Recent Articles:

News 8/15/16

August 15, 2016 News Comments Off on News 8/15/16

Top News

image

HRSA announces $16 million in funding to help improve access to quality care in rural communities. The money will be split between several dozen healthcare organizations via four grant programs – telehealth network development, rural health research centers, small provider quality improvement, and rural veterans access programs.


Webinars

image

August 24 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Surviving the OCR Cybersecurity & Privacy Pre-Audit: Are You Truly Prepared?” Sponsored by HIStalk. Presenter: John Gomez, CEO, Sensato. Many healthcare organizations are not prepared for an OCR pre-audit of their privacy and security policies. This webinar will provide a roadmap, tools, and tactics that will help balance policies and budgets in adopting an OCR-friendly strategy that will allow passing with flying colors.

Contact Lorre for webinar services. Past webinars are on our HIStalk webinars YouTube channel.

Our “summer doldrums” webinar services sale ends Labor Day, September 5. Thanks to the several companies who have signed up for the always-busy fall webinar season.


Announcements and Implementations

image

Aledade forms a new primary care ACO in Arkansas – the first of its kind in the state – with help from the Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care. The Bethesda, MD-based company, which operates ACOs in 11 states, has already recruited 10 independent practices that collectively care for 12,000 Medicare beneficiaries.

image

Sansum Clinic (CA) achieves Stage 6 in its ambulatory EHR adoption. The 95 year-old organization implemented Epic in 2010.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

image

After expanding its RCM capabilities last month, Boca Raton, FL-based Modernizing Medicine plans to hire 20 billing analysts at its Roseville, CA location. It will host a hiring event this Friday and Saturday, presumably in Roseville.

image

Mental health app developer Happify raises $5 million in an investment round led by Hills Capital. The New York City-based startup will use the funding to hire staff and expand its “positive-outcomes intervention” tech to the enterprise market in a new venture dubbed Happify Health. Advisor and board member Andrew Sekel (Optum) has been named chairman.


Telemedicine

image

Dallas-based Teladoc hints at plans to roll out a specialty physician second-opinion consultation service, according to Lisa Bana, area vice president. “We do see a need for chronic illness support, and we are looking at it,” she says, adding that it would be similar to offerings from 2ndMD and Best Doctors.


Other

image

The local public radio station profiles several Kansas-based practices and collaboratives selected to participate in the latest round of the federal Million Hearts program, which seeks to prevent 1 million heart attacks, strokes, and heart-disease related deaths by 2017. Post Rock Family Medicine, along with several other practices, will use a Web-based risk calculator to better understand a patient’s risk of heart disease. Jen Brull, MD expects to incorporate patient data from Post Rock’s EHR to findings from the risk calculator. “Post Rock has a history of doing clinical improvement,” she says. “Those are things we’re trying to do here. Hopefully at the end they’ll have lower cardiovascular risk.”

image

Good news for “friends” who’ve lost IPhones in the chlorinated depths of the neighborhood pool: Rumors swirl that Apple’s next phone, which will likely debut next month, may be waterproof. A patent awarded to the company describes a system for color-balancing photos shot underwater, suggesting that the company may take things one step further and waterproof it. Unlike Samsung, which has three waterproof phones in production, Apple has never gone that route.


Contacts

JennMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 8/14/16

August 14, 2016 News Comments Off on Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 8/14/16

image

Sue Powers (Array Health) joins Virtual Health as senior vice president of sales.

image

Predictive analytics vendor CareSkore raises $4.3 million in its initial funding round. The company’s product analyzes EHR inpatient data to assess a patient’s clinical and financial risk. The startup, which bills itself as a “predictive population health management” company, graduated from Y Combinator earlier this year.

image

Lee Memorial Health System (FL) brings Aegis Health Group on board to help evaluate its employer-directed population health strategy. The group will help LMHS determine the best plan of attack in reaching out to local employers and assisting with employee care needs.

image image image

Reston, VA-based Altruista Health brings on Greg Jensen (Colorado Access) as vice president of business intelligence, Bob Kalchthaler (Virtacore Systems) as CFO, and Eric Tryon (UnitedHealthcare) (not pictured) as vice president of product management. The company also promoted Mike McKitterick to executive vice president of implementation.

Multispecialty Signature Medical Group and managed care services company Heritage Medical Systems partner to form Missouri Collaborative Healthcare, a population health management venture that will serve patients along Missouri’s I-70 corridor. The collaborative will provide local PCPs with access to high-risk case managers, specialty clinics, hospitalists and post-transitional care, and pharmacist and social services.


