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EarlySense recently announced a major new research venture with market research firm Parks Associates, which led to the development of a comprehensive new whitepaper titled, Health at Home: New Era of Healthcare. The whitepaper examines the state of the virtual care market, with particular emphasis on the factors driving the shift from facility-centric care to healthcare at home. As author of the whitepaper, Jennifer Kent joined Vital Insights to talk about the confluence of factors driving the expansion of healthcare into the home.
As the founder of EarlySense, our guest for this episode of Vital Insights, Avner Halperin, has a deep history in the pursuit of technology use in the healthcare space to address gaps in care. He is the current CEO of EyeControl, a company established by individuals who share personal connections to loved ones with locked-in conditions. The communication barriers they experience initialized product development, and are also used with ventilated patients, including those in COVID-19 isolation. Join us as we explore how technology, AI and remote patient monitoring can revolutionize the way we connect in care for one another.
As Chief Operating Officer of EarlySense, Mike has been pivotal in the company's move to take proven technology solutions and create opportunities in the acute and virtual care spaces. His professional passion for the marrying of technology and healthcare has helped the company improve the health of individuals, and the ability for healthcare providers to better manage their population of patients. On this episode of Vital InSights, we delve into how more proactive healthcare solutions can take the biggest piece of cost out of the equation by moving care further upstream. In other words, catch issues that represent patient deterioration before they can exacerbate. Mike Tiffany is Chief Operating Officer of EarlySense. He is a dynamic and driven Operations Executive, with extensive industry expertise in building and scaling healthcare IT client operations organizations. He is a facilitator and builder of world-class customer success focused operations teams, with specialty in leading organizations from start-up through scaled growth stages. He has proven relationship management skills, building key executive partnerships with strategic clients and delivering business critical results for the client base.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's Fast Take is a perspective from Terry Duesterhoeft, Chief Product Officer at EarlySense, on why sleep presents an interesting and innovative opportunity when used as a clinical marker.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's Fast Take is a perspective from Matt Johnson, Chief Executive Officer at EarlySense, on how we take the next step in virtual care in the wake of COVID-19.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's Fast Take is a perspective from Matt Johnson, Chief Executive Officer at EarlySense, on the top three phenomena impeding the success of virtual care today.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's Fast Take is a perspective from Matt Johnson, Chief Executive Officer at EarlySense, on why patient compliance is a make-or-break factor for virtual care.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's Fast Take is a perspective from Matt Johnson, Chief Executive Officer at EarlySense, on how the Hospital at Home movement will be a lasting one in the world of virtual care.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's episode features Terry discussing the issue of health data standardization, and why it is critical we prioritize that goal if we wish to make strides towards a truly efficient and effective health system.
The Vital Insights podcast crew regularly sits down with internal experts at EarlySense for what we call “Fast Takes” – quick conversations with people who are in the know. From clinical architects to technology engineers to industry analysts – they have their finger on the pulse of everything that's happening at the very busy intersection of healthcare and technology. Today's Fast Take is a perspective from Terry Duesterhoeft, Chief Product Officer at EarlySense, on why gold standards are critical in the evaluation of monitoring devices.
Avener Halperin is a veteran high tech executive. He has served in several senior management positions including CEO of Emmunet, VP Marketing at Radcom (NASDAQ: RDCM), and VP of Business Development at Lenslet. He also led the R&D team at Eldat Communications (acquired by Pricer) and was the Department Head of an R&D Unit in the IDF Intelligence Corps where he won the Intelligence Innovation Award. He was part of EarlySense’s founding team in 2004 and served as CEO of the company until 2019. EarlySense developed breakthrough medical sensing and AI platform, that saves tens of thousands of lives every year. Originally intended to help overcome the Asthma of the co-founders' kids, EarlySense has already been used to improve the care of patients, including COVID-19 patients. In this podcast, Avner shares the exciting story of inventing and continuously pivoting a digital health startup until success is found. He also shares some takeaways on diversity, sustainability, and the future of medical AI. We were thrilled to collaborate with our friends at the MIT Enterprise Forum Israel to bring this conversation with Avner to you, moderated by Ayla Matalon. As a member of the Israeli Advisory Board of the MIT Enterprise Forum, Avner provides a fresh perspective on innovation and entrepreneurship in Israel.
Avener Halperin is a veteran high tech executive. He has served in several senior management positions including CEO of Emmunet, VP Marketing at Radcom (NASDAQ: RDCM), and VP of Business Development at Lenslet. He also led the R&D team at Eldat Communications (acquired by Pricer) and was the Department Head of an R&D Unit in the IDF Intelligence Corps where he won the Intelligence Innovation Award. He was part of EarlySense's founding team in 2004 and served as CEO of the company until 2019. EarlySense developed breakthrough medical sensing and AI platform, that saves tens of thousands of lives every year. Originally intended to help overcome the Asthma of the co-founders' kids, EarlySense has already been used to improve the care of patients, including COVID-19 patients. In this podcast, Avner shares the exciting story of inventing and continuously pivoting a digital health startup until success is found. He also shares some takeaways on diversity, sustainability, and the future of medical AI. We were thrilled to collaborate with our friends at the MIT Enterprise Forum Israel to bring this conversation with Avner to you, moderated by Ayla Matalon. As a member of the Israeli Advisory Board of the MIT Enterprise Forum, Avner provides a fresh perspective on innovation and entrepreneurship in Israel.
