I was part of the Pfizer COVID vaccine clinical trial in 2020. There was an app for recording some simple…
News 9/18/19
Top News
Jonathan Bush (Athenahealth) joins video and office visit provider Firefly Health as executive chair.
Bush’s appointment was announced in the same press release as the company’s $10.2 million Series A funding round.
The two investment groups taking part in the funding round – F-Prime Capital and Oak HC/FT — are represented by former Athenahealth executives Carl Byers and Nancy Brown, respectively.
Firefly’s founders are from Harvard Medical School.
Firefly bills a patient’s insurance for co-pay and video visits, with no charge for messaging. In-office visits are conducted only in Wellesley, MA, and the company does business only in that state. Firefly says it will “enter several new markets” in 2020.
Reader Comments
From Wall Flyer: “Re: Leidos Health. Sold to private equity firm A&M Capital last week. I’m interested in your perspective of what this might mean. Leidos Health was the commercial healthcare business unit of Leidos, which essentially consisted of MaxIT and Vitaliz that were purchased by SAIC before spinning off into Leidos and Leidos Health.” Verified that the commercial EHR implementation business has been acquired, although I don’t have deal details yet since the announcement isn’t scheduled to come out until next week. The DoD’s Cerner project isn’t included — Leidos runs that project through its federal business unit. The portfolio of A&M Capital Partners includes government health IT contractor CNSI, which it acquired in April 2018. I’ll probably have more to say once I see the announcement. UPDATE: The Leidos PR contact graciously offered to answer my questions ahead of the announcement:
- The affected business unit is Leidos Health, LLC, which does healthcare staff augmentation and EHR implementation and optimization work, basically the former MaxIT Healthcare and Vitalize Consulting Solutions.
- About 850 Leidos employees will transfer to A&M Capital.
- The reason for the sale is, “This transaction emphasizes Leidos’ focus on what it does best – creating and delivering solutions and services that drive improvements in patient care and make managing and delivering healthcare less costly and more effective. Additionally, the sale aligns the commercial EHR staff augmentation services business with a parent company that has a robust growth strategy that provides increased opportunities for employees focused on commercial EHR implementation services.”
- The DoD’s MHS Genesis is not affected. It is operated the federal business unit of Leidos.
- Terms of the sale will not be announced.
From Who Dis: “Re: HIMSS20 keynote speakers. They just announced Chris Christie (former Governor of NJ) and Terry McAuliffe (former Governor of VA) for the Friday morning session. Does that change your mind about attending?” It confirms the wisdom of my decision to skip the last day, as I always do. I doubt that even the few folks who stick around all week will be anxious to hear more political yammering. I’ll spend that time waking up at home or at the beach (maybe Chris Christie will join me). I’m more interested in who gets the primetime agenda slots, which usually ends up being some minor celebrity (Dana Carvey comes to mind as one of the worst, with Dennis Quaid a distant second) or big-company executives. My wild guesses for the good spots: someone from “Shark Tank” (Robert and Mr. Wonderful spoke at HIMSS17), Barack Obama, Malcolm Gladwell, Nicholas Webb, David Feinberg or Toby Cosgrove from Google, Amy Abernethy from the FDA, Sean Parker, Jay Leno, Bill Gates, or someone from Walmart or Amazon. My off-the-wall suggestions, who you can Google if you don’t know them: Jen Gunter, MD; Ken Jeong, MD; Jonathan Bush; Devi Shetty, MBBS; Elizabeth Holmes (or John Carreyrou in her probable absence); Atul Gawande, MD (since he bailed out this year); Stephen Bergman, MD, PhD (aka Samuel Shem); and Neil Pappalardo. I would have said Martin Shkreli, but he’s still in prison, although maybe he can tele-keynote.
Webinars
September 19 (Thursday) 1:00 ET. “ICD-10-CM 2020 Code Updates.” Sponsor: Intelligent Medical Objects. Presenters: June Bronnert, MSHI, RHIA, director of terminology mapping, IMO; Theresa Rihanek, MHA, RHIA, classification and intervention mapping lead, IMO; and Julie Glasgow, MD, senior clinical terminologist, IMO. The 2020 regulatory release is right around the corner. Join IMO’s top coding professionals and thought leaders as they discuss new, revised, and deleted codes; highlight revisions to ICD-10-CM index and tabular; discuss changes within Official Coding Guidelines; share potential impacts of the code set update; and review ICD-10-CM modifier changes.
