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In this special HIMSS25 recap episode of The Dish on Health IT, host Tony Schueth, CEO of Point-of-Care Partners (POCP), is joined by co-hosts Brian Bamberger, POCP's Life Sciences Lead, and Vanessa Candelora, Senior Consultant and Program Manager of the HL7 Gravity Project. Together, they break down the biggest themes from the conference, covering interoperability, artificial intelligence (AI), FHIR adoption, and the growing focus on improving data quality in healthcare innovation.HIMSS25 once again proved to be a crucial gathering of healthcare leaders, vendors, and policymakers, drawing nearly 28,000 attendees. Vanessa notes the continued focus on interoperability and trust, with a clear divide between experienced stakeholders refining their strategies and newcomers trying to grasp the fundamentals of FHIR. Brian, a HIMSS veteran, points out that first-time attendees often struggle with the complexity of both the conference itself and the discussions around health IT's latest advancements, particularly AI and its real-world applications.To add perspectives from the conference floor, Tony introduces a series of interviews with HIMSS25 attendees and industry leaders, including Anna Taylor, Associate Vice President, Population Health and Value-Based Care of MultiCare, Erin Weber, Chief Policy & Research Officer, CAQH, Mariann Yeager, CEO, The Sequoia Project, Matthew Holt, Founder/Writer of The Health Care Blog, and Lynne Nowak, Chief Data and Analytics Officer. Each interview provides insights into the real-world implementation of interoperability and FHIR, the evolving use of AI, and how data privacy and governance are shaping health IT strategy.FHIR adoption was one of the topics covered in the interviews. Some, like Mariann Yeager and Erin Weber, expressed optimism about FHIR's expanding role in clinical data exchange, while others, such as Anna Taylor, highlighted persistent scalability challenges and limited adoption for administrative functions like prior authorization. Matthew Holt offered a broader view on data exchange, arguing that while data mobility has improved, the real challenge is how organizations actually use and integrate that information. Vanessa underscores that while FHIR is gaining traction globally, large-scale implementation remains a work in progress. The panel agrees that translating theoretical frameworks into real-world adoption is the next crucial step.AI was another dominant topic, with a mix of enthusiasm and skepticism surrounding its potential. The HIMSS interviewees discuss AI's growing role in streamlining administrative workflows, summarizing patient records, and enabling ambient listening for clinical documentation. However, as Brian bluntly puts it, the “magic” of AI is still far from reality—many tools promise seamless EHR integration but lack the ability to write back into clinical systems, requiring manual intervention. Lynne Nowak and others emphasized that AI's effectiveness is directly tied to data quality—bad inputs will only lead to bad outputs. The consensus? AI has real potential to enhance workflows but cannot replace clinicians, and health IT leaders must focus on governance, usability, and ensuring AI supports, rather than replaces, human decision-making.As the conversation wraps up, Vanessa highlights the critical role of policy and strategic innovation in shaping the next wave of health IT progress. With new regulatory shifts and uncertainty around TEFCA, organizations must stay agile while ensuring that patient privacy, data integrity, and consent management remain top priorities. Brian brings the discussion back to life sciences, stressing the importance of leveraging patient insights and real-world data to drive treatment adherence and improve outcomes.HIMSS25 reinforced that while FHIR, AI, and interoperability remain hot topics, the industry is now at a critical inflection point—shifting from theory to execution. Organizations must filter out hype, focus on data quality, and build scalable solutions that improve both clinical and administrative functions.For those who couldn't attend HIMSS25 or want a deeper dive into what's next for health IT, this episode provides a comprehensive breakdown of the major takeaways. Subscribe to The Dish on Health IT on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform. The podcast is also available on HealthcareNOW Radio. Full video versions are also available on POCP's YouTube channel. As always, health IT is a dish best served hot.
How Tech Enables Better Consumer Experiences We welcome the Cured Dream Team! Ashmer Aslam and Brooke Vogelsmeier discuss bringing care full circle while ensuring that providers and patients are protected. It's an intriguing time as new tech platforms are opening doors to new types of digital consumer health experiences, and Ashmer and Brooke help us explore some of the possibilities. All that, plus the Flava of the Week about GNC's new healthcare subscription service. As the list of nontraditional retail primary care subscriptions continues to grow, how will these new services affect not only consumers' choices, but their expectations? Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
On HealthunaBASHEd our guest is health, life sciences, tech futurist, global thought leader, author, and popular speaker John Nosta, President, NOSTALAB. Making an encore appearance on Health Unabashed, John weighs in on the explosion of ChatGPT applications in the health, wellness and life sciences space. We unbundle the DNA of innovation, what's real and the 'where's the beef' fluff, then explore the upside of AI writ large and the potential for ChatGPT to be a game changer that "none of us saw coming". Tune in! Just say Alexa, "play HealthcareNOW Radio" weekdays at 10:30 am, 6:30 pm, & 2:30 am Eastern / 7:30 am, 3:30 pm, & 11:30 pm Pacific ==##==
On today's episode of Health UnaBASHEd, our guest is Bruno Larvol (FOAM) Founder & CEO at LARVOL, a VR-first, remote-always organization providing SaaS solutions to 15 Fortune 500 healthcare and pharmaceutical companies. Since 2004, LARVOL has accelerated decision-making via real-time, customized intelligence and software solutions with data-driven analytics to the most prominent pharmaceutical, biotech, and healthcare companies in the world. Bruno is a uniquely insightful executive and entrepreneur walking the talk of iterative, distributed team based learning and both advocate and innovator for real world applications in the metaverse. Follow Bruno's work at LARVOL on twitter via @Larvol and @RXXO, respectively and on the web via www.larvol.com Learn more about Health Unabashed on the program page at HealthcareNOWRadio.com. We air weekdays at 10:30 am, 6:30 pm, & 2:30 am Eastern or 7:30 am, 3:30 pm, & 11:30 pm Pacific. ==##==
On today's episode of PopHealth Week on HealthcareNOW Radio, our guests are Thomas E. Dobbs, MD, Dean of the John D. Bower School of Population Health, at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and Melissa R. Stephens, MD, Associate Dean of GME and Population Health and Professor of Clinical Sciences at the William Carey University College of Osteopathic Medicine. We discuss the intersection of population health with public health and the potential for systemic relief afforded by better alignement of public health 'infrastructure' with health system, health plan or risk bearing medical groups or physician networks as sponors of population health initiatives. We also address the value add of the John D, Bower School of Population Health for clinicians who are expanding their interest in population level outcomes. In addition to his role as Dean, Dr. Dobbs serves as the executive director of the Myrlie Evers-Williams Institute for the Elimination of Health Disparities. He has a clinical position within the Division of Infectious Disease, working specifically in the fields of HIV and sexually transmitted infections with a focus on the intersection of disease and the social determinants of health. Dr. Dobbs has a long career working at the crossroads of clinical medicine and public health as a physician, researcher and public health leader. He has held numerous leadership roles within the Mississippi State Department of Health including State Epidemiologist and State Health Officer (a role through which he directed the state's response to the COVID pandemic). As State Health Officer, Dr. Dobbs focused the agency on addressing the numerous health inequities that plague the state. Additionally, he has worked in leadership roles in the fight against diseases such as HIV and tuberculosis. ==##==
PopHealth Week on HealthcareNOW Radio features Thomas E. Dobbs, MD, Dean of the John D. Bower School of Population Health, at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and Melissa R. Stephens, MD, Associate Dean of GME and Population Health and Professor of Clinical Sciences at the William Carey University College of Osteopathic Medicine. We discuss the intersection of population health with public health and the potential for systemic relief afforded by better alignement of public health 'infrastructure' with health system, health plan or risk bearing medical groups or physician networks as sponors of population health initiatives. We also address the value add of the John D, Bower School of Population Health for clinicians who are expanding their interest in population level outcomes. In addition to his role as Dean, Dr. Dobbs serves as the executive director of the Myrlie Evers-Williams Institute for the Elimination of Health Disparities. He has a clinical position within the Division of Infectious Disease, working specifically in the fields of HIV and sexually transmitted infections with a focus on the intersection of disease and the social determinants of health. Dr. Dobbs has a long career working at the crossroads of clinical medicine and public health as a physician, researcher and public health leader. He has held numerous leadership roles within the Mississippi State Department of Health including State Epidemiologist and State Health Officer (a role through which he directed the state's response to the COVID pandemic). As State Health Officer, Dr. Dobbs focused the agency on addressing the numerous health inequities that plague the state. Additionally, he has worked in leadership roles in the fight against diseases such as HIV and tuberculosis.
