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Launch! at Health 2.0

Launch

Launch! is always one of the most fun and most exciting sessions at Health 2.0. Ten new companies demo their product on stage for the very first time during at the 10th Annual Fall Conference. Previous Launch! winners have included Castlight Health, Basis, and OM*Signal and last year’s winner MedWand, which just beat out Gliimpse–itself since bought by Apple.

This year’s finalists are:
  • Valeet Healthcares platform gives patients personalized health information while allowing providers to have a rounding tool and giving healthcare systems a dashboard to track metrics.
  • gripAble is an innovative mobile technology that bridges the gap between functional therapy and objective measurement of upper-limb function.
  • Cricket Health works with payor and provider customers to slow the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD), manage the transition from CKD to End Stage Renal Disease, and improve ESRD care.
  • Qidza is a population health mobile platform that enables parents work with their physicians to track their children’s developmental milestones
  • Docent Health guides health systems to embrace a consumer-centric approach to healthcare by curating patient experiences.
  • Albeado builds Healthcare prediction and optimization solutions based on proprietary data science platform which combines clinical AI and Graph-Based Machine Learning.
  • Siren Care offers temperature-sensing smart socks which provide health data on foot ulcers, hot spots, and more to prevent future injuries.
  • MDwithME integrates soft and hardware components in a suitcase enabling full remote physical exams with an option of instant or delayed physician’s consult with quality of testing that equals or exceeds the current state of art.
  • DayTwo maintains health and prevent disease utilizing a microbiome platform, starting with personalized nutrition based on gut bacteria, aiming to normalize blood sugar levels and cultivate a healthy gut microbiome.
  • Regeneration Health is a health ecosystem powered by artificial intelligence that collects and monitors health in real time and curates free personalized health info and recommendations based on integrative medicine.

You can see them on Wednesday, the last day of the Health 2.0 10th Annual Fall Conference Sept 25-8 in Santa Clara, CA.

Jess Jacobs, POTS & her bio

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As part of Health 2.0’s 10 Year Global Retrospective Awards (yes, winners to be celebrated at Health 2.0’s 10th Annual Fall Conference September 25-8), I wrote a bunch of bios. One patient and friend of mine Jess Jacobs has (as many of you know) recently died. Fellow POTS patient Greg Norman didn’t much care for the brief bio I wrote about Jess. So below the fold please read his tweet storm about it! And of course please comment.
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Cybersecurity Check In

No one likes to think about the possibility that patients might be hurt or killed as a result of cyber attacks. But all signs indicate that this is a real possibility and a serious problem. Attacks on Health IT systems such as EHRs or patient portals, electronic medical devices, or on standard healthcare digital systems can be a threat to patient safety.

To combat the cybersecurity threat, Congress and the Obama administration passed the  Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015, which established mechanisms for the US Government to collaborate with private industry to respond to cybersecurity threats. Lawmakers recognized the unique problems with cybersecurity in health technology and created the Health Care Industry Cybersecurity Task Force, charged to make recommendations to Congress regarding specific cybersecurity issues.  To paraphrase, we are to investigate:

  1. What can the healthcare industry learn from other industries about cybersecurity?
  2. What are the special challenges that we face with cybersecurity in healthcare?
  3. What are the difficulties protecting electronic health record (EHR) systems and networked electronic medical devices?
  4. What cybersecurity study materials should the healthcare industry be exposed to?
  5. How should an organization designed to coordinate the sharing of cybersecurity threats between healthcare industry players and the US Federal Government operate?
  6. Finally, we were asked give Congress a written report summarizing all of the above.

Our Task Force is asking the healthcare, patient and technology communities for help in this assignment. We are asking for discussion on these issues to be on platforms like The Health Care Blog, Reddit and Twitter, so the community may contribute new ideas as well as refine the ideas contributed by others. We are taking a crowdsourcing approach to cybersecurity ideation so we can aggregate and assess what people have to say about these issues.  

