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A joint advisory warns of Fancy Bear targeting Western logistics and technology firms. A nonprofit hospital network in Ohio suffers a disruptive ransomware attack. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) drops plans to subject data brokers to tighter regulations. KrebsOnSecurity and Google block a record breaking DDoS attack. A phishing campaign rerouted employee paychecks. Atlassian patches multiple high-severity vulnerabilities. A Wisconsin telecom provider confirms a cyberattack caused a week-long outage. VMware issues a Security Advisory addressing multiple high-risk vulnerabilities. Prosecutors say a 19-year-old student from Massachusetts will plead guilty to hacking PowerSchool. Our guest is Rob Allen, Chief Product Officer at ThreatLocker, discussing deliberate simplicity of fundamental controls around zero trust. Oversharing your call location data. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest On our Industry Voices segment, today we are joined by Rob Allen, Chief Product Officer at ThreatLocker from RSAC 2025. Rob is discussing the deliberate simplicity of fundamental controls around zero trust. Token theft and phishing attacks bypass traditional MFA protections, letting attackers impersonate users and access critical SaaS platforms — without needing passwords. Listen to Rob's interview here. Learn more from the ThreatLocker team here. Selected Reading Russian GRU Targeting Western Logistics Entities and Technology Companies ( CISA) Ransomware attack disrupts Kettering Health Network in Ohio (Beyond Machines) America's CFPB bins proposed data broker crackdown (The Register) Krebs on Security hit by 'test run' DDoS attack that peaked at 6.3 terabits of data per second (Metacurity) SEO poisoning campaign swipes direct deposits from employees (SC Media) Atlassian Warns of Multiple High-Severity Vulnerabilities Hits Data Center Server (Cybersecurity News) Cellcom Service Disruption Caused by Cyberattack (SecurityWeek) VMware releases patches for security flaws in multiple virtualization products (Beyond Machines) Massachusetts man will plead guilty in PowerSchool hack case (CyberScoop) O2 VoLTE: locating any customer with a phone call (Mast Database) Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Leah Holderbaum, OTR, CBIS, ATP received both her Bachelor of Science in Occupational Science, and Master of Science in Occupational Therapy from Eastern Kentucky University. Leah has 10 years of clinical experience, which began with Kettering Health Network in Ohio at the NeuroRehab and Balance Center. Leah expanded her career to Texas in 2012, as an occupational therapist on the Spinal Cord Injury Team at Baylor Scott & White Institute for Rehabilitation-Dallas, where she served as the clinical specialist. While at Baylor, Leah facilitated a national research study, in conjunction with the University of Pennsylvania, regarding compliance with intermittent cathing. Leah has developed and instructed continuing education courses on the therapeutic management of the spinal cord injured patient, and the distinct role of the OT in bladder management, and has provided lectures at Texas A&M, the University of St. Augustine, and TWU on SCI. Her webinar entitled Clean Intermittent Cathing: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Best Practice launched nationally in 2020. Currently, Leah is serving on a national expert panel regarding establishing a standard protocol for clean intermittent cathing. She developed a passion for education, and bladder management as the Clinical Specialist on the SCI team, based on knowledge and experience with quality of life improvements with patients, which earned her the acclaimed status of “Cath Queen”. Leah was recently published in the 2nd edition of the WOCN Core Curriculum, and is also contributing faculty at the University of St. Augustine for the Occupational Therapy Department.Leah currently works for Numotion as Medical Supply Account Manager, where she has the opportunity to share her love for bladder management, and promote quality of life and independence for customers she encounters.65646454yt
Join us as we navigate life, dreaming, and reaching the impossible with our guest, Tim Dutton, CHRO at Kettering Health Network. Tim Dutton is responsible for enhancing the connection between Kettering Health's employees and mission to improve the quality of life of the people in the communities Kettering Health serves. He is also responsible for advancing Kettering Health's philanthropic mission and brand, coordinating among its numerous foundations. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theonlydreambigpod/message
ONS member Rae Norrod, MS, RN, CNS, AOCN®, oncology service line manager at Kettering Health Network in Ohio and member of the West Central Ohio ONS Chapter, joins Stephanie Jardine, BSN, RN, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, to discuss how oncology nurses can safely administer irinotecan chemotherapy and manage its associated side effects and adverse events. This episode is part of an ongoing series about outpatient oncology drug infusion. The others are linked in the episode notes. Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at myoutcomes.ons.org by August 13, 2023. The planners and faculty for this episode have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. ONS is accredited as a provider of NCPD by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. Episode Notes Check out these resources from today's episode: Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. Previous Oncology Nursing Podcast episodes on outpatient oncology drug infusion ONS Voice article: The Case of the Pancreatic Phenomenon Oncology Nursing Forum article: Allelic Expression of Phase II Metabolizing Enzymes and Relationship to Irinotecan Toxicity ONS book: Clinical Guide to Antineoplastic Therapy: A Chemotherapy Handbook (Fourth Edition) ONS Communities thread on administering premeds to prevent diarrhea ONS learning library on safe handling of hazardous drugs ONS symptom management interventions for chemotherapy-induced diarrhea and mucositis ONS position statement: Education of the Registered Nurse Who Administers and Cares for the Individual Receiving Antineoplastic Therapies Irinotecan package insert Liposomal irinotecan package insert National Cancer Institute information on irinotecan To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities. To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email pubONSVoice@ons.org.
