that is training the model to work with their data governance colleagues to ensure that they are aware of any missing data, such as gaps in lab results and member data, to remedy these gaps for more complete quality measure reporting.

By implementing these best practices, data can be properly utilized to its full potential to inform decision-making, increase quality, and enhance patient care.

Healthcare data can be messy, but creating a process where the data is properly assessed and cleaned can be beneficial in so many ways beyond AI. It’s encouraging to see an industry that has historically moved slowly be so eager to adopt new technologies. While the opportunity for AI use in healthcare is great, we can’t forget the basics of data quality that are essential in determining the future success of these platforms. With this process, organizations can make better use of AI and ensure the most accuracy in their models to help better serve patients.

Morning Headlines 10/21/24

October 20, 2024 Headlines No Comments

Refusal of Recovery: How Medicare Advantage Insurers Have Denied Patients Access to Post-Acute Care

A US Senate subcommittee report finds that UnitedHealthcare, Humana, and CVS disproportionately denied prior authorization requests for post-acute care in their Medicare Advantage patients, often by using AI-driven tools.

Prolucent Secures Strategic Investment from Northwell Holdings to Accelerate Workforce Management Innovation in Healthcare

Healthcare workforce management software vendor Prolucent announces an undisclosed amount of funding from customer Northwell Health’s investment subsidiary.

Virginia Contractor Settles False Claims Act Liability for Failing to Secure Medicare Beneficiary Data

Federal contractor ASRC Federal Data Solutions will pay $306,722 to settle False Claims Act allegations that it stored unencrypted screenshots of Medicare beneficiary data from CMS systems on a subcontractor’s server.

Monday Morning Update 10/21/24

October 20, 2024 News No Comments

Top News

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A US Senate subcommittee report finds that UnitedHealthcare, Humana, and CVS disproportionately denied prior authorization PA requests for post-acute care in their Medicare Advantage patients, often by using AI-driven tools.

  • UnitedHealth’s denial rate doubled between 2020 and 2022 as the company  implemented “Machine Assisted Prior Authorization” and “[Healthcare Economics] Auto Authorization model.”
  • CVS saved $660 million in one year by denying inpatient admissions. It tested and then abandoned a predictive model that was too generous in approving cases.
  • Humana coached its reviewers in how to explain denials to the ordering providers. The Subcommittee was not able to assess the company’s use of technology to deny PA requests, but notes that Humana has been a NaviHealth customer for years.

The report recommends that CMS audit denials, especially for targeted services, and expand its regulation of utilization management committees to ensure that predictive technologies don’t exert undue influence on human reviewers who might be pressured to “rubber-stamp the recommendations of algorithms and artificial intelligence.”


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

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Most poll respondents don’t sneak looks at their phones during meetings except to check email or texts.

New poll to your right or here: What is the worst HR action you have experienced in the past two years? “Worst” in this case means whatever one you found to be most disappointing. I ran this poll three years ago and being laid off was the top answer, probably because it was peak COVID.

Most respondents to my one-off poll said that they would not listen to a NotebookLM-created podcast of the week’s top news. I was going to create another one for this week, but I found it frustrating that the “hosts” mispronounced HIPAA as “HYPE-uh.” The Google team has cranked out a lot of improvements to NotebookLM, so maybe they will add the ability to create a pronunciation guide. 


A Reader’s Notes from Nashville Health Care Council’s Sessions Conference

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Toby Cosgrove (interviewed by Bill Frist)

  • Cosgrove was unemployed for a period after his residency.
  • He made a point about letting clinicians practice at the top of their license and pushing administrative burden down the chain by talking about his experience serving in Vietnam. He led a 100-bed field hospital there with a total of two physicians, 15 nurses, and an army of service members who took care of everything that didn’t require true clinical expertise.
  • He’s a proponent of AI scribes and sees AI playing a larger role in clinical care in the coming years.
  • At Cleveland Clinic, they started an initiative to find and follow up with the first 1,000 coronary bypass patients to assess their wellbeing and outcomes. It took hiring private detectives to track down some of the patients. They maintained this culture of review and continuous improvement until they made bypass a very safe procedure.
  • He says that one of the top issues in healthcare is the explosion of knowledge and data and our inability to stay on top of it all.
  • Provider burnout and the shortage of providers came up numerous times during the conference. Apparently one-third of nephrology residency slots go unfilled each year.

David Feinberg, Oracle Health

  • He says that innovation hasn’t come to healthcare as much as other industries because we’ve skipped steps in the tech process. For example, with Meaningful Use, we paid people to use software, but didn’t evaluate whether the software is helpful.
  • He advocated for a nutrition label of sorts for AI that tells you how the system was trained, and which data points it uses.
  • He said that when Oracle was buying Cerner, Oracle made several decisions that made him question the success of the deal, so he felt incentivized to leave within a year to redeem his golden parachute. He even told his wife he was out within a year. But he says he stayed the course because those decisions were reversed and because Larry Ellison has allowed the Cerner team to be the healthcare experts while the Oracle team are the tech experts.
  • He says that they applied previously created software and solutions to create the Clinical Digital Assistant and a new patient intake product. For the latter, they borrowed from work that Oracle has done in developing inmate intake systems for prisons.
  • CDA has 70 customers using it since its June launch.
  • He said a new EHR that is rooted in AI is coming, with more details to be shared at the Oracle Health Summit in a few days in Nashville. He says it’s ready for ambulatory and will be ready for inpatient sometime next year.

A Reader’s Notes from Vanderbilt’s Health AI Sessions

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Brad Malin, professor of biomedical informatics, biostatistics, and computer science

  • There is a real risk of LLMs, including GPT-4, divulging training data through a carefully crafted prompt. Providers need to be cognizant of this if they are providing identifiable data for model training; there’s a reasonable chance it could be exposed.
  • Research has shown that introducing a little synthetic data into the training set for an AI model can reduce model bias, but you can reach a point where too much synthetic data eliminates any benefits.

Daniel Fabbri, assistant professor of biomedical informatics and computer science

  • VUMC spends $5-10 million per year on chart abstraction. Reliant upon expensive abstraction staff and requires lots of time and manual review.
  • Asked the question, “Can we build a system that allows non-technical users to attain 90% faster abstraction for a range of medical research tasks with human-level accuracy?”
  • First tried a not-so-technical approach: crowdsourcing the work through a group of medical students. This was still slow and resource-intensive.
  • Tried ChatGPT as a way to analyze and extract the pertinent data points; it was “okay”.
  • Ultimately created a new tool called BRIM that has reduced abstraction time for cancer research from 5 minutes per note to 15 seconds. All Vanderbilt staff, faculty, and students can use the tool with IRB approval. They also achieved 80% time reduction in mental health case review with human-like accuracy, and they recently won an ARPA-H funding award.
  • One key decision they made was to introduce a design requirement that every BRIM-generated data point must include the raw text from the source note, so that a human can quickly see where the LLM abstracted the information from and can easily verify accurate selection of pertinent information.

Jesse Spencer-Smith, director and chief data scientist for the Data Science Institute

  • Gave a very helpful overview of what a transformer in AI actually is.
  • He says that giving AI greater context (e.g., more input data or a longer conversation history) reduces hallucinations.
  • He says that we are seeing small (“small” meaning lighter weight and with fewer parameters) open-source AI models that have similar performance to ChatGPT, which will open up AI to function on small devices such as smartphones).

Webinars

October 24 (Thursday) noon ET. “Preparing for HTI-2 Compliance: What EHR and Health IT Vendors Need to Know.” Sponsor: DrFirst. Presenters: Nick Barger, PharmD, VP of product, DrFirst; Tyler Higgins, senior director of product management, DrFirst. Failure to meet ASTP’s mandatory HTI-2 certification  and compliance standards could impose financial consequences on clients. The presenters will discuss the content and timelines of this key policy update, which includes NCPDP Script upgrades, mandatory support for electronic prior authorization, and real-time prescription benefit. They will offer insight into the impact on “Base EHR” qualifications and provide practical advice on aligning development roadmaps with these changes.