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

News 8/11/16

August 11, 2016 News Comments Off on News 8/11/16

Top News

image

HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell announces that National Coordinator Karen DeSalvo, MD will leave ONC to focus on her HHS role as acting assistant secretary for health, which she took on in 2014. Since that time, Burwell explained in her announcement, “Karen has been instrumental in supporting families affected by the water crisis in Flint, in promoting nutritional and physical fitness through the development of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the events surrounding the 60th Anniversary of the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports, and Nutrition, and in leading the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. This year, she launched Public Health 3.0, an innovative cross-sector approach to strengthening local public health and building healthier communities. I am deeply grateful to Karen for her leadership and for her incredible service in both of these roles for nearly two years.”

image

Principal Deputy National Coordinator Vindell Washington, MD will continue DeSalvo’s crusade to advance interoperabilty when he takes over as national coordinator tomorrow. It will be interesting to see if his tenure at the top lasts as long as his predecessors. DeSalvo, Farzad Mostashari, MD David Blumenthal, MD Robert Kolodner, MD and David Brailer, MD retained the title for between two and three years.


Webinars

image

August 24 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Surviving the OCR Cybersecurity & Privacy Pre-Audit: Are You Truly Prepared?” Sponsored by HIStalk. Presenter: John Gomez, CEO, Sensato. Many healthcare organizations are not prepared for an OCR pre-audit of their privacy and security policies. This webinar will provide a roadmap, tools, and tactics that will help balance policies and budgets in adopting an OCR-friendly strategy that will allow passing with flying colors.

Contact Lorre for webinar services. Past webinars are on our HIStalk webinars YouTube channel.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

image

The Chartis Group launches a physician leadership institute that will bring together physician executives from hospitals, medical groups, and payers to collaborate on alignment, engagement, and organizational and operational strategy.


Announcements and Implementations

image

Doctors Imaging (LA) selects AbbaDox RIS and other radiology services from IDS to help it improve scheduling, registration, and administrative workflows.

image

Health Information Trust Alliance partners with Children’s Health (TX) to offer cybersecurity solutions to physician practices with 75 or fewer employees. Eighty practices have already deployed the CyberAid service, which includes installation assistance, hardware, software, monitoring services, training, and support. Children’s Health is working to spread the word about the service. “Our organization hosts private physician practices on our electronic medical record (EMR) system,” says Pamela Arora, SVP and CIO, Children’s Health. “Supporting this program enables us to more fully protect our organization, these physician practices and their patients from risks associated with cyber threats.”

Health and Wellness Education Partners develops an online continuing education resource for PCPs focused on optimizing primary care for patients with rare diseases.


People

image

Medicomp Systems promotes Jason Valore to general manager-Asia/Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

image

Matt Wilson (Health Outcomes Sciences) joins Huron Consulting Group as managing director in its healthcare practice.


Telemedicine

Encore Unlimited adds CHC Telehealth’s virtual consult technology to its workers’ compensation case management services.

image

TelaCare Health Solutions takes up temporary headquarters in Fishers, OH, while it waits for permanent office space to be renovated in a local office building, The company, which employs 150 at offices in Toledo, OH, Alabama, and Texas, has already hired eight employees at the new location, and plans to hire three to five more in the next several weeks.


Other

image

Six physicians develop AirRx, an app designed to assist volunteer physicians handle medical emergencies they aren’t familiar with during flight. The app includes 23 scenarios of the most common medical emergencies in-flight. (I had no idea between 150 and 200 such events occur in the friendly skies each day.) And yes, it even works in airplane mode.


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

HIStalk Practice Interviews Justin Barnes, Chief Growth Officer, IHealth

August 11, 2016 News Comments Off on HIStalk Practice Interviews Justin Barnes, Chief Growth Officer, IHealth

Justin Barnes is chief growth officer at IHealth.

image

You left Greenway in early 2014 and recently joined IHealth as a partner and chief growth officer. How did you fill the time in between?
My number-one priority when choosing to depart Greenway, which was a very difficult decision, was to take a little bit of time off to just recharge the batteries. I had my hands in three fairly large pots in the industry. Greenway was one of them. I was doing a lot of work on Capitol Hill and then also helping to start and lead several industry associations. I was running in a lot of directions for well over a decade, and it was time to pull back a little bit, to reflect on what I’d been able to accomplish, what I still wanted to do, and where my passions were. To figure out what’s next, I believe you’ve got to slow down, reflect, and really be deliberate about your path of life. For you, for me, and for a lot of our friends, our work is intricately involved with our life in general. We compartmentalize probably fairly well, but we’re very passionate people, we all care about healthcare, our society, and our country, and so you just can’t separate them morning, noon, and night. It’s all interwoven.