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An Update on Price / Cost Transparency + A Promising New Service

flying cadeuciiTransparency for consumers on prices and costs is a bipartisan goal in healthcare.  The good news is progress is afoot.  The bad news: that progress is still painfully slow.  This blog presents a quick status update with discussion of and links to some recent reports and events.

The Healthcare Incentives Improvement Institute (HCI3) and Catalyst for Payment Reform (CPR) have tracked state healthcare price transparency laws and their implementation for the past four years.  In a July 2016 report they found the following:  on an A to F scale, three states got As (Colorado, Maine, New Hampshire); one got a B (Oregon); two scored Cs (Virginia and Vermont), one got a D (Arizona), and 43 got Fs.

That’s an improvement over 2015 when only one state—New Hampshire—got an A.

The two groups primarily assessed whether the states’ price transparency web sites presented the information in an understandable and consumer-friendly way.

Despite the poor scores for most states, Francois de Brantes of HCI3 and one of the report’s authors told me:  “We’re actually optimistic.  A lot of states are beginning to pay more serious attention to this…we think a third to half of them could get As or Bs in the next few years… if they take the right steps.”

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The Health 2.0 10 Year Global Retrospective Awards

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Yup, more blowing the trumpet about Health 2.0! We’re celebrating our 10th conference in 2 weeks and over the summer we’ve been looking back at the people and organizations who’ve made a mark in health tech, digital health, Health 2.0, or whatever you want to call it. For ten years Health 2.0 has showcased and connected with thousands of technologies, companies, innovative thought leaders, and patient activists through our many events and conferences, challenges, code-a-thons, market research, blog posts, pilot programs and general industry promotion. Since our first conference in 2007, Health 2.0 has grown into a global movement and community of over 100,000 entrepreneurs, developers, and health care stakeholders, and 110+ chapters on six continents

As we prepare to usher in the 10th year of Health 2.0, we want to take this opportunity to reflect on and recognize the accomplishments of this powerful community and movement. To do this, we asked our community to nominate the top influencers from the world of Health 2.0. Over the summer thousands of people voted and now the finalists are showcased on Health 2.0’s 10 Year Global Retrospective Awards for all to see. It’s time to vote for the finalists, and the winners will be celebrated at Health 2.0’s 10th Annual Fall Conference on September 25-8 in Santa Clara, California.

Please go take a look at the finalists and vote for your favorites!

A Hole in the Heart, Part II

Click here for part 1 “A Hole in the Heart, Part I” If you have NOT read part I, we highly recommend that you go there now and then come back and read the continuation. – The Editors 

Analysis of the Randomized Control Trials

The 3 randomized trials performed tested two closure devices – CLOSURE I tested the STARFLEX device (NMT Medical, Boston, MA). The PC and RESPECT trial tested the AMPLATZER device (St. Jude Medical, St. Paul, MN).  Let’s look at each study closely.

CLOSURE I (Starflex device)

This study looked at patients between 18 and 60 years of age who had a prior stroke or a transient ischemic attack within the prior 6 months. This was a resoundingly negative study.  At two years, the 12/447 patients in the closure group suffered a recurrent stroke, while 13/462 patients in the medical therapy suffered a recurrent stroke.  The trial, however, reveals one of the important chinks in the armor of the randomized control trial (RCT).  Randomized control trials are only as good as the patients they enroll.  Enroll the wrong patients, and the results don’t tell you much.  CLOSURE-1 didn’t provide closure because they included patients with transient ischemic attacks (TIAs).

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Plans For the Quality Payment Program in 2017: Pick Your Track

Screen Shot 2016-07-07 at 2.30.28 PMAs the baby boom generation ages, 10,000 people enter the Medicare program each day. Facing that demand, it is essential that Medicare continues to support physicians in delivering high-quality patient care. This includes increasing its focus on patient outcomes and reducing the obstacles that make it harder for physicians to practice good care.

The bipartisan Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) offers the opportunity to advance these goals and put Medicare on surer footing. Among other policies, it repeals the Sustainable Growth Rate formula and its annual payment cliffs, streamlines the existing patchwork of Medicare reporting programs, and provides opportunities for physicians and other clinicians to earn more by focusing on quality patient care. We are referring to these provisions of MACRA collectively as the Quality Payment Program.