Previous webinars are on our YouTube channel. Contact Lorre to present or promote your own.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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CVS Health fires CEO Karen Lynch and promotes David Joyner, who runs its CVS Caremark pharmacy benefits management business, to replace her. The company also reduces guidance due to increased medical costs, sending CVS shares down more than 5% on Friday.

Cigna has reportedly restarts merger discussions with rival insurer Humana. The companies had ended those negotiations last year after failing to agree on terms.


Sales

  • MaineGeneral Health chooses Sectra’s hosted enterprising enterprising solution.
  • GaHIN migrates to InterSystems HealthShare.

People

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Michael Raymer (Simulations Plus) joins Vitalchat Telehealth as CEO.

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Providence CIO/EVP B. J. Moore announces his resignation.


Announcements and Implementations

Artera announces new AI co-pilots: Staff (translation, predictive text for patient inquiries, message shortening, and conversation summaries that can be saved to the EHR) and Insights (no-show reports).

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Zoom announces Workplace for Clinicians, a paid offering that includes visit transcription with AI-generated clinical notes and displaying EHR data as a visit prep summary.

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The Coalition for Health AI (CHAI) publishes draft frameworks of how it will certify independent quality assurance labs and standardize their test results into what it compares to a nutrition label for AI product performance and safety.


Privacy and Security

Axis Health System alerts patients and employees that ransomware hackers have posted their data to the dark web after the health system declined to pay a $1.7 million ransom.


Sponsor Updates

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  • Revuud team members join Reynolds Baptist Church volunteers in their Hurricane Helene clean-up efforts in Asheville, NC.
  • Wolters Kluwer Health adds AI search, robust analytics, and insights to the latest edition of its UpToDate Enterprise Edition.
  • Nordic and BeeKeeperAI partner to accelerate AI-driven clinical decision support at the point of care.
  • The EClinicalWorks Image AI Assistant saves York Primary Care (ME) over an hour per day on managing incoming faxes.
  • Greater Houston Healthconnect will connect charitable clinics across Texas at no cost using technology and services from InterSystems and J2 Interactive.
  • Netsmart and WellSky and exhibit at the National Association for Home Care and Hospice Conference and Expo October 20-22 in Tampa, FL.
  • Health Data Movers posts a new episode of its “QuickHITs” podcast, “Healthcare Innovation and Informatics with Dr. Nitu Kashyap.”
  • Nordic releases a new “Designing for Health” podcast, “Interview with Bryan Vartabedian, MD.”
  • QGenda receives Authority to Operate certification from the Indian Health Service.
  • Waystar publishes a new case study, “AnMed Health’s way forward.”

Blog Posts


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
Send news or rumors.
Contact us.

Morning Headlines 10/18/24

October 17, 2024 Headlines No Comments

Particle Health Inc. v. Epic Systems Corporation

Epic asks a federal court to dismiss the antitrust lawsuit that Particle Health brought against it, citing several arguments.

CodexIT Acquires Professional Services Company

Healthcare technology and consulting firm CodexIT acquires health data migration and archiving business Kyval from Marsden Advisors.

Bluesight Expands Capabilities Through Acquisition of Sectyr

Hospital medication tracking technology vendor Bluesight acquires Sectyr, which offers 340B audit and compliance tools.

BianLian ransomware claims attack on Boston Children’s Health Physicians

The BianLian group threatens to publish data online that was stolen during an early September ransomware attack on Boston Children’s Hospital.

Surgical Optimization Company Pip Care Raises $5M in New Funding, Led by A1 Health Ventures

Pip Care, developer of surgical optimization software for clinicians and patients, raises $5 million.

News 10/18/24

October 17, 2024 News 2 Comments

Top News

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Epic asks a federal court to dismiss the antitrust lawsuit that Particle Health brought against it, citing these arguments:

  • Particle’s customers violated patient privacy by accessing records for non-treatment purposes and Epic says that the lawsuit is intended to distract the industry from that issue.
  • Particle accuses Epic of anticompetitive behavior, but limits its argument to payer software, which Epic says includes other interchangeable products and services that are not mentioned in the complaint.
  • The lawsuit fails to prove that Epic’s actions served no purpose other than anticompetitive behavior.
  • No illegal agreements were cited to support claims of a conspiracy.
  • Particle doesn’t show market harm, just its own.
  • The complaint’s tortious interference claims are not valid because Particle can’t prove that Epic had wrongful intent or made false statements.

Reader Comments

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From My2cents: “Re: Qardio. I’m reading on Reddit that they went under, but haven’t seen anything in the news. The app seems to be unavailable in the Google Play and Apple stores.” CEO Mike Alvarez left the consumer ECG and blood pressure app company to become CEO at Glooko last month. The company’s website lists several executive team members who are no longer there, including its founder and CTO. Redditors report buying devices recently only to find that the app is not available and support is unresponsive.


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

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I received a HLTH email update that touts their celebrity keynoters. I’m impressed that HLTH says that their talks are neither paid nor sponsored, although I question the healthcare relevance in some cases. On the list: Lance Bass, Kesha Carter, Halle Berry, Chelsea Clinton, John Legend, Lenny Kravitz, Jill Biden, Maria Shriver, and musical guest Busta Rhymes. Today I learned that Lance Bass’s manufactured former musical group NSYNC is correctly capitalized since it’s an acronym of the last character of the first name of each original member, of which Lance wasn’t one or else I suppose it would have been SYNCEN, which is actually kind of cool. Also TIL that Busta almost certainly holds the healthcare conference record for being arrested.

Dr. Jayne’s critique of LinkedIn made me ponder what will happen to Meta after Facebook inevitably implodes into MySpace II. I’m an infrequent user, but it seems to have become a pointless platform whose most active users are tech-challenged, sloppy-writing boomers and Gen X’ers and the scammers who swarm to them. The algorithm has seemingly been tuned to a higher level of revenue-seeking desperation given the ads, group suggestions, and rage bait that it pushes more prominently than updates from actual connections. I hope Facebook users don’t migrate to Reddit since that’s the only place left that doesn’t make me feel stupider for having read it.


Webinars

October 24 (Thursday) noon ET. “Preparing for HTI-2 Compliance: What EHR and Health IT Vendors Need to Know.” Sponsor: DrFirst. Presenters: Nick Barger, PharmD, VP of product, DrFirst; Tyler Higgins, senior director of product management, DrFirst. Failure to meet ASTP’s mandatory HTI-2 certification  and compliance standards could impose financial consequences on clients. The presenters will discuss the content and timelines of this key policy update, which includes NCPDP Script upgrades, mandatory support for electronic prior authorization, and real-time prescription benefit. They will offer insight into the impact on “Base EHR” qualifications and provide practical advice on aligning development roadmaps with these changes.

Previous webinars are on our YouTube channel. Contact Lorre to present or promote your own.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Virtual digestive care clinic operator Oshi Health raises $60 million in a Series C funding round.

Healthie, which offers EHR and scheduling systems for health and wellness providers, raises $23 million in a Series B funding round.

Biotech research center The Broad Institute of Cambridge, MA lays off 87 employees, almost all of them in software and IT. Microsoft ended its contract with the company in July 2024.

Shares of insurer Elevance Health fall sharply after the company reported lower-than-expected earnings, which it attributes to rapidly increasing healthcare cost trends in its Medicaid business. It also reported a membership decrease of 3% due to the restarting of eligibility redeterminations that had been paused during the pandemic. Other insurers have reported similar problems with higher-than-expected medical costs in their government lines.

Hospital medication tracking technology vendor Bluesight acquires Sectyr, which offers 340B audit and compliance tools.


Sales

  • Lee Health (FL) will expand its virtual nursing program using infrastructure from Caregility.

People

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Pivot Point Consulting hires Scott Sims, MBA (Kyndryl) as SVP of business development and recruiting.

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Amwell names Mark Hirschhorn, MBA (Tapestry Health) as CFO.