I know you have a real soft spot for entrepreneurs. How did you stay in that world during your downtime?
I’m very faith-based, as you know, and so I prayed about it. I didn’t want to take myself too far out of entrepreneurialism and fortunately was introduced to ATDC, the Atlanta-based Advanced Technology Development Center, which is a technology incubator out of Georgia Tech. It was kind of love at first sight in a way. They saw my background and wanted to get me more involved with the 12 companies they had at the time. That was a great opportunity to see what’s evolving in the industry and how startups are managing today. It was really interesting to see how running a startup is different than it was when we built Relay Health and then Greenway. It’s very different today.

What drew you to IHealth?
I’ve always felt that navigating care providers is the future of healthcare. It’s what I did with Greenway. It’s why I did all the public policy work. It’s why I did all the industry association work. With Greenway, and a lot of the industry, it was all about innovation technology; that’s kind of where the industry was at the time. Now, with all these evolving payment and care delivery models, it’s about service. It still comes down to hands-on service – helping providers, sitting with them, and navigating them through their challenges, which are increasingly related to moving them from fee-for-service into value-based care.

During my time off, I asked myself, how do I continue on this mission? This is still my mission. It really and truly is. Again, it comes back to faith. I prayed about it and then happened to run into a good friend of mine who is a partner at Fulcrum Equity Partners, a private equity group here in Atlanta. He’d loved what I’d done at Relay and Greenway, and wanted to try and find a way for me to work with Fulcrum. They introduced me to a company that was looking to do a couple of acquisitions. When I met with them, they were all about revenue cycle and they’ve done very, very well on that side of things.

Another company that they were looking at acquiring did very well, again, on the revenue cycle side, but also had a great customer base in the hospital environment. One side of the business that was growing, IHealth Solutions, was really practice-based, focusing on credentialing and revenue cycle. The other company they were looking at, called DNA Health, was looking at the hospital market, but did some practices as well. They focused on revenue cycle, but also had care coordination, population health, and analytics. When you put those two organizations together, you have the full suite of innovation-enabled services for the practice market as well as the hospital market. That’s when I said, wait a second. That is the secret sauce to helping providers navigate the future of healthcare.

They were leaning on my knowledge and expertise to really fashion this type of opportunity into something more substantial, and so that’s really how it all came together. It was meant to be. It was just three business partners that we congealed very quickly, very well. These were very mature organizations in their own regard, but coming together made them much stronger. I think today they have over 300 employees globally. We’re off to the races.

How is IHealth poised to help physicians move to these new value-based care models. What does that actually look like to your average MD working daily in the trenches?
I see it as two parts, maybe even three. The first part is, let’s look at what you’re doing today. Every single practice, and hospital for that matter, that we walk into has so many inefficiencies and opportunities for revenue. Despite what they’re already doing, they’re not getting paid anywhere near what they should be. You and I, we would never stand for that. If I work, I should get paid fairly and compensated for my work. Most providers feel that way, but they don’t have the innovation or the service to be able to capitalize on that and optimize that, and so the number-one step is to stabilize where they are today. Optimize their fee-for-service contracts, make sure they’re getting paid properly based on their fee schedules, make sure their denials are as low as they possibly can be, send out the cleanest claim, authorize 100 percent of patients before you put them through the entire process, and make sure all the doctors are credentialed.

I can’t even begin to tell you the tens of thousands of dollars going to practices and millions of dollars that we’re requesting for hospitals on top of where they were. We’re unique in that we go 100-percent at-risk. We don’t charge a nickel until we collect additional revenue for you. We’ll stabilize where they are, optimize where they are, and even help them modify some of their EHR templates and reporting to get additional money. We also look for risk-based contracts they might be able to engage in. IHealth has a whole team dedicated just to that. Then we’ll go back and educate the practice on what they can do. Once we register them for qualifying programs, then we’ll modify and customize their EHR for capturing all those metrics and then manage that to make sure they’re hitting red light, green light, yellow light ….

We’ll manage it all through our dashboard and then produce your analytics, your reports, and then attest for you. It really is soup to nuts. No one has ever done this before in the history of healthcare that I am aware of, going in 100 percent at risk. It’s all service. This is really going from stabilizing to optimizing to properly positioning them for tomorrow.

You mentioned that the world of startups is different than it used to be. How has the revenue cycle world changed over the last several years? What sort of challenges are physicians faced with now that they may not have faced five years ago?
The revenue cycle world is completely different than it was even three years ago. Payment models are becoming much more complicated, not just with ICD-10 but with fee schedules and risk-based contracts. Hospitals and practices are under more pressure and they are having their payments held up more than ever before by payers and others. This is very complicated and I’ve got to be very respectful here. The doctors need an ally on their side. I know how to go get that money, how to manage their revenue cycle so that they can go collect a fair amount of money from their payers. Right now, money is being held up through no fault of their own. It’s because there are many more complexities and a lot of the billing staff just don’t have that expertise to file that claim cleanly initially with all the right authorizations so they can get paid much faster.