This episode features Nick Squillace, Director of the Kettering Health Network Operations Command Center. Here, he shared his experience building an efficient and effective command center, and talked about how the center will grow in the future. He also gave 3 quick tips for emerging leaders.
ONS member Rae Norrod, MS, RN, AOCN®, CNS, manager of the oncology service line at Kettering Health Network in Kettering, OH, and member of the West Central Ohio ONS Chapter, joins Stephanie Jardine, BSN, RN, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, to discuss how to safely administer bleomycin chemotherapy and what oncology nurses need to know. This episode is part of an ongoing series about outpatient oncology drug infusion. Other series' episodes are linked in the episode notes. Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at myoutcomes.ons.org by June 11, 2021. The planners and faculty for this episode have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. ONS is accredited as a provider of NCPD by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. Episode Notes Check out these resources from today's episode: Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. Previous Oncology Nursing Podcast episodes on outpatient oncology drug infusion ONS learning library on safe handling of hazardous drugs ONS position statement: Education of the Registered Nurse Who Administers and Cares for the Individual Receiving Antineoplastic Therapies Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing article: Cannabis Use and Bleomycin: An Overview and Case Study of Pulmonary Toxicity ONS book: Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy Guidelines and Recommendations for Practice ONS book: Clinical Guide to Antineoplastic Therapy: A Chemotherapy Handbook Fourth Edition MedLine Plus information on bleomycin National Cancer Institute information on bleomycin To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities. To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email pubONSVoice@ons.org.
ONS member Rae Norrod, MS, RN, AOCN®, CNS, manager of the oncology service line at Kettering Health Network in Kettering, OH, and member of the West Central Ohio ONS Chapter, joins Stephanie Jardine, BSN, RN, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, to discuss how to safely administer taxane chemotherapy treatments. This episode is part of an ongoing series about chemotherapy administration. The others are linked in the episode notes. Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at myoutcomes.ons.org by March 5, 2023. The planners and faculty for this episode have no conflicts to disclose, and the episode has no commercial support. ONS is accredited as a provider of NCPD by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. Episode Notes Check out these resources from today's episode: Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. Oncology Nursing Podcast Episode 92: Doxorubicin: The Infamous Red Devil Oncology Nursing Podcast Episode 143: Administer FOLFOX Chemotherapy Regimens With Confidence Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing article: Extremity Cooling: A Synthesis of Cryotherapy Interventions to Reduce Peripheral Neuropathy and Nail Changes From Taxane-Based Chemotherapy ONS book: Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy Guidelines and Recommendations for Practice ONS Communities thread on cryotherapy ONS Communities thread on safely administering exfoliants ONS course: Safe Handling Basics ONS course: Fundamentals of Chemotherapy Immunotherapy Administration ONS position statement: Education of the Registered Nurse Who Administers and Cares for the Individual Receiving Antineoplastic Therapies Journal of Oncology Pharmacy Practice article: Administration Sequence for Multi-Agent Oncolytic Regimens National Cancer Institute resources on taxanes
Paul is the Network Senior Vice President of Strategic Development for Kettering Health Network, a Truven 15 Top Health System comprised of nine hospitals, 12 emergency centers, and more than 120 outpatient locations serving southwest Ohio. In this role, Paul drives growth, development, and alignment of the network's strategy deployment, while building strong relationships with physicians and developing new services and lines of business by implementing creative improvements to processes. Pau is responsible for the Brain and Spine, Cardiovascular, Oncology, and Orthopedic Service-lines. This spans strategy, new business development, and ancillary operations across KHN. Leveraging 17 years of healthcare leadership experience Paul has helped organizations grow and fulfill their missions.. Here in Episode #102 Paul starts our show with a quote reminding us that we can achieve anything that we set our mind to, but only if we adjust our actions to do so; Paul walks us through his career journey and highlights