Announcements and Implementations

Oracle announces Oracle Health Clinical Data Exchange for claims processing data exchange between providers and payers.

CVS Health’s Aetna announces SimplePay Health, a health plan for self-insured clients in which members pay a fixed co-pay for services that are priced as a bundled payment; can use the Personify Health (formerly Virgin Pulse) app to search for the lowest-cost, best-outcome providers; owe nothing at the time of service; and receive a credit card-like monthly statement that can be paid using zero-interest line of credit. Coupe Health acquired SPH, formerly known as SimplePay Health, in November 2021. Coupe Health’s parent is venture capital firm Stella Health, which is owned by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota.

AMIA announces its 2024 Signature Award recipients, who will be honored at AMIA 2024 in San Francisco November 9-13.


Government and Politics

The board of supervisors of San Diego County, CA requests authorization to contract with OCHIN to implement Epic, which will be used across all Health and Human Services Agency departments in a $6.5 million project.

HHS OCR fines Maryland solo dental practice Gums Dental Care $70,000 for failing to provide a patient with timely access to their medical records. The practice didn’t provide the records even after being reminded by HHS OCR that it was obligated to do so, after which the patient filed a second complaint. The practice provided the records three years after the initial request and two months after it was notified of the $70,000 civil monetary penalty. The dentist there is Anna Gumbs, DMD, whose should have used her actual name for the practice since Googling “gums dental care” unsurprisingly returns a ton of unrelated pages.


Other

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The Guardian takes an investigative dive into Indiana’s Parkview Health, whose aggressive expansion strategy is funded by some of the highest prices of any US hospital even though it is located in the country’s #1 most affordable metro area. The strategy of the health system, which has boosted revenue to $2 billion, includes taking over competing hospitals, buying up practices to increase referrals and insurer pricing leverage, buying naming rights to sports teams and venues, building expensive campuses, and buying practices and imaging centers and increasing prices as hospital-based outpatient departments. In other words, it does what most big health systems do. Insiders say that it ranks doctors by revenue metrics and bases their bonuses on increased patient volume, higher coding, and generating charges for procedures and testing. Nurses report that they are pressured to charge patients for batteries and tissues and are forced to comply with a “linen stewardship” program.


Sponsor Updates

  • Inovalon launches a SaaS-based risk adjustment and analytics platform for health plans that reduces manual medical reviews by 50%.
  • Arcadia announces new standards-based interoperability commitments to streamline data sharing and enhance customer value.
  • A KLAS case study highlights the ways in which Surescripts technology enables greater workflow efficiency and faster approvals for prior authorizations for prescription medications.
  • Redox announces that its data exchange platform has earned i1 certified status by HITRUST for all data transactions hosted on the Google Cloud Platform.
  • Goliath Technologies partners with 1E to offer a complete IT observability solution that allows IT to identify and troubleshoot clinician EHR performance issues.
  • Elsevier Health launches Sherpath AI, an advanced AI solution for nursing and healthcare education.
  • Findhelp partners with Attane Health to support people with severe food allergies.
  • Five9 will present at the MIT AI Conference October 26 in New York City.
  • Fortified Health Security names Erin Martin content marketing manager.
  • Healthmonix names Kate Joyce customer support specialist.
  • Healthcare IT Leaders releases a new “Leader to Leader” podcast, “An Epic Journey at RWJBarnabas Health: Unlocking the Power of a Unified Patient Record.”
  • MRO releases a new episode of “The MRO Exchange” podcast, “Data Quality with Frank Jackson, SVP of Clinical Quality and Payer Solutions.”
  • NeuroFlow will present at the Behavioral Health Tech Conference November 5-7 in Phoenix.

Blog Posts


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
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Contact us.

EPtalk by Dr. Jayne 10/17/24

October 17, 2024 Dr. Jayne 1 Comment

The hot topics around the physician lounge this week included new alerts in the EHR to help clinicians manage IV fluids efficiently. If you’re not aware, Hurricane Helene damaged Baxter International’s production facility earlier this month. The single facility is responsible for nearly two-thirds of the IV fluids that are used in the US, which is problematic, especially considering that we’ve read the plot of this story before in the wake of Hurricane Maria in 2017, which damaged a Baxter International facility in Puerto Rico. The US government has invoked the Defense Production Act to try to help get the facility back to production while Baxter is ramping up production at facilities in Europe and China. Meanwhile, hospitals are postponing surgeries due to the fluid shortages, which is devastating for patients who have been waiting for carefully timed procedures that may not be emergent or urgent but are still important.

Another hot topic was a research letter about billing for patient portal messages that was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine earlier this week. It summarized changes to physician and patient attitudes when organizations decide to bill for patient messages. Some of the highlights: patients weren’t thrilled about being billed but were willing to accept it, but there was confusion about which messages would lead to billing. When patients were to be billed, they expected “speedy, detailed replies.” Ultimately patients said they would be more likely to call the office than to use the patient portal to avoid being billed. Physicians also began to receive messages where patients specifically asked not to be billed. The physicians talking in the lounge were split on whether billing for portal messages was a good thing or not, although two said they no longer manage portal messages at all – anything that requires physician input becomes a scheduled appointment.

I’ll admit I was lured by this headline: “Surgeons use PlayStation controller for long-distance endoscopy.” The procedure was performed in by a surgeon in Switzerland, with the research subject being a pig in Hong Kong. Although endoscopy is not without risk, it’s less risky than surgical procedures where tissue is removed or altered. The magnetic endoscope was steered using a magnet outside the pig’s body. Researchers note the potential for this technology to assist in remote locations. The first thing I thought of was for workers overwintering at the South Pole where resources are scarce and where the late Jerri Nielsen treated her own breast cancer while serving as the station’s physician. Reliable high speed internet is essential for the solution to work, which unfortunately may be a limiting factor for its use. Still, it’s an interesting idea and we’ll see how far it evolves over the next few years.

I love wearable tech, although I’m still sad about the untimely demise of Ringly and still wear my smart bracelet as a plain old bracelet. Happy Health just received FDA clearance for its new Happy Ring smart ring that can track pulse, temperature, and blood oxygen levels. It’s also a sleep tracker and can monitor “brain activity,” but I haven’t seen details on what exactly that involves. From an aesthetic perspective, it’s a bit chunky and certainly wouldn’t be mistaken for actual jewelry, but I suspect people that want those features are less likely to be fashionistas. The press release notes that it has “a near-indestructible, diamond-hard ceramic design,” which makes the emergency physician in me cringe a little bit, having fought the battle against a number of titanium rings in an effort to salvage fingers that might have otherwise been lost. The company will launch its first clinical program in the coming months, targeted at sleep health. For the people in my life trying to get ahead on their holiday shopping, I’m a size seven.

From Hoopster: “Re: health system sponsorships. Kaiser Permanente has become a founding partner of San Francisco’s WNBA expansion team.” Financial details weren’t shared publicly, but a previous deal with the National Women’s Soccer League was estimated at $850,000 per year. Kaiser filed multiple layoff notices in September and October, so I can’t imagine employees being thrilled about the new expense. Having worked in the software industry, I know how care delivery organizations think about ROI (return on investment) whenever they’re asked to spend money. I’m not familiar with the math around this kind of sponsorship ROI, but I imagine it must be there if so many organizations are taking the plunge. Either that or there’s just a cool factor around it. If you’re in the know, feel free to drop me a line.

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Has anyone else’s LinkedIn inbox become a dumping ground for spam? The majority of my invitations are from people I don’t know who are trying to promote services I don’t need, ranging from financial advice to career coaching. I had two invites today from people promising to “get you more patients,” which is not a problem that 99% of primary care physicians have in the US today. Another one was pitching weight loss services for busy physicians. I hope the platform gets it under control, because having those kinds of messages makes me not want to access it and makes it likely that I will miss something that I really do want to see. I’m not a robust user of the platform, so maybe if I engaged differently with it, I might have a different experience, but it’s hard to engage when my feed is full of reposts that seem to beat the same few topics to death.