September 26 (Thursday) 2:00 ET. “Patient Education Data: A Key Ingredient for Improving Quality and Patient Experience.” Sponsor: Healthwise. Presenters: Victoria L. Maisonneuve, MSN, RN, director of the Nursing Center for Excellence and Magnet program, Parkview Health; Marta Sylvia, MPH, senior manager of quality improvement and outcomes research, Healthwise. Healthcare data is everywhere! It’s scattered across various systems and in countless formats, making it difficult to collect and glean actionable information. Knowing where to start depends on what your organization wants to accomplish. By focusing on your patient education data, you can drive quality improvement across your organization. Vicki Maisonneuve will share how her team analyzes data around the use of patient education. By combining different data sets, she can easily identify trends, gaps, and opportunities to improve quality and patient experience across Parkview Health.
October 2 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Conversational AI in Healthcare: What About ROI?” Sponsors: Orbita, Cognizant. Presenters: Kristi Ebong, SVP of strategy and GM of healthcare providers, Orbita; Matthew Smith, AVP and conversational AI practice leader, Cognizant. Conversational AI holds great promise to drive new opportunities for engaging consumers and customers across all industries. In healthcare, the stakes are high, especially as organizations explore opportunities to leverage this new digital channel to improve care while also reducing costs. The presenter experts offer a thought-provoking discussion around conversational AI’s timeline in healthcare, the factors that organizations should consider when thinking about virtual assistants through chatbots or voice, and the blind spots to avoid in investing in those technologies.
Previous webinars are on our YouTube channel. Contact Lorre to present your own.
Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock
The New York Times confirms that two big financial backers of Doctor Patient Unity – which has spent $28 million to squash proposed legislation that would eliminate surprise medical billing – are the private equity-owned physician staffing and practice operators TeamHealth and Envision Healthcare, which make fortunes sending out-of-network bills. Just in case you’ve forgotten that healthcare is a big business, Blackstone Group bought Team Health for $6.1 billion in 2016 and KKR took over Envision Healthcare in 2018 for $9.9 billion. DPU warns that hospital will close and doctor shortages will arise if the government requires companies to accept the median in-network payment instead of whatever inflated amounts they dream up. They advocate for independent dispute resolution instead, which is already the standard in New York.
Toronto-based specialty practice EHR, PM, PACS, and AI chat bot vendor OrbCare is reportedly nearing insolvency just six months after announcing a $2 million seed round. The company’s problems came to light when one of the investment firm’s partners, who had been announced as OrbCare’s new COO, found that its monthly revenue was half of what it had reported. The founder and CEO gave a variety of excuses – he was dealing with family matters, the company’s debt was incurred after the funding round, revenue was reported for clients who ultimately never signed up, he intentionally did not share a re-filed financial report with investors, and he never intended to be CEO in the first place. The investment firm provided a $1.2 million loan and has offered another $1.2 million to buy the company in a stalking horse bid. I don’t know how good its products are, but it sure has a bunch of them, so perhaps there’s intellectual property in play.
People
Cerner hires Darrell Johnson (Medtronic) to the newly created position of chief marketing officer.
Pivot Point Consulting promotes Keith Olenik to VP of revenue cycle services.
Vince Vitali (Vitali & Associates) joins NextGate as VP of strategy and business development.
Ricci Mulligan (Leidos Health) joins Grant Thornton’s healthcare practice as director. She previously held leadership roles the VA’s OIT department and retired from US Army Intelligence after 21 years.
Government and Politics
A woman who bought her family short-term health insurance (aka a “junk plan”) gets a $244,000 hospital bill after her husband’s emergency bypass surgery. Her plan didn’t cover pre-existing conditions and limits hospital payments, so it covered only $4,000. She says “negative stories” had kept her from buying real insurance through Healthcare.gov, which she found afterward would have cost her less than the junk plan’s $400 per month premium. The real beneficiary was publicly traded insurance broker Health Insurance Innovations (HIIQ), whose share price tripled from 2016 to 2018 as its annual revenue grew to $350 million, valuing the founder’s stake at $150 million at its peak and earning its CEO $14 million since 2016. A White House executive order expanded the scope of short-term plans, resulting in a six-fold increase in policies since the end of 2018 to 600,000. Big insurers have jumped on board since they aren’t required to spend 80% of premiums on claims like they are for ACA-compliant plans, and in fact are averaging just 39%, making the plans highly profitable with minimal regulation. Meanwhile, HIIQ just paid $70 million to acquire a company that sells insurance via TV ads to senior citizens, so it sees promise in the “low-hanging fruit in the over-65 space.”
Privacy and Security
A ProPublica investigation identifies 187 Internet-accessible, unsecured servers that hold the medical information of 5 million Americans. Many of those records belong to mobile X-ray provider MobilexUSA – whose parent company Trident USA is operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy – but the company says it has beefed up security after being notified of the exposure by ProPublica. DICOM overseer Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance says that secure connection capability was added to the standard in 1999 and any lack of security is the responsibility of the operator, but adds that some of the insecure systems don’t contain live patient information and instead are being used for product development and testing.