Pooja Babbrah, Point-of-Care Partners Payer & PBM Lead kicked off the episode by acknowledging guest, Dr. Steven Lane, Chief Medical Officer with Health Gorilla and Point-of-Care Partners co-host, Jocelyn Keegan , Payer/Practice Lead and HL7 Da Vinci Project Program Manager. Pooja then outlined the discussion for this episode. The hosts talked with Dr. Lane about: Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA)Information blocking…or rather information sharing, Dr. Lane's transition from being part of a large health system to joining the health IT company, Health Gorilla and the different perspectives on innovation and change that come with operating in these quite different organizations. The cycle of innovation and the role of policy. Before jumping into the discussion both Jocelyn and Dr. Lane introduced themselves and explained that over the years they have worked with each other several times through the HL7 FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) Accelerators with Dr. Lane participating in the Da Vinci Project and Jocelyn serving as the program manager of Da Vinci. Today's hosts, Pooja, Jocelyn and the guest are all interoperability champions and share a passion for leveraging technology to improve healthcare. This episode's guest, Dr. Steven Lane, Chief Medical Officer of Health Gorilla, member of the Health Information Technology Advisory Committee (HITAC) and longtime advocate for interoperability identifies as being a clinician first and that role brought him into the health IT space. Dr. Lane shared that he started using an EHR (Electronic Health Record) back in 1989. Worked on EHR implementation during the 1990's and helped launch one of the first patient portals connected to an EHR back in 2001. He explained that he's had more of an opportunity to engage in health IT throughout his career than most primary care physicians. He explained that the importance of interoperability started to be a real focus starting in 2008 and he had the opportunity to work with HIEs (Health Information Exchanges) and then was invited to take part in an ONC (Office of the National Coordinator) taskforce and just continued to say yes to any the opportunities that have come his way so he could contribute to progressing interoperability. He continued to say that in his view if we're going to fix healthcare, we need to first focus on improving the health of our population. Second, improve the value of the healthcare being provided (reduced costs with optimal outcomes). Third, improve the overall experience of obtaining and delivering healthcare for the patients and for the providers, acknowledging that physician burnout is a real issue. Last, improving health equity. Pooja asked Dr. Lane to share a little more about the mission & vision of Health Gorilla to familiarize the audience.Dr. Lane explained that Health Gorilla started initially by addressing physician burden around lab orders and results. From there, they built a platform and started aggregating data they were exchanging and created a private HIE (Health Information Exchanges). They build a robust record service, master patient index, and then aggregate, normalize and de-dupe the records. The focus really being on data quality and utility. He compared the work to some of the regional HIEs, but Health Gorilla's audience is much broader. Health Gorilla made early connections with CommonWell, eHealth Exchange, Carequality framework – Epic Care Everywhere, with Direct messaging through 3rd party health information service providers (HISPs)Dr. Lane shared that what he found special about Health Gorilla is the commitment to innovation and bringing in more data types like social determinants of health or data from wearables. Pooja then asked Dr. Lane to share his view of TEFCA and why Health Gorilla decided to apply to become QHIN (Qualified Health Information Networks)?Dr. Lane described the history of TEFCA, the initial idea for it being included in the 21st Century Cures legislation. He recalled that while interoperability had been a major focus of policymakers and the industry, providers and other stakeholders were still voicing frustration that they still couldn't access the data they needed. The idea of TEFCA was for it to be an onramp to support all kinds of interoperability, data exchange and use cases. He expressed that he has had to learn patience as things in health IT never move as quickly as one might want. Dr. Lane went on to convey that early on after the announcement of TEFCA, Health Gorilla came out with a public commitment to apply to be a QHIN and be part of a diverse community of regional and national private and not-for-profit entities. He continued that becoming a QHIN for a private company is a big deal. They are inviting government oversight and commit to robust governance, state-of-the-art privacy, security and compliance practices. Health Gorilla is committed to supporting a broad range of cases and user communities like:Health Data UtilityPublic HealthCommunity based social servicesPayer-providerIndividual Access ServiceQHINs (Qualified Health Information Networks) will pursue multiple architectural approaches. Health Gorilla will be a data aggregator and platform. Health Gorilla will leverage TEFCA exchange as they do current HIN (health information networks) exchange to continue to build their secure cloud-based repository of health data with the goal to become the nation's largest and most secure repository of high quality, high utility health data.Dr. Lane likened his vision of the role of a QHIN to that of a dance studio operator. He went on to explain that a dance studio operator creates a safe supportive space for people to come to dance. Different types of people - individuals or groups. Different types of dances – flamenco, ballet, private party. Everyone is invited to creatively use the space within specified constraints to ensure safety and privacy. Pooja followed up to clarify whether Dr. Lane likened becoming a QHIN as more opportunity for innovation. Dr. Lane said that absolutely it does. He explained that TEFCA is supplying a framework or single on-ramp and allows for more innovation in various use cases from treatment to payment and operations to public health. Pooja asked Dr. Lane to talk about TEFCA and FHIR. She explained that there has been some feedback in the industry voicing concern that even with the TEFCA FHIR roadmap there isn't enough alignment between TEFCA and the FHIR community. Dr. Lane responded that many were disappointed that when TEFCA was originally announced there was no mention of FHIR at all but since then the TEFCA FHIR Roadmap was published. Some may not be satisfied with the current roadmap but it's a good step in the right direction.Related to the TEFCA FHIR Implementation guide, Dr. Lane summarized some of the responses explaining that there were 16 commenters – Provider organizations, EHR and other HIT (Health Information Technology) vendors, public health departments, HL7, DirectTrust, HISPs, and othersSome commenters called out the challenges of scale especially around registering and managing endpoints. Others pointed out the need to leverage and align with other work in the FHIR community. Others still pointed out the need to clarify the priority between developing to IHE (Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise) document vs. FHIR exchange for specific use cases.Dr. Lane went on to point out that there has been concerns about “if we build it will they come” but the number of QHIN applicants and the engagement seen with the comments submitted are a great sign that people are engaged with TEFCA.Pooja asked Jocelyn to chime in and share what she is hearing from the FHIR Accelerator community related to TEFCA and FHIR? Jocelyn agreed with Dr. Lane about seeing the level of engagement being a great sign. She added that there is starting to be a little bit of a cultural shift related to thinking about data outside of clinical data and how to use data to support billing, operations and more and how to use FHIR to do some of those things. Jocelyn explained that we're starting to see a lot more traction. After attending the Carequality, Sequoia and eHealth Exchange meetings in DC in December and hearing the cacophony of voices talking about how to make TEFCA a reality and leverage FHIR was amazing. From a community perspective, Jocelyn explained that she is hearing a lot of positive feedback after seeing more real alignment happening with TEFCA and the FHIR community and there seems to be a feeling there is more of an openness akin to what happens in the standards development communities which was a needed next step. Jocelyn went on to say that in the near future the industry will need the volunteers to help pilot some of this work and prove we can move beyond point to point and settle the trust issue through these networks. What will be critical is technology meeting us where we are and solving real business challenges. Ultimately, while documents will continue to be part of certain transactions we really have to strive to get to codified data to get to the level of automation the industry needs. Dr. Lane seconded the notion of piloting now and not waiting until policy deadlines are looming. This is the time test, pilot and work out the bugs. Pooja remarked that it will be interesting to see how Sequoia as the Recognized Coordinating Entity (RCE) of TEFCA decides to engage more closely or not with the Accelerators, specifically FHIR at Scale Taskforce. Then Pooja asked Dr. Lane to discuss the huge transition from working for Sutter health, a huge health system to working