what a day in the life of a Chief Strategy Officer looks like; He shares a dark moment story highlighting why we must all have an appreciation for the timing of our work; He gives us so many examples of using the power of storytelling to pull teams together; Paul tells how he gained a career AHA after discovering that his dog wasn't hunting; Paul shares why he is excited about the ongoing industry shifts related to cost, quality, and experience; Paul challenges healthcare organizations to focus on disrupting themselves; He gives examples of what he is doing across his teams to breakdown hierarchical systems and grow future leaders in his organization; Why living in the present and the future inspires his daily work; And how wandering with a purpose sets him up for success. Connect with Paul on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pshoover/ Access the Healthcare QualityCast LinkedIn Group: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/12203005/ Subscribe and Rate Us: Itunes (Apple) - The Healthcare QualityCast Earn Your Lean Six Sigma for Healthcare Certification: https://theqiacademy.mykajabi.com/
1. Tell us about yourself and your company Chris Luckett, Industrial, and Systems Engineering Degree. I have worked in various industries throughout my 20+ years. I am the Network Manager of Process Excellence for Kettering Health Network in Dayton Oh. Kettering Health Network is a faith-based award-winning healthcare system of 10 hospitals, 10 emergency departments, and 120 outpatient facilities serving southwest Ohio. With nearly 13,000 employees and 2,100 physicians and ~2B Revenue per year. Emergency Care, Cancer Care, Orthopedic Surgery and Rehab, Neuro & Stroke Care, and Heart Care. Our calling card is to provide improvement science and best practice throughout the NW. 2. How long have you been on your Lean journey? I've been involved in ‘Improvement Science' from the start of my career 20+ years ago. I was fortunate enough to start my career in consulting while Toyota Production Methodologies were becoming mainstream and CI with my engineering knowledge was just a great fit for me. Professionally, I have been part of many lean journeys through consulting work and with several companies in full-time roles. 3. Why did Kettering Health Systems embark on a Lean journey? What did you hope to gain? Let me take this in a little bit different direction. Over the years, I have become much less of a ‘purist' and describe what I do in my role now as ‘discipline agnostic'. There are very prominent foundations that I draw from Lean but have also found that for many situations, it can be narrow-sighted to expect each problem or opportunity to act the same way, especially in healthcare. So, whether it's Six Sigma/DMAIC, PDCA, 8D, Lean, Project Management, a well rounded ‘Improvement Scientist' can adapt his/her approach to effectively manage the opportunity. 4. What have been some of the biggest struggles on your journey? One of the biggest things that I continually find challenging and a struggle is the pressure to have the ‘right solution' vs experimenting my way to the best solution. Especially as you progress in roles and title in your career, people don't react well to planning, go and see, not making progress, failing. For me, I'm not afraid of failure or being fired or something, It's more of my internal struggle to manage my frustration when something doesn't turn out the way I had planned. We've all had the mountain top feeling when the RIE is outstanding and a tremendous success, but that doesn't happen all the time and so staying disciplined and not ‘chasing the high' can be a struggle. 5. What are some things you have learned from those struggles? I've had to learn to walk away. I make myself get in the car and go for a drive to detach in some ways. And I've had to manage my behaviors in those situations. When my mind is so focused on something, it can end up blinding me to adequate solutions. Inevitably, on Saturday morning when I'm mowing the lawn, it hits me and I'm ready to go and can't wait until Monday to be back at work trying the next thing. But, I've had to learn to discipline myself under ‘damage control' situations (sometimes of my own doing) by creating diversions, and managing my behavior are two big lessons that I've learned. 6. What have been some of your greatest successes on your Lean journey? I have some really neat, quantifiable, measurable things that I'm happy to say I've been a part of doing. But, for me, it comes back to the times that I've helped someone do something that they wouldn't have been able to do without my help. And there are really simple examples that make me most proud. Helping someone do their first executive presentation, someone who's become ‘control chart crazy' because they've seen the value through working with me, a nurse who had never really led a team on an...