Other
Cardiac surgeon and India hospital operator CEO Devi Shetty, MBBS makes some fascinating points in an interview:
- Doctors will continue to be the most important people in a hospital, but they will need to be backed by skilled executives who know how to run the business.
- The MBBS (MD) degree has lost its relevance because specialists make the broadest impact. He says lack of safe surgery kills 70 million people in India each year and 90% of India’s healthcare problems could be solved with emergency C-sections, laparotomy for burst appendix, and compound fracture repair.
- Analytics holds great promise in healthcare, but 95% of hospitals in India don’t use EHRs, which is why his Narayana Health built its own after finding commercial products lacking.
- Shetty’s hospitals perform 15% of all heart surgeries that are done in India and the company is using the huge volume of data that results to predict outcomes.
- He does ICU rounds using Microsoft Kaizala encrypted mobile messaging and will soon have access to cardiac monitor live streaming.
- Shetty says that the keyboard is the biggest roadblock in capturing and using information. He predicts that voice-powered phone apps will overcome loneliness in elderly people by providing alarms, reminders, physiologic monitoring, and wellness checks.
- He scoffs at the idea that AI will replace radiologists, saying that as with airline pilots, radiologists who use AI will replace those who don’t.
- Shetty predicts that India will “become the first country in the world to disassociate healthcare from affluence,” unlike every other country where the cost of healthcare rose with incomes.
A husband and wife are charged in federal court with stealing trade secrets from Nationwide Children’s Hospital (OH), where they worked as exosome researchers. They are charged with selling the results of their research through companies they formed in the US and China. They also filed four patents in China. The indictment calls for the couple to forfeit $876,000 in cash, $450,000 in stock payments, and their shares in two biotech companies. The FBI is also investigating possible ties to the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese government-sponsored “Thousand Talents Program” that encourages its citizens who work abroad to return to China with their newfound knowledge. The couple’s attorney scoffed at most reporter questions with the response, “Research while Asian.”
Sponsor Updates
- Audacious Inquiry prepares blessing bags for the Manna House in Baltimore.
- AdvancedMD will exhibit at WebPT’s Ascend Conference September 19-21 in Minneapolis.
- Arcadia Healthcare Solutions will exhibit and present at the NAACOS 2019 Fall Conference September 25-27 in Washington, DC.
- Bluetree and Dimensional Insight will present at IntegraTe HIMSS South Florida September 24 in Davie, FL.
- CarePort Health will exhibit at ACMA Maryland September 21 in Hunt Valley, MD.
- Clinical Architecture will exhibit at the InterSystems Global Summit September 22-25 in Boston.
- Redox joins the Allscripts Developer Program and earns its first global integration engine certification.
- CompuGroup Medical will exhibit at the AZ MGMA Conference September 24-25 in Chandler.
- Rob Gallo joins The Chartis Group’s informatics and technology practice as a principal.
- CoverMyMeds will exhibit at the PCMA Annual Meeting September 23-25 in Scottsdale, AZ.
- Cumberland Consulting Group will lead sessions at the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program Summit September 23-25 in Chicago.
- Diameter Health will host its 2019 Customer Forum October 2-4 in Dedham, MA.
Blog Posts
- Make sure patients keep their appointments (AdvancedMD)
- Patrick Conway led the industry in healthcare transformation at CMS. At Blue Cross NC, he’s not stopping. (Advisory Board)
- NAACOS Can’t-Miss Discussion: Contracting with Commercial Payers (Arcadia Healthcare Solutions)
- Going Mobile: Creating Experiences that Matter with the Avaya Mobile Experience (Avaya)
- 50 Best HIPAA-Compliant Cloud Storage Solutions, Part 2 (Datica)
- IT Strategy – Planning for 2022 and Beyond (Optimum Healthcare IT)
- Helping You Navigate CMS’s Proposed Rule for 2020 (ChartLogic)
- Burnout is an Occupational Hazard, Here’s How to Mitigate It (Collective Medical)
- A Pillar of Stability in Historic Franklinton for 114 Years (CoverMyMeds)
- Patient Access – Staffing (Culbert Healthcare Solutions)
- Dimensional Insight Sponsoring St. Jude Walk/Run Boston (Dimensional Insight)
- Tips for a Smooth Health Information Technology (HIT) Hiring Process (Divurgent)
Contacts
Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
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Re: HIMSS20 keynote speakers
Another suggestion might be Dr. Sanjay Gupta
Re: My Two Cents
In a “Cool Story” moment – I met Dr. Sanjay Gupta in 2016 in San Diego at Fortune’s first ever Brainstorm Health conference. We both went to the same university and are also die-hard Cubs Fans. We watched Game 7 in the hotel bar together and frankly, he was one of the nicest people I have met in a long time. He shook hands with everyone, took pictures and just really was a joy to be around.
Best one I ever heard (and I attended over 30) was Scott Adams (Dilbert).
Bring him back!