with a health IT company. Pooja asked him to explain the different approaches to innovation he's noticed. Dr. Lane acknowledged that it is a big challenge to change the course of the huge ship that is healthcare. Things have evolved over the last 100 years or so resulting in the way healthcare is delivered today and it can be hard to change. Many providers may be resistant to change but then you have big disrupters like telehealth and other innovations that force that change. Dr. Lane explained that he has personally been deeply passionate about health IT and being innovative but for many years, he was the only provider in the room for years. That's starting to shift but if the industry wants to see more engagement and willingness to change by providers, there needs to be the right incentives. The most efficient way to innovate is to have all parties at the table with representation to make sure the work being done is solving the right problems. Dr. Lane expressed that he's been at this for 20-30 years and he has recognized the improvement in the process for standards development, policy changes and innovation with people thinking about how we can do this in a coordinated and repeatable way to gain efficiencies. From a policy perspective, Dr. Lane explained, there will always be a need for carrots and sticks. Pooja then asked Jocelyn to share her perspective on the health systems that are members of Da Vinci and whether there are common attributes/factors that lead some systems to be more open to engaging with standards development and FHIR adoption?Jocelyn shared that before she jumps in she wants to point out that CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) has done a lot over the last decade to move the policy levers shifting the industry from a pay for service to a value-based care. This shift will require real-time interaction from a 60-90-day lag in information in provider systems. Health systems likely to be at the standards development table have recognized this shift to real-time exchange and own and master their own data. Jocelyn explained that one of the big attributes she's seen in health systems who are more engaged in standards development are those that area a little further along in the value-based care journey and have strong partner relationships. A second attribute is having a willingness to go first and help prod their partners to move a little faster. Jocelyn went on to say that it isn't just the big health systems that can engage, APIs will help level the playing field and enable smaller systems to operate more efficiently. She went on to say that sometimes all it takes is an individual with a passion like Dr. Lane to volunteer, come to the table and be willing to speak up and share the challenges they are facing during use case development. Standards development isn't just for big health systems to participate and represent providers, it isn't just for developers and implementers. For valuable work to be done the standards development process needs to understand the real-world problems that need to be solved. There is space for providers, pharmacists, grad students, really anyone in the ecosystem. Pooja made the point that this discussion is really about innovation, there is a role for and intersection of policy and standards development and the importance of stakeholder engagement and participation in these areas. She asked Dr. Lane to share his view of the policy role in innovation. Dr. Lane responded by saying that Jocelyn had it right when she talked about the importance of having different perspectives represented, especially when creating the initial use cases. Dr. Lane went on to say that in his role on HITAC and working on USCDI (United States Core Data for Interoperability). After the first version, other stakeholders were invited to the table to contribute and provide feedback and now there is a repeatable process that is done to update USCDI annually. He added that HL7 has been invited in as well and there is coordination there to ensure implementation guides reflect the latest coming version of USCDI. Pooja responded by saying that policy is really important in moving the industry forward but there is also a solid connection between standards development and policy and that in her role as chair of the NCPDP board, she may be biased, but feels organizations who don't participate in standards development are really missing a big opportunity. HL7 and NCPDP see the value of coordinating and working together and CMS and ONC have made it clear through their roadmaps that standards will be named in coming policy so why not come to the table and make sure your organizational interests are being represented while also working to solve the big, complex issues in healthcare? Pooja then shifted the conversation mentioning that as we close out, we like to ask our guests if they have any final message or calls to action, they want to send to the industry?Dr. Lane responded by saying that he sees TEFCA as a once in a decade opportunity to really take nationwide interoperability to the next level. Right now, the general public probably has no idea what TEFCA is and that there should probably be more of a nationwide, public discourse and awareness so people can move towards it versus being dragged along. Pooja then asked Jocelyn for any concluding thoughts or calls to action she would like to send out. Jocelyn expressed her agreement with Steven, what are you doing to advance us as an industry, we're all consumers of this data and ecosystem. She added that we are at an unprecedented time when the industry is leading and CMS and ONC are playing a critical role in alignment. The standards version advancement process (SVAP) is a notable example of CMS and ONC listening to the industry. They are no longer putting a ceiling on the level of advancement and progress the industry can make but rather focusing on establishing a floor. Jocelyn reiterated her encouragement of organizations and individuals to come and participate in the standards development process and give voice to your challenges so the industry can solve real problems. Pooja thanked cohost and interop expert Jocelyn Keegan and the well-informed guest, Dr. Steven Lane from Health Gorilla And thanks to our audience for tuning in! A friendly reminder to new listeners that you can find us on Apple Podcast, Spotify or whatever platform you use to pick up your podcasts, including HealthcareNOW Radio and the Podcast Channel. We also post videos of our podcast episodes, sometimes longer versions, on the POCP YouTube channel. And don't forget, Health IT is a dish best served Hot!
Pooja Babbrah, Pharmacy & PBM lead with Point-of-Care Partners (POCP), NCPDP Board of Trustees Chair, and host of The Dish on Health IT kicked off the episode. This last episode of 2022 featuring POCP Regulatory Resource lead, Kim Boyd and Payer & Provider Practice Lead and Da Vinci Program Manager, Jocelyn Keegancame together to break down all the big things that have happened in 2022 and what we expect for 2023. Pooja explained that while this episode's discussion will primarily be policy related, the panelists will also talk about some of the real progress being made in the standards world and the interconnectedness between federal and state health IT policy and legislation and between standards and policy, and what it means to the industry. Pooja asked Jocelyn and Kim to briefly introduce themselves and to tell the audience what topics they are most excited about discussing. Jocelyn introduced herself as the POCP payer practice lead, devoted to positive change and building/getting stuff done. She went on to say that her focus at POCP is on interoperability, prior authorizations, and the convergence of tech, standards, and product strategy. She explained that she has spent her career moving people and organizations towards APIs, unleashing data for their highest, best-purpose uses. She expressed that she couldn't be more excited about where we've been this year and the precipice of where we are headed next year.Kim expressed that it's always a pleasure convening with Pooja and Jocelyn to discuss the exciting world of health IT. She went on to share her background which has spanned medical and pharmacy operations and implementations, with years of policy, industry, and standards development work on ePA, cost transparency, ePrescribing, and taking what she learned in these areas to work with policymakers on smart policies to advance interoperability and patient care. Kim stated that it has been an exciting year leading POCP's Regulatory Resource Center and that so much is happening in the state and federal regulatory spaces that ties to the innovations and acceleration the industry has been experiencing in health care. Pooja thanked them both for their introductions and then dug into the discussion by asking each of them to share the biggest Health IT highlights of 2022. Kim explained that four things really stand out in 2022:the requirements of the transparency in coverage and no surprises act going into effect and the various provisions requiring data and cost transparency and giving patients and their care teams access to information that will help them make informed decisions. Many in the industry have been clamoring for transparency of this type for some time.The incredible work happening to advance interoperability via the SDOs and Accelerators, like HL7 Da Vinci, CodeX, FAST, and NCPDP's Pharmacy Technology and Innovations group. how Federal agencies are collaborating on aligning requirements for interoperability, like the use of standards and