Many of our readers are prepping for HLTH 2024, where the who’s who of the industry will again come together. Many will be launching new solutions, schmoozing potential clients, identifying new partners, and trying to close deals. Others will simply be trying to “outcool” each other, and I’m deputizing all attendees to send me their best footwear and fashion pictures so I can feel in the loop. Word to the wise for first time attendees: the name of the conference is pronounced “health” as opposed to “H-L-T-H” which I continue to hear in conversations. Pronouncing it correctly can only add to your cool factor. I’ll be popping in for a single day only, so if you’re exhibiting, make sure your sure your shoes are shined and your phone is safely tucked away so you can engage the people walking by.

I also noticed that they announced a new “Main Stage” speaker for Wednesday, Dr. Jill Biden, First Lady of the United States. She’ll be discussing the future of women’s health research. My first thought was “what kind of extra security is this going to add to the event,” especially given how the HLTH conference floor plan is configured. If there will be additional measures, HLTH owes it to attendees to explain it well in advance. Many of the people I know who are attending are planning to fly out Wednesday morning (after recovering from the Busta Rhymes event), so it will be interesting to see what attendance looks like.

If you’re going to HLTH, what’s your game plan for the event? Leave a comment or email me.

Email Dr. Jayne.

Morning Headlines 10/17/24

October 16, 2024 Headlines No Comments

Oshi Health Raises $60M Series C to Strengthen Its Position as the Category Leader for Virtual Digestive Care

Virtual gastrointestinal clinic Oshi Health raises $60 million in a Series C funding round, bringing its total raised to $113 million.

Healthie Secures $23M Series B to Continue Building Infrastructure for Longitudinal, Virtual-First Healthcare

EHR and practice management software developer Healthie announces $23 million in Series B funding.

Legion Health Pivots to Digital AI-Enabled Psychiatry, Raises Over $6M

Texas-base Legion Health raises $6.3 million in seed funding as it pivots from connecting providers with digital mental healthcare services to offering telepsychiatry.

Healthcare AI News 10/16/24

October 16, 2024 Healthcare AI News No Comments

News

Patient engagement startup Parakeet Health launches its generative AI voice platform for health system contact centers and raises $3 million in seed funding.

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Luma Health announces AI products for healthcare call centers: a fax processing tool and a patient-facing voice AI concierge.


Business

MIT News profiles alumni-founded Ambience Healthcare, which offers an ambient documentation solution that is being used in 40 large institutions.

Johnson & Johnson lists six ways it is using AI:

  • Creating and analyzing videos of surgeries to create “highlight reels” for training, collaboration, and support.
  • Create 3D maps for surgical procedures.
  • Analyze de-identified EHR data to identify disease targets and drugs.
  • Support clinical trial recruitment.
  • Analyze genomic and clinical data from diagnostic tests to target treatments and identify candidates for clinical trials.
  • Predict drug supply and demand to optimize distribution of products where they are needed most.

Research

A retrospective cohort study of Yale New Haven Health System medical-surgical inpatients finds that the accuracy of six AI-powered early warning tools for patient deterioration varies widely. ECARTv5 and the National Early Warning score were the top performers, while Epic’s Deterioration Index had the lowest positive predictive value. The authors recommend that health systems verify how the tools work and oversee their use.


Other

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Angela Elena Olazaran Laureano, a 17-year-old student in rural Mexico, is chosen from 11,000 nominations to win a $100,000 student prize for her work developing an AI-powered virtual medical assistant that provides basic diagnosis for 21 conditions and warns users if they are likely to be contagious. She was previously part of robotics team that won the national Home Care Challenge. She will use the award to create a STEM classroom in her home town.


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
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Send news or rumors.
Contact us.

HIStalk Interviews A. J. Loiacono, CEO, Capital Rx

October 16, 2024 Interviews No Comments

A. J. Loiacono is CEO of Capital Rx.

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Tell me about yourself and the company.

I have been in the pharmaceutical supply chain for 24 years. I’ve always had a special interest or focus in software development, which makes me kind of unique in my role.

Capital Rx has two main businesses. We are a full-service PBM, a pharmacy benefit manager, servicing self-insured payers such as employers, unions, and municipalities. The other side of our business is that we are a PBA, a pharmacy benefit administrator, and we license our software and technology services to health plans.

What role does technology play in those two business lines and how advanced is it?

This has been an oversight for much of healthcare for far too long. The massive underinvestment in technology is catching up with the country. 

People think that there has been investment in healthcare. What I explain is that there are two major electronic workflows when it comes to healthcare in the United States. I’m generalizing, but one is the EMR-EHR, the electronic health record systems. This is the workflow to activate a claim, such as scheduling and decision support software. But the moment a medication is prescribed or a procedure is performed for a patient, congratulations, in the US healthcare system, you have created a claim. 

That claim then disappears from the very workflow that we have been describing. It moves over to my world, which is what we call claim administration, the workflow to administrate a claim. Who is eligible for the benefit? Who’s in network? What’s the plan design? What’s the co-pay? Who is being billed? Who is being reimbursed? 

On this side of the fence, we have invested nothing in over the last 20 years. This bill of technical debt or ignorance has caught up with the entire industry, because administrative workflows enable us to use new ideas to leverage new clinical ideas. If you have a brilliant healthcare idea, good luck implementing it, because the infrastructure or the technology won’t support it. This massive underinvestment is one of the key areas that’s holding back the country.

How can technology address the key issues of drug transparency and cost?

Let’s start first with price transparency. You are really talking about an innovative payment workflow or an innovative pricing workflow when you talk transparency. Because up to this point, one of the things that’s very odd about the prescription healthcare process in the United States is that no one knows what the real price of anything is. A lot of times, that’s because price may be obfuscated by co-pay. If you pay a flat $10 or $20, you don’t know or necessarily care what the price of the drug is. But with high-deductible plans or co-insurance over the last 20 years, patients have become more and more exposed to price. Patients start to feel the cost. It’s no longer hidden behind flat co-pays.

When we talk about technology, what you’re trying to do is allow buyers and sellers to freely communicate on price. What do we mean by that? The buyers are the patients, but really the buyers are what I would call the ultimate payers. These are the people that are plan sponsors or people that are providing benefit services on behalf of patients. The sellers are the pharmacies, but it’s a little bit more complex in the US healthcare system because the pharmacies don’t really have a direct negotiation with the patient. It’s coming through some form of insurance, again through a PBM or a carrier. 

By allowing the buy side, if you will — the patient — to freely communicate with the seller who’s really selling the drug — the inventory is held by the pharmacy — you create market efficiency. That sounds simple, but it’s difficult to manage inventories of 140,000-plus unique drug codes and to evaluate price based upon different benchmarking, wholesaling, and resale kind of pressure points. What hasn’t existed in the United States is an efficient market around drugs. It has been hidden. It’s been far too opaque.

This leads to the second problem, which is that the person that’s administrating the pharmacy benefit became conflicted along the way. This is the problem with the traditional PBM model. If you went in a time machine with me back to the 1990s, PBMs didn’t make money on drug spend. Their job was to be an unbiased administrator of drug spend. Very easy. 

Then in the 21st century, they shifted their model and said, there’s no longer a flat fee. My services are effectively free. We know that nothing is free, so how are they getting paid? The statement was, “We’re making a little bit of money on the drug spend.” People thought that seemed reasonable. But the inherent conflict of interest under that model is that the moment you start making money on drug spend, the more expensive the drug, the more money you make. The more fraud, the more waste, the more abuse, unfortunately, the more money you can make. 

Because of this inherent conflict, the industry started to adopt more opacity, more confusion, and more limitations around data, because the people that are making money on drug spend don’t want people to understand true price. Capital Rx took a different approach. We said, we’re not going to make money on drug spend. We’re not going to have any fulfillment assets, which means that we’re not going to own pharmacies, mail, retail, specialty. We’re not going to own or buy into a GPO. Our job is to let buyers and sellers communicate a price. 