How is medical technology like contact-free patient monitoring changing the way that hospitals approach patient care and staff management, and how are those trends likely to continue evolving in the years to come? That was the topic of a recent conversation between Elaine Bridge — a seasoned clinician and nurse leader who’s pioneered the adoption of medical tech at Massachusetts’ Newton-Wellesley Hospital, among other achievements — and Tim O’Malley, President and Chief Growth Officer at EarlySense, Inc.
Rapid response emergency systems have become a critical tool in the fight to prevent patient fatalities in hospitals via the early detection and management of cardiac events and other critical events. But although the importance of rapid response is now widely acknowledged throughout the global medical community, this wasn’t always the case. In this podcast from EarlySense, Dr. Michael DeVita and Dr. Ken Hillman, two pioneers in the development of rapid response systems (RRS), discuss the revelations that led to their individual efforts to develop RRS, and the challenges they faced implementing rapid response in hospitals that were less than receptive to their calls for change.
Healthcare Weekly: At the Forefront of Healthcare Innovation
Learn more about EarlySense by visiting https://www.earlysense.com/
Michael DeVita, former president of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare and Chief Medical Officer of EarlySense, joins Dan Raemer & Janice Palaganas of the Center for Medical Simulation on their podcast, DJ Simulationistas, to talk about his development of the "rapid response" team with the goal of preventing cardiac arrest rather than just responding to it, as well as surprising results from virtual gaming that can improve code response performance.
The Center for Medical Simulation Presents: DJ Simulationistas... 'Sup?
"Distress is in the Eye of the Beholder": Michael DeVita, former president of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare and Chief Medical Officer of EarlySense, joins Dan & Janice to talk about his development of the "rapid response" team with the goal of preventing cardiac arrest rather than just responding to it, as well as surprising results from virtual gaming that can improve code response performance. Enjoy!
In episode #15 I sit with Avner Halperin, CEO of EarlySense a medtech company that is at the forefront of Digital health. EarlySense developed a software and sensor that remotely monitors patients’ sleep and movement when placed under a mattress. Crazy! I know as it's one of the more effective non-invasive patient-monitoring systems, in fact it saved over 3,000 lives in 2018 and is now in over 1M beds. So how did Avner build EarlySense to be one of the largest MedTech companies out of Israel? Listen to find out, but in the meantime here things you will learn in this episode. 1. What proverbial wall did EarlySense hit? How did they overcome it before it killed them? 2. What challenge did EarlySense overcome w/ first product? 3. Diversity within the company as they have 13 languages spoken in the office and employees ages range from 17-77. 4. Market Research!! Critical to their sucess- EarlySense spent months in hospitals listening to the needs of users-i.e. medical professionals 5. Leveraged experts in field to prove value and generate proof points. 6. How did EarlySense penetrate & sell to US Hopitals? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
En este episodio: Ledger, ClassPass, Tidelift, EarlySense, y Money Tree Este episodio esta disponible en ingles. Sigue a @thejcad
In this episode of startup news: Ledger releases Nano X ClassPass acquires GuavaPass Tidelift and EarlySense raise money You can hear this podcast in spanish too. Follow @thejcad.
In part one of a two part episode on sepsis, Dr. Michael DeVita, a critical care physician and Chief Medical Officer of EarlySense, will be joined by Sue and Jay Stull, (Team Sue) sepsis advocates, and Thomas Heymann, President and Executive Director of the Sepsis Alliance. Sue is a quad amputee as a result of an undiagnosed bacterial infection. Thomas has been part of Sepsis Alliance since 2007, serving as a consultant, board member, and now as President and Executive Director. In part of this two part episode, Jay and Sue share their story, Jay and Thomas share statistics surrounding sepsis, Dr. DeVita dives deeper into what sepsis is, and the group discusses what needs to be done in the future.
In the second episode of Clinical Conversations in Continuous Monitoring, Dr. Michael DeVita, a critical care physician and Chief Medical Officer of EarlySense, is joined by Dr. Frank Overdyk, an anesthesiologist affiliated with multiple hospitals in South Carolina and sits on the board of advisors for the Physcian-Patient Alliance for Health & Safety, discuss Failure to Rescue and why continuous monitoring has not yet become a standard of care.
In the first episode of a new series, Dr. Michael DeVita, Chief Medical Officer of EarlySense, is joined by Ms. Helen Haskell, founder of Mothers Against Medical Error, for a one-on-one conversation about the the importance of continuous monitoring. In their wide-ranging discussion, Dr. DeVita and Ms. Haskell talk about what brought them into their current roles as continuous monitoring advocates, how far they think the movement has progressed, failure to recognize patient deterioration, and the growing role of continuous monitoring within the organization of medicine.