FHIR-based standards specifically. This collaboration and proceeding regulatory action will help align the technical and interoperability stars. the all-hands-on-deck focus on patient health equity is a big area of concentration for not only innovators in the market but the White House, HHS, standards organizations like NCPDP and HL7, and community and public health organizations. There is just so much happening to try and close gaps in equitable care and the data/digital transformation that needs to happen to help facilitate change. Jocelyn followed Kim to share her perspective on the biggest highlights of 2022 first joking that Kim got to go first and steal some of the things she was going to say.She laughingly shared that she agrees with all of Kim's points and then said that she wanted to focus more on the tone and the tenor of the work happening in the industry. Jocelyn shared that from her perspective it feels as though the industry has moved from thinking about interoperability projects as something that will happen "someday" to action and reality. She clarified that this may not be the case for everyone, but many organizations and projects are moving forward to not only do the IT work but the business transformation. The examples she gave included the real progress made on TEFCA, real-world deployments of FHIR guides, live usage of APIs, prior authorization (PA) on pharmacy getting an infusion with last year's Medicare Part DJocelyn added that she wanted to focus on and add to Kim's comment about coordination at the federal level. She explained that policymakers at the federal level have been working for well over a decade and using their levers to make change extraordinarily well. Jocelyn went on to say that as she sees it there are three camps of folks; people and organizations who are working ahead of policy by paying attention to published roadmaps and reading between the lines of public statements, folks trying to get their organizations prepared to respond to the next wave of policy, and others playing the waiting game to see if it's real and if they'll have to follow or if another path will emerge. Finally, she added, that the last highlight from 2022 is all the waiting! The industry keeps waiting for certain regulations to drop. She explained that she doesn't think she remembers another year where there has been this much policy anticipation at year-end. Pooja thanked Jocelyn and Kim for sharing their perspectives. She shared two important topics that have been more under the radar but are growing in importance and focus. The first is consent, specifically eConsent. Stewards of change published the report “Modernizing Consent to Advance Health and Equity” to bring more attention to the need to solve this issue – not only in the context of healthcare but also social services as those are such an important tie-in to health outcomes. Add to that, the ONC half-day discovery workshop on eConsent. Pooja explained to those who may not have attended – that it was an amazing session that brought together so many different people across the continuum of care in addition to the people working in the social services arena.The other area is pharmacy and the growing role of pharmacists in the care team and the work that is being done to ensure that they have access to more data and information to support care teams and support patients. Pooja explained that there has been a lot of movement by retail chains to add primary care services to their offering and community pharmacies are supporting more clinical services. This has led to more focus and a flurry of discussion around interoperability in the pharmacy space. Pooja gave the example of the Health Information Technology Advisory Committee (HITAC) recently proposing adding a pharmacy-focused subcommittee which is a huge indicator. Pooja shifted the discussion to policy highlights, specifically, requirements that went into effect and whether the industry met the deadlines or is still working on it. She explained that she is thinking specifically of: No Surprises ActTransparency in Coverage RuleInformation BlockingKim jumped in by saying that with the No Surprises Act there is still some pushback and uncertainty about how providers are going to comply with having to pull together all the data to provide Advanced EOBs (AEOBs) and good faith estimates (GFEs) when there are multiple providers involved in delivering the expected care; however, the Da Vinci Project is working on advancing implementation guidance to support patient cost transparency. Kim encouraged folks and organizations listening to this episode to get involved in these efforts. Kim added that she expects to see more price transparency-related policies, especially given the latest request for information on AEOBs. Kim went on to say that compliance with the ONC 21st Century Cures Final Rule on information blocking has been a mixed bag. She added that she wished ONC had called this "information sharing" instead of information blocking. Kim went on to say that most of the non-compliance has been on the provider side because it is challenging when a provider falls under the rule as an actor but maybe the health system they work in does not, especially when the health system may hold the data being requested. She added that most of the EHRs have spoken with are up-to-speed on the full EHI sharing requirement. Jocelyn added her perspective on information sharing specifically around EHI. Technically all of this information needs to be put out there, while the industry waits for USCDI to fully encapsulate patient information, there is probably a lot of non-codified data in the system that isn't actionable or really useable. The EHR certification requirements will likely do more to move the industry forward. Jocelyn confessed that she fell down the RFI response rabbit hole and spent an hour looking at the feedback to the RFIs. She thinks there is a disconnect between the goal of the rule and how to operationally do the work. An example she provided was around PA and that it isn't automating the submission of the PA alone but how to automate the 10 steps that need to happen before a PA is submitted. Pooja shifted the conversation to ask Kim to talk a little about the state activity around price transparency and why it's so important for stakeholders to pay attention not only to federal policy but what's happening in the states.Kim agreed that so many organizations forget that state policy is a big part of the equation too. She shared that on the data and cost transparency side, states doubling down to move the needle on data fluidity. The POCP Regulatory Resource center has its finger on this pulse. From the required patient-specific cost, benefit, coverage, and eligibility data sharing to confirmation of compliance enforcement of the No Surprises Act and Hospital Transparency, just to name a few.Pooja concurred and added that many people forget the states can add enforcement teeth above and beyond federal enforcement. She then remarked that this has been a year of anticipation and asked Kim to share where the burden reduction and prior authorization rule that was shelved back in 2020 is currently. Kim responded by explaining that there has been so much anticipation and even angst for some when the original rule came out in 2020 but then was pulled back.So many in the industry have been endeavoring to fulfill the promise the Da Vinci CRD, DTR, PAS IGs provide on solving for medical PA. Probably the most promising sign from CMS is the rule sitting at OMB since mid-October, waiting for review and then ultimately release. Given OMB has a max of 90 days to take action on the review, health plans, vendors, providers, and their partners should be closely monitoring for OMBs response and action. Jocelyn joined in to say that the rule that came out in 2020 was definitely more than just burden reduction and it would have codified the use of patient-access APIs. She added that the 2020 rule didn't just require FHIR but named a particular implementation guide or "recipe" for the industry to use. Jocelyn anticipates that the version of the rule that has reemerged and is sitting with OMB likely includes Medicare Advantage plans which weren't included in the 2020 version. She's really interested to see what the NPRM will include. Jocelyn added that there is legislation pending that includes prior authorization and many are hoping the proposed rule drops before the legislation passes. Pooja thanked Jocelyn for bringing up the pending legislation and then moved on to ask about the recent CMS requests for information out there. She asked about what kinds of questions is the government asking and what do these questions tell us about where their heads are at? Jocelyn started by saying that the industry is seeing an unprecedented amount of coordination and policy-making activity. It has been a challenge to marshall the resources to respond to these RFIs and participate in the conversations and discussions these RFIs generate. Clearly, the industry is leading and the RFIs are an indication that CMS and ONC want industry input into their policymaking. Jocelyn went on to say that after reviewing the comments to these RFIs, the common themes were that the industry needs time and an incremental approach is needed but no one is saying what is being explored can't be accomplished. Kim added that she was struck by how aligned the agencies releasing these RFIs seemed to be on solving for interoperability, digitization, using/reusing or referencing FHIR resources for use and across different areas of health care, from the public health