Here’s where the technology comes in. The technology needs to create efficiency to transmit price, not just on behalf of the plan sponsor, but to the patient. To also help the patient that may have unfortunately been put in a situation where they’re using a medication that’s far too expensive and there’s a generic or a lower-cost alternative available, but there was never any interest under a traditional PBM model because of the inherent conflict of interest.

If you have delegated the administrative power to a PBM as a self-insured employer or plan, and if your PBM can make money on an error that is not in the best interest of your plan or patient, you need to change that model.

Companies such as CVS and Optum that operate PBMs have vertically integrated to own insurers, specialty pharmacies, and traditional pharmacies. How do they spread the total cost of a drug over those businesses to optimize corporate profit?

At the turn of the century, PBMs decided to move to a model where they made money on drugs. It’s the perfect model. Why would you change anything? It’s an inelastic demand curve. Patient utilization does not budge in the United States. Prices only appear to inflate, with list price increasing every year and the average cost per prescription goes up due to the proliferation of more expensive specialty drugs. 

When you have the perfect market, you don’t innovate, you consolidate. You not only buy more of the PBM model, you buy more of the supply chain. This is exactly what we saw. It’s not just the PBM buying retail assets, but buying mail assets, specialty assets, rebate GPO assets, and now even further with medical assets in the form of the actual insurance carrier, but even down to the physician level, buying entire surgical or physician practices. This is such a problem in the United States. It’s something that we need to focus on more than anything else, which is that vertical integration is a real problem.

The ultimate payer is usually the employer that provides health insurance. How can they empower themselves to force change on these huge healthcare corporations?

It’s very easy. The solution is in front of everyone. Very simply, If you want someone to administrate your benefit plan, that’s all they can do.

Let’s say I’m a big vertically integrated PBM and I want to be your administrator. I want to administrate your benefit plan. You as the employer say, that’s great, you can administrate my pharmacy benefit plan. But we can’t use any of your fulfillment, GPO, or other vertically integrated assets, because I need to separate church and state, if you will. I need to make sure that my administrator remains unbiased and unconflicted. 

The reason for this is that the moment you make money on drug spend, unfortunately, there’s an inherent bias in every decision. Be it there or not, you’re making more money on the actual drug itself. As the administrator, you need to push them and say, you can only administrate my plan. I could go to another PBM and say, hey, I’d like to use your mail facility, and I’d like to use maybe even a different entity’s rebates.

What we need to do is to peel away the things that are creating the potential for financial incentives to drive the wrong decision on behalf of a payer. I keep going back to this point, which is that if your PBM makes a mistake — I used a different pharmacy, I chose a different drug, I chose the different classification system, I applied the wrong DAW code — if your PBM can make more money, that’s a problem. By separating mail, specialty, and retail outside of the administrator’s financial purview or gain, I’ve created an aligned arrangement. My new administrator that’s just administrating services is beyond reproach. There will always be mistakes in any healthcare setting, but you can’t point a finger and say that they’re making more money on that mistake. Once you separate these two things, magic happens for both the patients and the plan.

Are employers and health plans aware that they have alternatives? How do you promote the idea that PBMs come with a conflict of interest unless you take specific actions?

I’ve been saying this for seven years. I remember very clearly that I was in a meeting with a TPA and they were considering using our PBM. They said besides moral outrage, AJ, does your company really have anything to offer? I said, moral outrage? This is a real fiduciary problem if you’re not careful. The people that you are having administrate drug spend, plan design, clinical decisions, and network decisions on behalf of membership are making financial gain from potentially bad decisions. They were like, this doesn’t matter. 

We stayed true to our philosophy. We are a B corporation. We don’t make money on drug spend. We invested heavily in technology to create the infrastructure for the future. Lo and behold, it turns out that we were correct. Legislative pressure, both state and federal, suddenly started to appear about three or four years ago. You started to see regulatory scrutiny and oversight from the FTC, CMS, other areas. You suddenly see moral outrage from patients sharing stories of pain what I would say is real price inequality. You then also see the media covering these stories. Then it begins to culminate into lawsuits and litigation, where you see both J&J and Wells Fargo, unfortunately, being named in fiduciary cases, where it’s being suggested that they are not doing the right job by using what appears to be a pricing system that is highly variable and unfortunately selecting prices where there are lower prices available in the market. You start to see these tailwinds accelerate.

For our organization, we started with zero lives and a mission. Now going into our seventh year of operation, we service over 3 million employer membership around the country. These are Fortune 500 companies. These are some of the largest municipalities, unions, health systems, and universities. We’re very proud. We are thoughtful in the services that we’re providing. 

This is a tipping point moment where, for the first time, you’re seeing bigger and bigger employers say, enough is enough. I need an aligned administrator, PBM, and the market has more than enough willing participants to provide retail, mail, specialty, and rebates. This is exactly what we do. We do not own any of these assets. Our job is to provide access to the pricing and value that the market is willing to offer. It’s a simple model, but the reason it became so complex over the last 20-plus years is because there was too much self-interest driving the model.

How hard would it be for government or anyone else to look at the medication value chain to try to understand what parts affect spending and where profits or inefficiencies exist?

This is one of the things that makes this a clear example of pain and consumer discomfort. It’s easy for anyone — legislative side, regulatory side —  to say, could someone give me an example of drug spend not being a great experience in the United States? There’s millions of examples. 

The question then is, how do you synthesize what is wrong in the supply chain from manufacturer through wholesaler to retail pharmacy or mail order to the PBM or carrier to ultimately the ultimate payer, the plan sponsor, and then ultimately to the ultimate user, the patient? How do you make sense of such an overly complex system? This is what has made this such a difficult discussion.

The other thing is, think of all the people that are making money on the current model. A lot of people don’t want to see the good times change. It’s lonely trying to move such a huge industry in the right direction. Thankfully, there are other people that share a similar vision and are helping us push this industry in the right direction, and many of them are competitors. Some of them are allies in this position.

But the whole point is that there is a growing movement for change because the pain or the issues is clear. The solutions up to this point were not. Some of it, again, was hidden or dampened by people of self-interest that don’t want the model to move. But now you’re seeing people come to the table and saying, enough’s enough. There’s no reason we need to continue down this path. 

The simplest way to solve for this problem is to just separate church and state. In the old days, you could be a commercial bank, but you couldn’t also be an investment bank simultaneously with the same member of your banking system. By separating these things, you have clear separation of powers and you have removed all conflict. You can still use all the big-name players for retail, mail, specialty, fulfillment, and GPO, but they can’t be your administrator. Because the moment you make money on drug spend, all the wrong decisions can happen, and if there’s ever any error or oversight, a traditional PBM can make more money. That’s just liability for any fiduciary.

What issues will be important to the company in the next few years?

I’m a big believer in continuing to innovate. Companies that stay static are displaced over the long term. A big part of what we do at Capital Rx is not just work on the solutions that meet the demands of today’s healthcare system, but to be thoughtful, look to the future, and to continue to provide new services and new infrastructure to support not just our ideas, but what comes next. We are certainly not the architects of the future of healthcare. What I often say is that Capital Rx has the best infrastructure. We are the best plumbers in healthcare. We provide the infrastructure for what is going to come next. That’s where we continue to invest heavily. Not just to stay relevant, but to position a clear path for healthcare to evolve in a positive trend.

We are seeing the tailwind of legislative pressure, regulatory pressure, and the media. Bad things happen when you have someone on the buy side and the sell side. If you’re on the buy and the sell side, you represent yourself always. That’s the problem with the traditional PBM model. Through vertical integration, they represent themselves at every step of the supply chain. That is a recipe for disaster, and disaster in this case is defined by hyperinflating drugs and medication that is perceived to be too expensive for the average American to afford. It just needs to change.

Morning Headlines 10/16/24

October 15, 2024 Headlines No Comments

Walgreens Boots Alliance Reports Fiscal Year 2024 Earnings

Walgreens announces that it will close 1,200 drugstores and reports Q4 results: revenue up 6%, EPS -$3.48 versus -$0.21, beating analyst expectations for both and sending shares sharply up.