Season 4 was shot and recorded at the Carolina Conference, Charlotte, NC and at Southern Adventist University, Collegedale, TN.Ryan's special guests for this season are made up of local pastors, students, Conference employees and church members in the Carolinas and employees of Southern Adventist University. "What is my purpose?" This question runs through every young adult's mind. For some, they have known their whole life and for others as they are heading off to college, they are still asking that question. In this episode, Ryan and his guests explore this question but not just from a sitting back and waiting to find it but actually pursuing it. Let us introduce you to this episode's special guests:Jon Daniel is currently a graduate student at Southern Adventist University, pursuing a master's degree in clinical mental health and counseling. Previously he spent 6 years doing youth ministry. Jon and his wife, Kim, live in Ooltewah TN and enjoy hiking trails, exploring coffee shops and other stereotypical millennial activities. Kevin Christenson is originally from Kettering, Ohio, where Kevin attended Spring Valley Academy and graduated Southern Adventist University with Bachelor’s degrees in International Business. During his time at SAU, he created the comedy sketch show Studio 4109: LIVE and starred as “Ashpenaz” in the 2014 Oshkosh Camporee: Daniel (and its documentary film) After interning for several years with Kettering Health Network in marketing and communications, he went into the booming Atlanta film industry. Kevin worked on major film and TV sets alongside A-list actors, musicians, directors, and producers; learning the industry’s best practices to help the church produce better storytelling. After having conversations about faith on set, he realized both worlds had a lot to gain from each other. www.thescratchnews.comwww.theprojectrefresh.orgwww.southern.edu Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=M3NMBKTL3YRA2&source=url)
Season 4 was shot and recorded at the Carolina Conference, Charlotte, NC and at Southern Adventist University, Collegedale, TN.Ryan's special guests for this season are made up of local pastors, students, Conference employees and church members in the Carolinas and employees of Southern Adventist University. When all is said and done, and we leave the bubble of Adventism after school, how do we live our faith in the real world? This is a concept and questions that all new graduates face every year. Join Ryan and his guests as they navigate the narratives of their own stories and perspectives on how they have experienced living their faith in the real world. Let us introduce you to this episode's special guests:Jon Daniel is currently a graduate student at Southern Adventist University, pursuing a master's degree in clinical mental health and counseling. Previously he spent 6 years doing youth ministry. Jon and his wife, Kim, live in Ooltewah TN and enjoy hiking trails, exploring coffee shops and other stereotypical millennial activities. Kevin Christenson is originally from Kettering, Ohio, where Kevin attended Spring Valley Academy and graduated Southern Adventist University with Bachelor’s degrees in International Business. During his time at SAU, he created the comedy sketch show Studio 4109: LIVE and starred as “Ashpenaz” in the 2014 Oshkosh Camporee: Daniel (and its documentary film) After interning for several years with Kettering Health Network in marketing and communications, he went into the booming Atlanta film industry. Kevin worked on major film and TV sets alongside A-list actors, musicians, directors, and producers; learning the industry’s best practices to help the church produce better storytelling. After having conversations about faith on set, he realized both worlds had a lot to gain from each other. www.thescratchnews.comwww.theprojectrefresh.orgwww.southern.edu Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=M3NMBKTL3YRA2&source=url)
In this second episode of our four part series, we meet Justin Willis, Nurse Manager, Centralized Patient Logistics Center at Broward Health, who brings first-hand experience of both Hurricane Dorian and the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. John Weimer, Vice President of Emergency and Trauma Services at Kettering Health Network, worked with his team to care for the victims of the mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio. What you'll learn: • Refining the evacuation processes (3:06) • Standardizing disaster equipment (4:30) • Triage tagging (5:30) • Managing patient intake in an emergency (7:22) • Redeploying resources (9:45)
Jimmy Phillips is the network marketing director for Kettering Health Network. www.adventistreview.org
Taking care of patients by integrating the continuum of prevention through care paths https://outcomesrocket.health/hale/2019/10/
"What a Difference a Block Makes: A Perspective From the United States on Setting up a Regional Anesthesia Service," by Nirmala R. Abraham, MD, Kettering Physician Network, Pain Management, Sycamore Medical Center, Kettering Health Network, Dayton, Ohio. From ASRA News, May 2019, pp. 36-37. See original article at www.asra.com/asra-news for figures and references. This material is copyrighted.