infrastructure, TEFCA, Certification of HIT, PAs and more, even the RFI from CMS related to the National Directory wants to hear from health care on the applicability of the use of FHIR standards. In transition, Pooja remarked that POCP and everyone on the podcast work in the standards development space through the support of some of the Accelerators like FAST, CodeX, CARIN Alliance, and of course, Da Vinci. She asked for the discussion to now cover the biggest accomplishments so far and what's expected in 2023. Kim responded by saying that while not officially announced, the CodeX PA in Oncology Use case – focused on solving for automating PA for cancer patients using the Da Vinci IGs is progressing to the Execution Phase. Members represented in this use case are payers, EHRs, physician groups, and health systems and they have collaboratively moved the needle on this use case and will execute the proof of concept for prostate cancer in 2023. Kim added that she is proud that NCPDP for their October Pilot launch announcement of the National Facilitator Model to strengthen pandemic and epidemic preparedness using industry standards and technology to enable pharmacies, prescribers, and government agencies to access real-time information on prescription, testing, immunization, and related data – across state lines - to support patient health interventions during public health crises. The model can also be used to effectively support public health surveillance.Jocelyn chimed in to express her awe at the pace of work on IGs and new use cases. She added that another big milestone is that FHIR at Scale Taskforce (FAST) transitioned out of ONC into the HL7 Accelerator program. FAST progressed work on Security, Identity, and Exchange and they are pulling the TEFCA team in to align their work. She added that Da Vinci has made a lot of progress on Risk Adjustment, allowing payers and providers to share information to inform a change in a patient's risk status. Jocelyn went on to say that there are also some exciting real-world implementations happening with a specific shout out to the team comprised of MultiCare, Providence, Regence, leadership from Optum, and Da Vinci champions launching the first in the nation FHIR-based pre-authorization embedded into the clinical workflow. Pooja seconded the kudos for the NPCPD vaccine pilot and she also mentioned the CodeX REMS use case which is marching toward a pilot and is once again bringing NCPDP and HL7 together. Pooja went on to recognize Helios as an Accelerator that is starting to gain traction and the industry should pay attention to their work. Pooja commented that while price and cost transparency for the patient will always be a passion of mine, the growing role of pharmacists in the care team is another area she is really excited about. Additional services are being performed by pharmacists, the prescribing authority is being extended to pharmacists, and the need for standards and technology to enable clinical data to flow from pharmacists to care team members in other environments like doctors' offices and hospitals. Pooja continued by saying that the pandemic and really the Federal PREP act accelerated this movement. Now pharmacists can administer pretty much any vaccine on CDC's list, and there are around 25 states that allow pharmacists to prescribe HIV medications. Pooja explained that this expanding role and some of the regulatory requirements make pharmacy interoperability and connection with the rest of the care team critical. For example, for pharmacists to prescribe Paxlovid, they must order or access labs for the patients. Unless pharmacists are in a health system they will likely not have access to a patient's lab report. If the industry wants pharmacists to continue to support providers and patients with more clinical services – there has to be a focus on interoperability. Kim agreed that it is an exciting time for the pharmacy community. The need for clinical and administrative data access, use, storage, and exchange to improve and coordinate patient care knows no boundaries – the whole of the care team, including the pharmacist, must be able to operate in an environment where this takes place. Kim added that the NCPDP Strategic Planning Committee Value-Based Care Subcommittee acknowledged that the industry is well positioned to support pharmacists as a part of a value-based arrangement and we have the standards to support all types of clinical care and exchange so pharmacists can provide services like dispensing, screening for Social Determinants of Health or taking and reporting labs or blood pressure, etc. 2023 will be filled with opportunities within the NCPDP standards development process, the industry, and policy, to further the role of the pharmacist, closing gaps in care and the innovations needed for the future of pharmacists as part of the care team.Pooja asked to do a round-robin weigh-in on TEFCA, HIPAA 2.0, and Health Equity. What's new, what's real, and what should our listeners be on the lookout for in 2023? Jocelyn responded by saying that each of these topics has so many sub-topics and what will be interesting is to see how these all intersect with one another. She added that there is a movement to the platform where companies are partnering to solve some of the challenges related to these areas and make data fluid but secure. Kim responded by saying that there is still confusion and conflict between HIPAA and the ONC Information blocking rules. Technology has evolved and new interpretations and requirements are needed that provide patient data security without limiting data sharing. The industry will see some movement from OCR in 2023.TEFCA is real and moving forward in establishing the infrastructure model and rules that will govern how different networks and their stakeholders (including providers, payers, and public health) securely share clinically relevant information with each other. Nine organizations have provided letters of intent to the Sequoia Project, the recognized coordinating entity on behalf of ONC, to apply to become QHINs including EHR vendors such as Epic and Nextgen, national networks such as the eHealth Exchange and the CommonWell Health Alliance, and tech vendors such as Health Gorilla. More organizations are expected to apply. It will be interesting to see how successful TEFCA will be in incorporating FHIR into the framework over the next few years There is a united effort that includes government entities, health systems, pharmaceutical companies, private payer groups, and community organizations working together to overcome disparities and improve equity. This requires improved access to shared clinical and social needs data. Just last week CMS released its “Path Forward to improving data to advance health equity solutions” which aims to increase the collection of standardized sociodemographic and social determinants of health (SDOH) data across the healthcare industry as an important first step towards improving population In closing, Pooja asked everyone to share what they are most hopeful to see in 2023. She kicked it off by saying that for her it's the continued focus on pharmacists. Kim responded by saying many great things are happening in health care and that she is excited as a patient. There is more focus on helping patients grow as consumers of their own health care, providing data and insights into what options are available to obtain quality, timely and cost-effective care. She also expressed excitement about working with industry and policymakers to advance medical ePA in 2023 via the HL7 Da Vinci standards and leading the CodeX work on a pilot to advance PA for cancer patients. She concluded by echoing what Pooja said about her excitement about leading and partnering with others at NCPDP to promote and advance the role of the pharmacist as a part of the care team. Jocelyn joined in to say that she is hopeful for the momentum that has built up and she is super excited to see stakeholders build their toolboxes and embark on real-world implementations. Pooja closed out the episode by thanking her POCP cohosts, Jocelyn and Kim, and wishing our audience the happiest of holidays and the best for 2023. She reminded listeners that they can find The Dish on Health IT on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or whatever platform they use to pick up their podcasts, including HealthcareNOW Radio and the Podcast Channel. And that videos of the podcast episodes can be found o on the POCP YouTube channel. Adding, Health IT is a dish best served Hot!
On today's episode of Health UnaBASHEd, our guest is Rasu Shrestha, MD, MBA, (@RasuShrestha) enterprise executive vice president & chief strategy and transformation officer for Atrium Health, one of the largest non-profit and leading academic health systems in the US. In addition to his enterprise and transformational role he spearheads a renewed focus on innovation, launching new healthcare inventions, discoveries and ideas to benefit patients and the communities Atrium Health serves. Previously, Dr. Shrestha served as chief innovation officer for the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), where he was responsible for driving UPMC's innovation strategy, serving as a catalyst in transforming the payer-provider organization into a more patient-focused and economically sustainable system. In addition to leading innovation at UPMC, Shrestha also served as executive vice president of UPMC Enterprises. ==##==
Carol Flagg of HealthcareNOW Radio talks about marketing the HLTH conference to exhibitors via radio interviews and a strong social media presence.