Parakeet Health Launches With Generative AI Voice Platform to Transform Patient Engagement for Healthcare Providers

Patient engagement startup Parakeet Health launches its generative AI voice platform for patient communication and raises $3 million in seed funding.

CVS to exit core infusions services business, job cuts possible

CVS Health will exit its infusion business and close or sell 29 related regional pharmacies.

MDisrupt Secures American Heart Association Ventures Investment, Enters Strategic Collaboration for Association Members

MDisrupt, which offers a health technology expert marketplace, receives a $1 million milestone-based investment from the American Heart Association’s newly created venture arm.

UnitedHealth’s stock rocked as a big jump in medication costs hurt profitability

UnitedHealth Group beats analyst expectations for Q3 revenue and earnings per share, but sees shares drop alongside the news that the Change Healthcare cyberattack will cost it $705 million.

News 10/16/24

October 15, 2024 News 1 Comment

Top News

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Walgreens Boots Alliance reports Q4 results: revenue up 6%, EPS -$3.48 versus -$0.21, beating analyst expectations for both and sending shares sharply up.

WBA shares have lost 57% of their value in the past 12 months.

The company announced that it will close 1,200 of its 8,000 drugstores over the next three years. CEO Tim Wentworth said in the earnings call that the company is focused on “monetizing non-core assets to generate cash,” naming VillageMD as an example, to focus on its core retail pharmacy business.


Reader Comments

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From Kim: “Re: the NotebookLM podcast you created. I enjoyed listening to the 5-minute weekly news summary and found it easier to digest than reading. Lately the amount of information has been overwhelming so I very much appreciated the summary at the end.” The AI-generated podcast that recaps the top five news item from the week (chosen by me) took me just a couple of minutes to create. I created a poll for readers to express their interest or lack of it. I’m happy to do it regularly if enough readers are interested.


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

HLTH USA attendees – consider connecting with HIStalk sponsors that are participating.


Webinars

October 24 (Thursday) noon ET. “Preparing for HTI-2 Compliance: What EHR and Health IT Vendors Need to Know.” Sponsor: DrFirst. Presenters: Nick Barger, PharmD, VP of product, DrFirst; Tyler Higgins, senior director of product management, DrFirst. Failure to meet ASTP’s mandatory HTI-2 certification  and compliance standards could impose financial consequences on clients. The presenters will discuss the content and timelines of this key policy update, which includes NCPDP Script upgrades, mandatory support for electronic prior authorization, and real-time prescription benefit. They will offer insight into the impact on “Base EHR” qualifications and provide practical advice on aligning development roadmaps with these changes.

Previous webinars are on our YouTube channel. Contact Lorre to present or promote your own.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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CVS Health will exit its infusion business and close or sell 29 related regional pharmacies. The company bought infusion company Coram for $2.1 billion in 2013.

UnitedHealth Group reports Q3 results: revenue up 9%, EPS $6.51 versus $6.24, beating expectations for both, but shares dropped sharply on the news. CEO Andrew Witty said in the earnings call that health system partnerships will provide significant opportunities. The company reported that the Change Healthcare cyberattack will cost it $705 million.

UK-based health tech market intelligence form Signify Research receives an $8 million investment from UK investment company BGF.

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MDisrupt, which offers a health technology expert marketplace, receives a $1 million milestone-based investment from the American Heart Association’s newly created venture arm.

Practice management system vendor ClinicMind acquires ChiroDominance, which offers a marketing system for chiropractic offices.


People

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Matthew Michela, MBA (Curve Health) joins Flywheel as CEO.

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The Christ Hospital Health Network names Joyce Oh CIO and digital transformation officer.

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RLDatix names Dan Michelson, MBA (InCommon) as CEO.

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Industry long-timer David Wattling, who held leadership positions at Courtyard Group and Telus and served on the boards of several companies, died October 1. He was 69.

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Symplr Chief Nursing Officer and former hospital executive Karlene Kerfoot, PhD, RN died Tuesday.


Announcements and Implementations

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WhidbeyHealth (WA) goes live on Meditech Expanse with consulting assistance from Tegria.

In New York, Columbia Memorial Health, Glens Falls Hospital, and Saratoga Hospital will go live on Epic early next month, rounding out Albany Med Health System’s implementation.

Oracle Health introduces Clinical Data Exchange for the automated exchange of claims processing data between providers and payers.

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Jupiter Medical Center (FL) implements Epic with help from Cordea Consulting Solutions.

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Digital identity vendor AllClear ID launches Health Bank One, an app that allows people to collect their medical records — including images —  and then ask questions about the information, with answers provided by GPT-4o. The system processes digital and hard copy records from all providers, payers, and pharmacies, which are required to provide the information by the 21st Century Cures Act. A subscription costs $14.95 per month and a 30-day trial is free.


Government and Politics

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The VA Fayetteville Coastal Health Care system in North Carolina opens a Virtual Health Resource Center to offer veterans assistance with digital health tools offered through the VA’s Connected Care program and VA clinicians training on how to incorporate them into care workflows. The VA offers 47 VHRCs across the country.


Privacy and Security

RCM, compliance, and coding vendor Gryphon Healthcare notifies 400,000 individuals of a third-party data breach that may have exposed patient information.

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UMC Health (TX) restores its EHR after a ransomware attack several weeks ago forced it to divert ambulances and enact downtime procedures. UMC is still working to restore its patient-facing systems and internal patient care programs.


Sponsor Updates

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  • Clinical Architecture staff volunteer at the Gleaners Food Bank of Indiana, serving 1,947 households in the Indianapolis area.
  • AGS Health announces that Everest Group has named it a leader in revenue cycle management operations for the fourth consecutive year.
  • Arcadia publishes a new report, “The healthcare CIO’s role in the age of AI.”
  • Artera debuts three new products at its Heartbeat Customer Conference.
  • AvaSure honors the 2024 AvaPrize winners for virtual care excellence.
  • Capital Rx announces that co-founder and CTO Ryan Kelly and SVP of Strategy Josh Golden have been named to the Class of 2024 BenefitsPro Luminaries in the Innovation & Technology and Education & Communication categories, respectively.
  • Consensus Cloud Solutions will exhibit at the Arizona Hospital Leadership Conference October 16-18 in Tucson.
  • CloudWave will present at and sponsor the HIMSS Central and Southern Ohio conference October 18 in Dublin, OH.
  • DrFirst will exhibit at the NAACOs Fall Conference October 16-18 in Washington, DC.
  • Netsmart announces the implementation of the 360X electronic closed-loop referral management standards with LifeWorks NorthWest (OR).
  • AdvancedMD announces its Fall 2024 Product Release, with 30 updates and features that include new two-way patient messaging capabilities.
  • Goliath Technologies partners with 1E to offer health IT end users a combined solution for EHR performance review and management.

Blog Posts


Contacts

Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
Get HIStalk updates.
Send news or rumors.
Contact us.

Morning Headlines 10/15/24

October 14, 2024 Headlines No Comments

Resilience Lab Expands Care Delivery for Treatment-Resistant Depression and Other Moderate and Severe Mental Illnesses with the Acquisition of Options MD

Resilience Lab, a digital healthcare company that matches patients with virtual and in-office therapists, acquires virtual mental healthcare provider Options MD, including its proprietary clinical intake and AI-powered clinical decision support software.

Gryphon Healthcare, LLC Notifies Individuals of Data Security Incident

Medical billing company Gryphon Healthcare notifies 400,000 individuals of a third-party data breach that may have exposed patient information.

UMC’s electronic health record systems restored over two weeks after ransomware attack

UMC Health (TX) restores its computer systems after a ransomware attack in late September forced it to divert ambulances and enact downtime procedures.

Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne 10/14/24

October 14, 2024 Dr. Jayne 5 Comments

As a longstanding supporter of virtual health care, an article published this week in JAMA caught my attention. It addresses the issue of disability rights and accessibility in virtual healthcare.