Jimmy Phillips is the network marketing director for Kettering Health Network.
Karl Haffner is the teaching pastor at the Kettering Seventh-day Adventist Church in Ohio and works with the Kettering Health Network in the Spiritual Mission department. He enjoys traveling and running and reads everything that John Ortberg writes. He is an award-winning author of a several books and writes regularly for a variety of periodicals.
https://www.youtube.com/user/WrightStateU Wright State University nursing students scream for help while injured patients lie motionless in an abandoned cement facility at Calamityville. These were scenes from a simulated explosion on the final day of a training program offered by Wright State University’s National Disaster Health Consortium (NDHC), an interprofessional program designed to standardize disaster preparedness, response and recovery training. The training took place Oct. 10-12 at Wright State’s National Center for Medical Readiness at Calamityville. Dozens of Wright State nursing students participated in the training along with professionals from Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. Kettering Health Network provided a visit from its MedFlight helicopter, allowing students to learn how to transport critical patients. “This is the type of emergency nursing that I’m interested in,” said Tyler Rowland, a senior nursing student at Wright State. “I have never seen another school that has this kind of program.” Participants received continuing education credit, a certificate from NDHC and Advanced Disaster Life Support certification. More information about the National Disaster Health Consortium, including registration details, is available at nursing.wright.edu or by calling 937-775-3572. More at http://webapp2.wright.edu/web1/newsroom/2018/10/17/disaster-training/
Whether it’s discussing equal pay for women healthcare professionals, uncovering #MeToo narratives in the medical profession, or examining studies comparing women physicians’ and surgeons’ outcomes favorably to men’s, there has never been a more important time for crucial conversations to take place about women’s health. And that is why National Women’s Health Week will be the subject of this special Talk Ten Tuesdays broadcast. Other segments to be featured on the broadcast include: Tuesday Focus: Lisa Banker, chief physician advisor and vice president for case management at McLeod Health in South Carolina, reported on her perspective on women’s health issues. Talk Ten Tuesdays News Desk: Laurie Johnson, senior healthcare consultant for Revenue Cycle Solutions LLC and ICD10monitor contributor, reported on the latest proposed codes for women’s health. CDI Report: Kathy Murchland, manager of CDI for Kettering Health Network in Dayton, Ohio, reported on her career transition from an inpatient coder to successfully rebranding the facility’s CDI department as “Documentation Excellence.” Women’s Health Report: Vinita Manoraj, MD CHCQM, medical director at Hackensack Meridian Health, reported on women’s health issues from her perspective. TalkBack: Talk Ten Tuesdays co-host Erica Remer, MD, FACEP, CCDS, founder and president of Erica Remer, MD, Inc., reported on a disturbing news report about a medical student who was asked to perform a pelvic exam on a woman who had been anesthetized before having a surgical procedure. Talk Ten Tuesdays. More than just talk.™
Presented June 15, 2015 by Mark Graban & Jason Coons See slides http://info.kainexus.com/continuous-improvement/culture-of-continuous- improvement/a-system-wide-approach-to-driving-process-improvement/webi nar A System-Wide Approach to Driving Process Improvement Get actionable advice from lessons learned in Kettering Health Network's 5 year process improvement journey Hear how Kettering's system-wide approach to projects, training, and daily problem solving led to $2.6 million of financial impact last year Learn about KaiNexus, the continuous improvement software platform that spread continuous improvement by enabling change management and accountability within the system