This episode of PopHealth Week, with hostFred Goldstein and executive provducer, Gregg Masters features a conversation with colleague and host of 'The Incrementalist' on HealthcareNOW Radio, Nick van Terheyden MD aka 'Dr. Nick'. We discuss the current state of the clinical trials industry including key headwinds, tailwinds and near term prospects to accelerate benck to beside innovation in the therapeutics space. Join us! ==##==
On this episode of Health UnaBASHEd Executive Producer and co-host Gregg Masters takes the mic to interview principal host Gil Bashe for a season 1 look back, preview of season 2 and overview of Gil's recent medical mission to the Moldova adjacent warzone. We highlight some of the guests and key takeaways from season1 and gain additional insight to the man, the mission and the drive behind Gil's determination to make a ddiference in the public's health and wellbing including his role seeding a purpose driven culture at FINN Partners, a market leading global marketing and communications company. ==##==
Kicking-off HealthcareNOW Radio's Host to Host Summer Series, Hosts Jen Jennings and Tom Testa are joined by Jared Johnson, founder of Shift.Health and host of Healthcare Rap! Be sure to tune into this discussion to hear the three discuss the most overrated & underused tactics in healthcare marketing. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play Healthcare NOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
On this episode of Health UnaBASHEd co-hosts Gil Bashe and Gregg Masters welcome physician-scientist and master curator of digital health innovation content Daniel Kraft, MD. Dr Kraft is a technology enthusiast, theorist and practitioner. We discuss bench-to-beside innovation that matters, the proliferation of digital health apps, and the need for curation that facilitates the onramp of tech into care delivery best practices including key trends, tailwinds, and likely headwinds. For more information or to access our library of on-demand broadcasts, go the Health UnaBASHEDshow page at HealthcareNOW Radio. For more information on Dr. Kraft's work in digital health apps curation click here. ==##==
Pooja Babbrah, filling in as host for Ken Kleinberg, kicked off this first episode of 2022 by welcoming guest, Kim Boyd, industry consultant, regulatory and standards and Health IT expert. This episode will cover the regulatory landscape in health IT and what may be coming in 2022 from new rules to compliance and enforcement. Jocelyn Keegan, senior consultant with Point-of-Care Partners, chimed in to explain she and Kim Boyd have had a chance to work with each other on the National Council for Prescription Drug Programs, (NCPDP) electronic prior authorization (ePA) task group and that she has such admiration for her and her work. Kim Boyd then introduced herself and described how she got into regulation. She explained that while she does have a law background, having served as a paralegal in the United States Airforce, that's not where her love for policy started. In reality, the policy bug bit her in a chance encounter with a couple of entrepreneurs who mentored her and taught her their business from the ground up. In 2001, California proposed a regulation that would have been detrimental to their business, and she was asked to go up to Sacramento and talk to the regulatory bodies and legislature about why the policy wasn't good for patients or business. She was hooked from there. Pooja reaffirmed how important policy and regulation are in Health IT and pivoted the conversation by asking Kim her take on what could be expected in 2022 after several very active rules and policy years. Kim explained that many are of the mindset that Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) will continue to build on the endeavors we saw over the last several years. The focus will continue to be on interoperability, data fluidity, transparency, and other areas that have already been a major focus of the industry. She went on to explain that the pandemic really helped underline the importance of solving some of these industry challenges. Kim went on to say that there is so much work left to be done to move toward full interoperability in healthcare and a merging of the clinical, administrative, and financial data. She added that she is really excited by the ONC Health Interoperability Health Outcomes 2030 initiative, stating that we need to strive toward truly collaborative and coordinated care and maybe we'll finally succeed in getting rid of faxes once and for all.Pooja followed up by asking about whether there were any pieces of legislation that have enough bipartisan support to get passed. Kim explained that there is so much we need to accomplish and, thankfully, there are a couple of areas that seem to have bipartisan support. One of those areas is health equity. Legislation looking at reimbursement models leveraging social determinants of health data and funding around standards development around social determinants of health (SDOH) are up for consideration. Kim added that she saw at least 99 pieces of legislation related to health equity for congress to take action on. Pooja then asked Jocelyn if there are any rules she hopes get published or if she has a policy wish list. Jocelyn responded by agreeing with Kim that there is so much activity going on in the policy space. One of the things near and dear to her heart is prior authorization. She recounted that at the end of 2021, ONC was making progress in certifying people around prior authorization. CMS signaled via the unified agenda that they plan to pick back up the rules that were tabled during the administration transition. Jocelyn went on to say that she hopes to see rules that align the industry on a shared path forward around prior authorization. A certain level of certainty is needed by the industry — from a policy perspective—to help spur them to pick up the implementation guides and work coming out of Da Vinci and other FHIR accelerators. Pooja asked Kim to weigh in on the future of prior authorization, specifically automating PA based on her work with CoverMyMeds and on the NCPDP ePA task group. Kim said that Jocelyn is on point. There has been an evolution in the healthcare ecosystem, especially on the medications front. CoverMyMeds has done a lot of work to move away from faxes, that there are still smaller payers that just aren't yet on board with ePA, but the needle is moving. This will be really important to ease the administrative burden for providers. If regulatory bodies require certification for ePA, that will help move the needle even further. She went on to say that as the standards bodies are evolving in their approach to automating PA, the regulatory bodies are paying attention and will hopefully issue policy that will support that work. Pooja then asked Jocelyn to weigh in on how creators of these tools can drive adoption and use outside of policies or rules to require use whether through user-based designs, establishing strong value models, or other methods. Jocelyn responded by saying that Kim touched on one of the topics earlier, which is to look at all the workflows holistically and make sure the tool being created is solving immediate problems faced by providers and giving them more information and transparency around eligibility and benefits for their patients. Before providers adopt a new tool, they are asking themselves “is this going to be better than what I'm using now?” The creators of these tools should also be evaluating their tools over time to determine what's working and what isn't and iteratively improving them. Jocelyn added that, ultimately, adoption is really a one butt in the seat at a time. It's important that any policy doesn't add additional burden to providers but, outside of policy, the creators of these tools need to ensure they are being mindful of the providers' workflows, and that the tool is usable and solving real problems. Ultimately, the reason we are in 2022 and still using faxes is that they solve the provider's immediate problem.Pooja then asked Jocelyn and Kim on how they would advise payers who work to adhere to new policies but are just checking the box and then asking “now what?”Jocelyn stated that the shift to standards-based design is a game changer. With the iterative approach of standards development at NCPDP and HL7, the standards development process is much more collaborative and iterative than in the past. Additionally, more testing is being done so the standards have already been road-tested before being named in policy. That makes it easier to meet some of these new rules. Ultimately, many of these new policies intend to unlock data, and stakeholders who are going to be successful will go beyond checking the box and will think more broadly about how this additional data can be leveraged across their organization. It's really about stakeholders mastering their data and how to best leverage the shift to APIs. Those that can take the time to do that planning, rather than just trying to meet deadlines of a new rule or piece of legislation, will be most successful. Kim agreed with Jocelyn's points, adding that while we're trying to make more data available for decision support, further upstream we're also talking about transparency. Data has to be usable and real time. The requirements from the CMS transparency & coverage final rule, the Medicare hospital outpatient perspective rule, and the No Surprises Act are all catalysts to improve the patient experience: the intent being to make us all more informed consumers. Operators in this space have a real opportunity to not only make this data more readily available to consumers but to help them understand it. We have a real health literacy issue in this country. Plans and providers need to factor this into their strategic initiative and position themselves as trusted resources for patients to better understand their data as a means to build brand loyalty. Jocelyn chimed in to say that back in July, payers all scrambled to meet the patient access API deadline. Some leapt across the line, some dragged themselves across the line. Everyone was at a different point when they started the work to meet this policy but they all met it. This step was one building block in building how we do business for the next several decades. The industry needs to take a collective breath and consider how we can set ourselves up for success and how can we move forward to make sure that each additional block we put in place is incrementally better. Jocelyn added that she and Kim both testified to a sub-group underNational Committee on Vital and Health Statistics(NCVHS) on the intersection of clinical and administrative information and talked about the needs to bring these two worlds back together. Everything ties back to the fact that to provide care, you've got to understand what the patient's coverage is. There is a relationship between care, quality, and the cost of the care. This isn't going to get fixed overnight. The idea of transparency is good but it has real-world implications on how we all do business. Pooja then shifted the discussion to cover compliance and enforcement. She mentioned that there has been a lot of shifts in deadline and delays in enforcement. Pooja asked Kim to weigh in on these shifts and changes and what stakeholders need to know. Kim relayed that although there have been delays in several rules, the policy teams and strategy teams should still be dedicated to evaluating and planning to comply. They should also be thinking about how to not only comply,but also factoring in how they can comply and how to leverage those rules to support more cost-effective use of healthcare services by both patients and providers. They should also be thinking about value-add services through these initiatives that will help build brand loyalty. Ultimately, stakeholders should be working to stay ahead of deadlines and moving forward in good faith. Jocelyn chimed in to say that many times policy guidance following legislation is really important to get the industry out of limbo. Many times, there might be abhorrent behavior as stakeholders try to meet a piece of legislation when they've misunderstood the intent or ways to really address it in a real-world setting. We should be recognizing that new policy and legislation are coming and to not panic until the final rule comes out. Because ONC and CMS are much more involved and providing some funding for some standards development, there are fewer shocks and surprises in recent policies.In an effort to close out the episode, Pooja asked both Kim and Jocelyn for last thoughts to leave with the audience. Kim conveyed that she advises everyone to just keep on pressing. If you have a policy team, work with them to align your strategic goals with policy requirements. Bring your SMEs to the table, highlight your organization successes out in the industry, work to educate and assist regulators to better understand the challenges and solutions that have shown promise. Also, work with the standards organizations and influence the standards development process which ultimately influences policy. Jocelyn's last thoughts were to point out that as the industry evolves, we are moving away from a place where only a small group of people within an organization are considered experts or in the know about interoperability but moving toward a reality where interoperability is just how we get things done. The organizations who are looking at interoperability holistically and doing the training across their organization are tightening partnerships, and really getting everyone in their organization ready to solve problems and respond to regulations. It's a much easier task when everyone in the organization has the understanding and can contribute to the solution. Pooja then closed out the first episode of 2022 by thanking Kim Boyd for joining us and to the audience for listening. She reminded the audience they can find past and future episodes on Spotify, Google Podcasts as well as HealthcareNOW Radio and other podcast carriers.