I’ve been involved in discussions of accessibility in health tech for more than two decades, watching features evolve from those that are requested by software customers as “enhancements” for young EHR products to those that are mandated by federal certification requirements. Some of these are fairly straightforward, such as ensuring appropriate contrast for text, ensuring that color is not used as the sole indicator of something being an alert or concerning value, and compatibility with screen reader technology. Others are a bit more nuanced and generate discussion, but those conversations taper off when people realize they aren’t going to get around a certification requirement.

At one point in my career, I was working entirely in the realm of certified EHR technology and began to take these things for granted. Only when I moved into consulting and working with technology startups did I realize how some vendors lacked an understanding of basic usability principles, let alone accessibility standards. I can’t count the number of conversations I’ve been in where I’ve had to explain that the requirements are linked to specific health conditions, such as red-green colorblindness or macular degeneration, and that health tech companies should probably try to do the right thing regardless of whether they have a regulated product or solution. I understand that adding features adds to development costs, but often it costs the same to develop a product that’s compliant as it does to ignore the needs of end users. Font and color / contrast are good examples of this.

There are reasons other than documented health conditions to develop in certain ways, one being the needs of an aging workforce. Now that I’m past a certain age, I would wholeheartedly support efforts to help early-career solution developers understand the various physical changes that come with age. They may not be enough to qualify as a “diagnosis,” but for many of us, the likelihood that we can get meaningful work done on a 13-inch laptop versus a 24-inch monitor is low. I’m more sensitive to bad ergonomic configurations than I was 20 years ago, that’s for sure. For me, some of these factors are merely an inconvenience, but for patients and clinicians who have additional needs, these factors serve as barriers to the giving and receiving of quality care.

The JAMA article notes that this summer brought new federal regulations that cover the accessibility of websites and mobile apps for state-run and federally funded health programs, including Medicare, Medicaid, and public hospitals. However, it notes that “disabilities are diverse” and the lack of one-size-fits-all solutions means that many resources are simply inaccessible. It goes on to specifically explore the inaccessible nature of many virtual health solutions, including “incompatibility with screen-reading software, a lack of captioning, and interfaces that are difficult to navigate.”

I recently tried to explore a virtual health solution using my phone, but couldn’t even request an appointment because the calendar interface that was selected by the developers prevents you from keying in your date of birth. Instead, you were supposed to scroll back month by month to your date of birth, which in the case of some people in my household, would have required 600 swipes. How’s that for welcoming people over 50 to the platform? Frankly even if I were much more youthful, I wouldn’t want to use such a horrible user interface.

The accessibility requirements extend to entities that accept Medicare, Medicaid, or other government funds, including small independent care providers. Those types of entities have three years to meet the requirements, where larger organizations have two years to do so. Third-party solution providers will need to gear up to meet the needs of their clients on the appropriate timeline, since failure of an organization to comply violates the law. I’ll be interested to see how quickly technology providers begin promoting themselves as “WCAG compliant” since it’s version 2.1 of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines that are required in the new regulations. Bonus points to the first exhibitor I see at HLTH that promotes this designation.

I’ll admit that I don’t know the details of compliance since it’s not an area that I’m working in. But in thinking of all the third-party or homegrown chatbot and patient portal solutions that are out there, I’m betting that consultants are at the ready to assist as organizations work to assess where they stand. I’m also wondering whether this might push some smaller practices to begin to assess the pros and cons of opting out of Medicare (which many are already considering) versus having to replace technology solutions. I have a number of colleagues who have transitioned their practices to Direct Primary Care models where they don’t interact with public funding at all, and if people are on the fence about that change, I bet something like this might just be the thing that pushes them over.

Although I do love me some good Federal Register reading, I’m not exactly feeling it tonight. I’m hoping readers who are experts in this area might consider pointing me to some summary resources, or even send me their comments to share in a future post.

I would also be curious to know whether the patients who these regulations are intended to help think that the regulations are adequate or if more needs to be done to improve accessibility on a faster timetable. I’m also curious whether any part of these regulations address the diverse needs of healthcare providers or whether they’re entirely patient-centric.

If you’re with a third party that is addressing these requirements or is already compliant, I would enjoy hearing how the process worked for you and what the relative effort was like. It’s important for all of us to understand the work that goes into healthcare IT to make it work for everyone who uses healthcare services.

What’s your take on accessibility in virtual care? Leave a comment or email me.

Email Dr. Jayne.

Readers Write: The Uncomfortable Truth About Healthcare Data

October 14, 2024 Readers Write No Comments

The Uncomfortable Truth About Healthcare Data
By Mike Green

Mike Green, MBA is chief information security officer of Availity.

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Cyberattacks have become an all-too-common occurrence, with no industry immune from their effects. In healthcare, the stakes have reached unprecedented levels, with the FBI recently identifying the sector as the top ransomware target.

Consider that in 2023, healthcare data breaches that impacted 500 or more records were reported to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at a rate of 1.99 per day. The results of that equate to a whopping 364,571 healthcare record breaches every day and 133 million records exposed or impermissibly disclosed in 2023 alone.

Data like this, combined with lessons learned from previous cyberattacks, reveal the uncomfortable truth that healthcare data is increasingly vulnerable. Hardware, software, and the information that runs through it are more interconnected than ever. The vital nature of healthcare’s digital infrastructure, combined with increased cyber threats, magnify the vulnerability of this connectedness further.

Reflect on this year’s example in which a major clearinghouse experienced one of the worst cyberattacks in the history of the US healthcare sector, affecting up to one-third of the U.S. population. What makes this incident stand out is the company’s crucial role as a healthcare clearinghouse.

As digital super-highways, healthcare clearinghouses connect the healthcare ecosystem, routing billions of electronic transactions between health plans and providers and streamlining administrative processes that are associated with claims, prior authorizations, and provider payments. Yet today, under HIPAA, the closest thing to an information security standard is a catch-all “reasonable efforts” expectation. Such a standard, or lack thereof, was wholly inadequate to protect hundreds of thousands of providers and millions of patients across the interconnected healthcare landscape from this unprecedented cyberattack.

Members of Congress have caught on, announcing the proposed Health Infrastructure Security and Accountability Act in late September, which aims to direct HHS to craft a new set of minimum cybersecurity standards for healthcare providers, health plans, clearinghouses, and business associates. As calls for change such as this highlight, to truly improve cybersecurity across the US healthcare system and prevent this from happening again, the industry—and clearinghouses in particular—must do more to safeguard and swiftly recover with minimal disruptions.

The following best practices can help bolster cybersecurity posture and speed recovery time for healthcare organizations that are impacted by attacks.

  • There is a pressing need to establish mandatory cybersecurity standards for all clearinghouses. The days of “please see attached HITRUST certification” are gone. That is simply not enough, and the false sense of security provided by these certifications is dangerous. These standards should be updated regularly to address evolving threats. Clearinghouses should be required to disclose the scope of their information security programs and demonstrate compliance with highly specific security standards, such as the US Defense Information Systems Agency Provisional Authorization Impact Level 2 (DISA IL2), which maintains cloud computing security requirements and the National Institute of Standards and Technology SP 800-171, a standard for safeguarding sensitive information on federal contractors’ IT systems and networks.
  • Clearinghouses should also comply with SOC-2, a security framework that was developed by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). SOC-2 specifies how organizations should protect customer data from unauthorized access and is built around five Trust Services Criteria: security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy. Not all healthcare organizations comply with SOC-2 criteria. Clearinghouses should be required to fully implement these cybersecurity standards, adjusting criteria over time to keep pace with evolving threats.
  • It is crucial to implement stringent disaster recovery and business continuity standards. These standards should include annual reviews by boards of directors and mock cyberattack exercises to ensure preparedness. Clearinghouses must demonstrate the capability to recover from disruptions swiftly, with recovery times measured in hours and days, not weeks and months. Moreover, Recovery Time Objectives and Recovery Point Objectives should be shared with clients annually, with these metrics audited by credible third parties.
  • Streamlining the administrative processes for providers is also essential. Simplifying and standardizing the enrollment process for electronic data interchange (EDI) with Medicare and Medicaid will reduce redundant requirements and enhance efficiency. Establishing a unified, automated EDI enrollment system across all Medicaid and Medicare programs will further ease the administrative burden on healthcare providers, saving time and money while ensuring the ability to run practices through a disruption of service to the primary clearinghouse.