We received feedback on our April proposal for implementing the Quality Payment Program, both in writing and as we talked to thousands of physicians and other clinicians across the country. Universally, the clinician community wants a system that begins and ends with what’s right for the patient. We heard from physicians and other clinicians on how technology can help with patient care and how excessive reporting can distract from patient care; how new programs like medical homes can be encouraged; and the unique issues facing small and rural non-hospital-based physicians. We will address these areas and the many other comments we received when we release the final rule by November 1, 2016.

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Health 2.0–Expediting The Health Technology Buying Process

Like I told you, there’ll be a lot more on THCB about what’s going to be happening at Health 2.0 coming up Sept 25-8. Today’s edition–MarketConnect a new program for getting new products into provider organizations, modeled on something we’ve been doing as part of our pilot programs in Health 2.0’s Catalyst group–Matthew Holt

Through vigorous vetting of health technology companies and matching based on prospective buyers’ needs, Health 2.0 is simplifying and expediting the health tech buying and selling process during the 10th Annual Fall Conference on September 25-28 in Santa Clara. Health 2.0’s MarketConnect is an invitation only forum for buyers and sellers to be pre-matched for market compatibility and facilitate technology acquisition. Executives from organizations such as Kaiser Permanente, Cedars-Sinai and UPMC will be looking to connect with technology companies.

The networking program is designed to break down the barriers of technology adoption within large health systems and health organizations to connect tech companies directly with pre-qualified executives that are interested in seeing vetted technologies that are relevant to problems that are trying to solve.

How it works: Health 2.0 works with closely with buyers to identify specific areas where technology is needed and a solution is required within 12 months. Health 2.0 then assess the digital health marketplace and identifies relevant companies aligned with buyer’s’ technology needs and connect buyers with hand-picked companies during our MarketConnect event at Health 2.0’s Annual Fall Conference. During the event, buyers will meet with compatible companies with the intent of purchasing suitable technologies. If you want to know more contact Pa*****@********on.com

 

The Top Five Recommendations For Improving the Patient Experience

Healthcare organizations are working diligently to improve patient satisfaction and the patient experience of care. After all, patient experience of care is a critical quality domain used to evaluate hospital performance under the 2016 CMS Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program (accounts for 25 percent of a hospital’s VBP score)—and comes with the potential for a penalty or bonus.

Patient experience of care is also one of three essential dimensions of the industry-guiding IHI Triple Aim (a framework for optimizing health system performance):

  1. Improving the patient experience of care.
  2. Improving the health of populations.
  3. Reducing the per capita cost of healthcare.

Improving the patient experience can seem like a moving target influenced by a variety of factors. For one, despite the fact that healthcare organizations have been talking about and focusing on patient experience and patient satisfaction for a long time, universally accepted definitions don’t exist. For example, patient satisfaction survey vendors use contrasting language, leading to varying patient interpretations. The industry also lacks conclusive research that proves the connections between patient satisfaction and outcomes. And with so many resources focused on improving patient satisfaction, it’s no surprise healthcare leaders want to understand the connection.

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A Hole In the Heart, Part I

Strokes are the third leading cause of death in the United States. 800,000 people suffer a stroke every year, and the consequences are frequently devastating. Lives are not just lost, but changed forever – speech permanently silenced, arms and legs turned into useless appendages. The brain is very expensive real estate and it is little surprise that a clot the size of a pinhead lodged in a blood vessel feeding the brain is all that is needed to wreak a devastation most fear worse than death.

Most of the time the source of the debris that results in a stroke can be readily identified, but at least one-third of the time no source can be found. These have been termed cryptogenic strokes by the medical community mostly because it is an intelligent sounding phrase when your doctor does not know why something happened. Almost 30% of strokes in patients under the age of 55 are found to be cryptogenic. Until the mid 80’s there was little progress in identifying the cause of these strokes, but around the same time I was wondering why Duran Duran was running through jungles in Sri Lanka on MTV, cardiologists began injecting air into the heart to shed light on this mystery.

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