On Health UnaBASHEd our guest is Yele Aluko MD MBA, Chief Medical Officer at Ernst & Young @EY_US @EYnews. Lead host Gil Bashe (@Gil_Bashe) engages Dr. Aluko in the profound significance and impact of the social determinants of health, and its slow uptake by the acute care health system, noting missed opportunities - decades in the making - to rightfully mitigate health disparities and equity. Dr Aluko speaks candidly, with global insight proferring a balanced perspective unique to his leadership vision as a prominent national voice in the conversation. We also discuss innovation writ large and the imperative healthcare leaders face under the current strain of the pandemic. Follow Dr. Aluko's and E&Y's work on Twitter via @YAluko, @EY_US and @EYNews, respectively. ==##==
On a special edition of PopHealth Week recorded live in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth at HIMSS 2021 in Las Vegas, hosts Gregg Masters and Fred Goldstein talk to Ardy Arianpour CEO of Seqster. They discuss their health data management platform which is capable of aggregating, standardizing and harmonizing all of your health data along with allowing you to share on your terms. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
On a special edition of PopHealth Week recorded live in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth at HIMSS 2021 in Las Vegas, hosts Gregg Masters and Fred Goldstein talk to George Valentine, Executive Director, Cox Communications. We discuss digital solutions for health systems and related healthcare enterprises. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
Host Bruce Kennedy is joined by co host Les Jordan live at HIMSS21 in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth. Their guest is Christel Anderson, VP Informatics discussing the importance of mobile app technology, and the role that nurses play in the innovation of app technology. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
On a special edition of PopHealth Week recorded live in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth at HIMSS 2021 in Las Vegas, hosts Gregg Masters and Fred Goldstein talk to Ryne Natzke, SVP Growth and Strategy. They discuss patient experience with patient payment systems, integrating with APIs to make payment seamless and fully automated. Also how integrating before visit communications and reminders can help in the patient experience and the provider collections. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
This week another special edition of PopHealth Week recorded live in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth at HIMSS 2021 in Las Vegas, our guest is George Valentine, Executive Director, Cox Communications. We discuss digital solutions for health systems and related healthcare enterprises. Cox Communications is committed to creating meaningful moments of human connection through technology. The largest private broadband company in America, we proudly serve six and a half million homes and businesses across 18 states. Cox Communications is dedicated to empowering others to build a better future and celebrate diverse products, people, suppliers, communities and the characteristics that make each one unique. Cox Communications is the largest division of Cox Enterprises, a family-owned business founded in1898 by Governor James M. Cox. ==##==
On a special edition of PopHealth Week recorded live in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth at HIMSS 2021 in Las Vegas, hosts Gregg Masters and Fred Goldstein talk to Vik Krishnan, GM for digital workflows at Intrado Health. Vik details why large healthcare organizations are lagging on adopting patient engagement as an outcomes and revenue generating tool. He also dives into on point solution vs platforms and explains the value of EHR integrated solutions that leverage augmented AI. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
This week another special edition of PopHealth Week recorded live in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth at HIMSS 2021 in Las Vegas, our guest is Ardy Arianpour co-founder & CEO @Seqster. Seqster was founded on the vision of a world where individuals own and truly understand all of their health data. Seqster believes that combining multiple data types such as electronic health record (EHR), genetic, and fitness data in one secure place is the key to unlocking optimal health and wealth. In this episode, we discuss Seqster's health data management platform which is capable of aggregating, standardizing. amd harmonizing all of your health data along with allowing you to share on your terms. ==##==
Justin Barnes does his annual show from HIMSS21 in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio booth. His guest include: Micky Tripathi, Ph.D. M.P.P., National Coordinator, ONC John Halamka, MD, Author & President – Mayo Clinic Platform Rasu Shrestha, MD MBA, Chief Strategy and Transformation Officer, EVP, Atrium Health Paul Brient, SVP and Chief Product Office at athena Jon Zimmerman, CEO at Holon Solutions Monica Bolbjerg, MD, Co-Founder/CEO, Qure4u, Inc. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
On this special edition of PopHealth Week recorded LIVE in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio produced by Health Innovation Media our guest is Vik Krishnan, General Manager, Intrado Digital Workflows (a Life & Safety business) at Intrado. A results-oriented, collaborative leader Vik's major focus is on unlocking value (revenue acceleration, profitability) at large companies through management of special programs, and advising private equity investors on deal acquisition. Commercially-focused with sales experience. Experience leading consultant (BCG, Bain & Co.) and client teams. Track record of success in commercial and general management roles in lean environments. In this interview on PopHealth, Intrado's Digital Workflows General Manager details why large healthcare organizations are lagging on adopting patient engagement as an outcomes and revenue generating tool. Vik dives into on point solution vs platforms and explains the value of EHR integrated solutions that leverage augmented AI. For more information on Intrado' patient engagement solutions, go to www.intrado.com and do follow on twitter via @IntradoHealth. ==##==
On this special edition of PopHealth Week recorded LIVE in the HealthcareNOW Radio studio produced by Health Innovation Media our guest is Vik Krishnan,General Manager, Intrado Digital Workflows (a Life & Safety business) at Intrado. A results-oriented, collaborative leader Vik's major focus is on unlocking value (revenue acceleration, profitability) at large companies through management of special programs, and advising private equity investors on deal acquisition. Commercially-focused with sales experience. Experience leading consultant (BCG, Bain & Co.) and client teams. Track record of success in commercial and general management roles in lean environments. In this interview on PopHealth, Intrado's Digital Workflows General Manager details why large healthcare organizations are lagging on adopting patient engagement as an outcomes and revenue generating tool. Vik dives into on point solution vs platforms and explains the value of EHR integrated solutions that leverage augmented AI. For more information on Intrado' patient engagement solutions, go to www.intrado.com and do follow on twitter via @IntradoHealth. ==##==
Hosts Jen Jennings and Tom Testa are joined by HealthcareNOW Radio's Carol Flagg for a discussion focused on Voice Marketing. The three debate the most overrated and underused aspects when it comes to launching a radio show or podcast. Be sure to tune in! To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Get ready for a master class in podcasting. Carol Flagg from HealthcareNOW Radio is in the house to share some provocative thinking in the first of a two-part crossover episode. In part 1, Carol and Jared cover their top ten tips for starting a podcast. If you build a podcast, will they come? What are the three key ingredients of a successful podcast? How do you measure it? Tune in for answers to these and many more questions. All that, plus the Flava of the Week about inviting all the right players to the table. Hospitals and health systems own a smaller and smaller portion of a consumer's healthcare journey, so why haven't they been interested in establishing better consumer relationships? Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Get ready for a master class in podcasting. Carol Flagg from HealthcareNOW Radio is in the house to share some provocative thinking in the first of a two-part crossover episode. In part 1, Carol and Jared cover their top ten tips for starting a podcast. If you build a podcast, will they come? What are the three key ingredients of a successful podcast? How do you measure it? Tune in for answers to these and many more questions. All that, plus the Flava of the Week about inviting all the right players to the table. Hospitals and health systems own a smaller and smaller portion of a consumer's healthcare journey, so why haven't they been interested in establishing better consumer relationships? Shout-out to the Shift.Health Content Network for spreading the awesome, yo! Next steps: Subscribe to Carol's podcast, What's My Tagline, and subscribe to catch part two of the crossover series, where Carol and Jared discuss their top ten tips for those who already host a podcast and want more out of it. Check out all of the shows at HealthcareNOW Radio. Subscribe to Season 2 of Now What?? on the Shift.Health YouTube channel. Check out some of our favorite related podcasts: DGTL Voices with Ed Marx, Healthcare 360 with Scott Burgess, and Healthcare IT Today with John Lynn and Colin Hung. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
HealthcareNOW Radio and Podcast Network 226 followers226 1,309 tracks1,309 In this episode, we share some personal stories about what happens when medications are not optimized as well as work being done to get the medications right from Liz Helms, the president and CEO of the California Chronic Care Coalition (CCCC), an alliance of non profit, social consumer and provider organizations united to improve the health of Californians with chronic conditions or diseases. She shares with us the patient perspective in comprehensive medication management. After all, they are the ones who have the most to lose and gain from personalized and optimized medication use.