While there’s no one-size-fits-all solution to addressing cyber threats in healthcare, the establishment of such clear standards and accountability measures can help better ensure the resiliency and security of the entire digital infrastructure. Strengthened cybersecurity practices can also instill confidence in the integrity of the healthcare ecosystem, which connects patients, providers, payers, and other stakeholders alike.

HIStalk’s Guide to HLTH 2024

October 14, 2024 Uncategorized No Comments

Amenities Health

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Booth 4038

Contact: Aasim Saeed, founder and CEO
aasim@amenitieshealth.com
832.607.5778

Amenities Health is a leading digital front-door platform focused on helping health systems to strengthen patient loyalty and boost revenue. At HLTH 2024, we’ll showcase an interactive demonstration of how health systems are enhancing their patient portals, mobile apps, and websites with the Amenities platform. Our solutions streamline digital interactions, accelerating patient registration, improving care search and scheduling, and offering memberships that drive deeper patient engagement.


Artera

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Booth V-4127

Contact: Elyssa Jaffe, director of events
elyssa.jaffe@artera.io
904.536.7790

Visit us at our booth! Our team will be available throughout the event (booth V-4127) to share insights, best practices, and demonstrations. Schedule and attend a meeting with an Artera team member and earn a $25 Amazon gift card. As an added bonus, you’ll be entered to win an iPad Pro in our post-event raffle.


Clearwater

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Booth #3210 in the ScaleHealth Pavilion

Contact: John Howlett, chief marketing officer
john.howlett@clearwatersecurity.com
773.636.6449

Investments in new technology must be coupled with greater investment in cybersecurity. And not just by hospitals and health systems, but also by the health IT companies and the broader ecosystem that is a target of cyberattacks. Reputations, balance sheets, and most importantly, patient lives are at stake. Clearwater is here to help with a deep pool of experts across a broad range of cybersecurity, privacy, and compliance domains; purpose-built software that enables efficient identification and management of cybersecurity and compliance risks; managed cloud services; and a 24/7 Security Operations Center with managed threat detection and response capabilities.


Clinical Architecture

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Booth V-1525

Contact: Jaime Lira, VP of marketing
jaime_lira@clinicalarchitecture.com

Visit the Clinical Architecture viosk (V-1525) located near the HLTH café on the showroom floor to get your copy of the 2024 Healthcare Data Quality Report. We will have digital copies along with a limited number of print copies available. While you’re there, let’s talk about how you are managing patient data. Clinical Architecture data quality solutions have delivered real ROI to health systems, payer organizations, life sciences enterprises, government, and others. Our terminology solutions are designed to improve healthcare data quality, provide a platform to enable the aggregation of clinical data, automate semantic normalization and interoperability, and enrich your data to make it meaningful and actionable. We are looking forward to seeing you at HLTH!


Get-to-Market Health

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Contact: Steve Shihadeh, founder and CEO
steve@gettomarkethealth.net

The continued pace of transformation in healthcare creates enormous pressure on technology companies to adapt and deliver clear value. Get-to-Market Health (GTMH) was formed to address this challenge. Whether a company needs to accelerate its top-line growth following an investment round or is bringing new products to market, GTMH helps healthcare technology leaders market, sell, and create sustainable long-term relationships with their customers. We are on a mission to help optimize healthcare technology sales.


InterSystems

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Booth 4033

Contact: Brian Sohns, North America business development manager
brian.sohns@intersystems.com

We look forward to joining you at HLTH 2024! InterSystems partners are at the forefront of healthcare innovation and many of our customers, such as Epic, have grown with us from their beginnings. If you’re looking to work with healthcare data, connect with us during the show for solutions including:

The show will be full of exciting sessions, including Sunday partner programming where our leadership will be speaking. We’d love to hear about your goals for the show and help make it a success — schedule time to meet with one of our experts today. See you in Las Vegas!


KeyCare

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Booth 3254 in the Digital Health Hub / Kiosk 36

KeyCare connects health systems with a network of virtual care providers working on KeyCare’s Epic-based EHR and telehealth platform. This allows health systems to improve access for their patients in a coordinated manner, while also decreasing the burden on their own providers. Health systems can start with nationwide, virtual, on-demand care coverage (24×7, 50-state coverage), and then may add other virtual health services based on the needs of their patients. To learn more about KeyCare, visit www.keycare.org.


Medicomp Systems

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Booth V-4425

Contact: James Aita, director of strategy and business development
jaita@medicomp.com
647.207.0080

Medicomp will showcase the latest in what can be done with AI and clinical intelligence at the point of care. Leveraging its patented Quippe Clinical Knowledge Graph, Medicomp will display the new “intelligent hybrid model” for usability, documentation, and compliance during a patient encounter. Mirroring a clinician’s thought process, the Quippe Clinical Intelligence Engine makes chart review, documentation and review, risk analysis, compliance, billing, and interoperability faster and easier than ever before. See for yourself at HLTH 2024 booth V-4425.


MRO

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Booth V-1628

Contact: Brad Hawkins, national director, health plan sales
bhawkins@mrocorp.com
601.405.2470

MRO is accelerating the exchange of clinical data throughout the healthcare ecosystem on behalf of providers, payers, and users of clinical data. With a 20-year legacy and as a 10-time KLAS winner, MRO brings a technology-driven mindset built upon a client-first service foundation and a relentless focus on client excellence. For more information on how MRO is empowering providers with proven, enterprise-wide solutions to exchange clinical data of every type and scale, visit www.mrocorp.com.    

Reasons to stop by the MRO booth:  

  • Ask us how we helped CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield deliver an average 63% increase in annual HEDIS quality measures.   
  • Learn about our ever-growing network of providers and connectivity with over 250 health IT systems.  
  • Learn how our DAV certification guarantees high data quality and compliance, facilitates reliable clinical reporting, and enhances overall operations and financial performance.    
  • Ask how our Exchange Nexus solution speeds chart retrieval time from months to 24 hours.

Surescripts

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Booth 2419

Contact: Kate Giaquinto, PR manager
kate.giaquinto@surescripts.com

Surescripts’ purpose is to serve the nation through simpler, trusted health intelligence sharing in order to increase patient safety, lower costs, and ensure quality care. At Surescripts, we align healthcare organizations across the nation and convene the Surescripts Network Alliance to give healthcare professionals the trusted insights they need to serve patients.   Visit us at surescripts.com.


TrustCommerce, a Sphere Company

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Schedule a meeting with Chief Revenue Officer Ryne Natzke or VP of Partnerships Rick Follett here.

Contact: Ryan Natzke, chief revenue officer
rynen@spherecommerce.com

TrustCommerce, a Sphere Company, is the leading financial technology company trusted by the nation’s largest health systems. Our integrated payment platform facilitates secure, compliant patient payments. Using TrustCommerce to enhance the patient financial experience, clients can securely process payments anytime, anywhere and be connected with core software including EHRs like Epic, Veradigm, and Athenahealth.


WellSky

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Contact: Mark Heron, SVP of sales
mark.heron@wellsky.com
610.662.1428

WellSky solutions connect thousands of providers across the US. The end-to-end solution set bridges acute and post-acute data, providing visibility and collaboration for the entire patient journey for providers, physicians, payers, and risk-bearing organizations. Schedule a time with us during HLTH to see how WellSky solutions help healthcare professionals efficiently and effectively coordinate patient care to better manage patients and influence their care as they move through the continuum. Contact Mark Heron at HLTH to learn more.

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