Host Justin Barnes, aka the @HITAdvisor and Roberta Mullin, editor of Answers Media Network and station manager for HealthcareNOW Radio, sit to talk about happenings in health IT, care strategy demands for physicians, and health IT innovation during COVID. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play HealthcareNOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Voices of Change podcasts originally aired on HealthcareNOW Radio
Voices of Change podcasts originally aired on HealthcareNOW Radio
Voices of Change podcasts originally aired on HealthcareNOW Radio
Voices of Change podcasts originally aired on HealthcareNOW Radio
Voices of Change podcasts originally aired on HealthcareNOW Radio
Voices of Change podcasts originally aired on HealthcareNOW Radio
Host Carol Flagg talks with Jennifer Jennings and Tom Testa, both vice presidents at Anderson Interactive, a Health IT PR and Marketing agency. Jen and Tom are the dynamic duo behind the show, Overrated and Underused that airs on HealthcareNow Radio. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
On this special Coronavirus edition of This Week in Health Innovation on HealthcareNOW Radio, my guests are: Dr. Phil Marshall, Co-founder & Chief Product Officer andMurray Brozinsky, CEO of Conversa Health. Today's episode is titled: 'Flattening the COVID19 curve: One company's contribution to mitigate demand for acute healthcare services'. To learn more about Conversa's Coronavirus Health Chats, you can head to coronavirushealthchats.com. For more about Conversa, head to conversahealth.comor shoot an email tohello@conversahealth.com ==##==
Host Justin Barnes, aka @HITAdvisor invites HealthcareNOW Radio’s station manager, Roberta Mullin to catch up and find out more about Think Tank VI and the upcoming Live at HIMSS radio show. Want to stream our station live? Visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com. Find all of our show episodes on your favorite podcast platforms. https://www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Host Jim Tate's guest is Jeff Lin the Senior Vice President of Product Management and part of the Executive Management team at InstaMed. He has overall responsibility for product strategy, product development, product marketing, solution engineering, professional services, and strategic partnerships for payer, provider, vendor and consumer solutions. Jeff continues to innovate in healthcare payments and build the first healthcare payments network. And catch Jeff as host of Payment Matters on HealthcareNOW Radio. Want to stream our station live? Visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com. Find all of our show podcasts on your favorite podcast channel and of course on Apple Podcasts in your iTunes store or here: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/heal…1301407966?mt=2
On PopHealth Week's last show of 2019, seasoned healthcare analyst and Executive Vice President of Validation Institute, and host of ValidPoints podcast series Brian Klepper PhD join PopHealth Week hosts Fred Goldstein and Gregg Masters for an update on progress towards fulfillment of the triple aim. We explore the question of 'are we there yet' with a deeper dive into the continuation of lack of affordability, high variability in quality and outcomes including the well known 'book of business' driven access problems in healthcare equity. 2019 has been a landmark year for PopHealth Week. Of note is our continued scheduling of national thought leaders, system executives and many in the lesser know world of innovation and advancing the triple aim. We are very happy to witness the continued growth and expansion of our work and reach via collaboration with HealthcareNOW Radio. 2020 will be a make or brake year for the burden placed upon healthcare leadership writ large. We'll engage many on the front lines of this transformational imperative. Happy Holidays and Happy New Year! ==##==
The Health Innovation Media and HealthcareNOW Radio pop-up studio team covered the second HLTH - that's HLTH - conference in Las Vegas Nevada. The combined team included Nick van Terheyden MD aka Dr. Nick, Douglas Goldstein the 'eFuturist', Roberta Mullin, Partner, Answers Media Network and station manager at HealthcareNOW Radio, Carol Flagg, Partner and Director of Marketing, Answers Media Network and Jane Boque, Chief Revenue Officer at Xtelligent Healthcare Media. The conversation was recorded live in the exhibition hall at HLTH, so enjoy the exchange! For more information or to listen/view the posted interviews see out pop-up studio showcase. Guests include Patrice Harris, MD, President of the American Medical Association, Daniel Kraft, MD, Physician, Scientist and Innovator and curator of Exponential Medicine, former AthenaHealth co-founder and CEO, Jonathan Bush, now executive chairman at Firefly Health, a direct primary care start-up, and Daniel Durand, MD, Chief Innovation Officer at Lifebridge Health, as well as others. ==##==
Principals from Health Innovation Media Gregg Masters and Fred Goldstein team up with principals from HealthcareNOW Radio Roberta Mullin and Carol Flagg to discuss their key takeaways from MGMA's annual conference 2019 held in New Orleans. More TBA ==##==
This is PopHealth Week on HealthcareNOW Radio recorded LIVE from HIMSS 2019. Produced by Gregg Masters also known on twitter as @2healthguru, the managing director of health innovaton media as well as co-host of pophealth week. In this "LIVE From HIMSS 2019 segment", my colleague and co-host Nick van Terheyden, MD aka 'Dr Nick' chats with two giants in the healthIT and healthcare transformational space. First up is the former CTO of the U.S. under President Obama, and currently the President at Care Journey, Aneesh Chopra, followed by Assistent Medical Director Emeritus at Kaiser Permanente Southern California, John Mattison, MD. Enjoy the insights of these two dynamic thought leaders!
Health Innovation Media Co-hosts Fred Goldstein, Gregg Masters weigh in on key takeaways from HIMSS 2019. For related posts see: Our HIMSS 2019 preview is here. Day one of live streaming c/o our synidcation partner HealthcareNOW Radio is here, and day two here. Enjoy!
On PopHealth Week, Health Innovation Media principals provide a @HIMSS 2019 Preview with @DrNic1, @fsgoldstein and @2healthguru. For more on LIVE From @HIMSS 2019 broadcast from Nuance Communications, check out the schedule here. We're live streaming during HIMSS from HealthcareNOW Radio. Tune in!