This has changed so dramatically over the last probably two years. You now have to have a completely different RCM strategy if you want to get paid. Most providers have got to be off by 15 to 20 percent, if not more, if they haven’t changed anything in the last couple of years, and I know that from sitting with them. That’s just traditional fee-for-service, never mind once you layer on a risk-based contract or any type of value-based care contract. That’s another conversation altogether. We call that revenue cycle performance, which is allowing you to get paid for what you’re doing and optimizing what you’re doing.

It seems providers are getting hit with something every few months, whether it’s a new federal program or deadline of some sort. Have you ever seen this pace of change?
No, I’ve never seen this pace. I don’t see it slowing down anytime soon, either. It’s almost a call to the industry. Our industry needs help. It needs service. This is what I feel that all of us should be focused on, really engaging with these providers and helping them through the next steps. There might be 50 initiatives for even a single state, but you know what? There’s probably three that make the most sense for a practice or a cardiologist in Florida, or for an OB/GYN in Georgia.

We don’t know where the final MACRA rule will land, but I’m thinking there’s going to be some type of MIPS advancement in 2017, so we’re positioning all of our practices that way. If there is a 90-day reporting period in 2017, we want to be ready for it. I think there’s going to be. I think CMS is going to offer that option in 2017 because they don’t want to delay this until 2018.

Do you think MACRA will start on January 1 as proposed?
Here’s the way I think it’s going to play out: We get the final rule in November. I do believe that there is going to be an option that says if you want to have a 90-day reporting period, you can start July 1 and end September 30. If you want to start October 1st and end December 31st, and then report in February of 2018, you can do that. It might be voluntary in 2017, with the program really getting off the ground in 2018. It would give people time to test and to have options to see if they can perfect the process.

CMS could also say we’re going to start mandatory reporting October 1. If you want to start July 1 with the test data, that’s great, but no matter what, you have to start October 1. I wouldn’t be surprised about that, either. I think you’re going to have a 90-day reporting period in 2017, either mandatory or voluntary.

What will be key to helping physicians succeed with these new advanced payment models?
My advice is to go ahead and put a plan together for either MIPS and APM engagements or for quality reporting initiatives. Have a plan ready to go and then discuss amongst your team and board in 2016. That is the best way to position. That way, you are deliberately navigating the future of healthcare. You’re not waiting to take what balls are being thrown at you. You have proactively put a strategy in place to navigate it and see revenue increases. Again, it’s not just about surviving, it’s about thriving. I do believe that there will be more money available to you in the future than there is today if you deliberately navigate these new payment and care delivery models.

You have worked with a number of administrations over the last several years. How would you characterize each one as they related to healthcare technology? How will the next administration change the healthcare IT landscape?
Bush put the framework for strategic action into place. He’s the one who actually put this entire plan that we’re moving through in technology and innovation into place. Every single component that we are implementing today still stands on top of that framework. Then the Obama administration basically invested in that plan – institutionalizing it and making sure that we had all the necessary incentives. You have to have the infrastructure built. That’s exactly what that administration did. In 2009, it was ARRA and HITECH. Then they have layered accountable care and now MACRA on top of it. That’s the evolution of what every administration has done. Nobody has ever done it perfectly, nor will anyone ever do it perfectly because perfect is in the eye of the beholder. I’m not going to give it an A+, but they have achieved what they set out to achieve in both of those administrations.

Looking at the Trump and the Clinton campaigns, I don’t see any major changes to what has already been done. I’m not talking about a single payer healthcare system. I’m not getting into the health insurance world. In talking with staffers from both of those organizations, I’ve yet to hear anyone say, "We are going to go back to paper. We are taking IT out of healthcare. We don’t believe in shared savings. We don’t believe in risk-based contracts." There’s none of that. The fee-for-service model is no longer in healthcare’s future. I have not heard from a single person that we’re going to repeal MACRA.

This is my prediction: These programs will continue on, no matter who wins the election. I do not see a big wave of funding. I do not see anybody saying, "We need another $4 billion for this or $80 billion for that." I don’t see that at all. I do see the tying of payments to quality, value, and efficiencies in healthcare. That is what I see from both parties.

Do you have any final thoughts?
No, I think this was great. I haven’t done any real interviews since joining and being very heads down with IHealth, so I’m happy we could make this work.


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

News 8/10/16

August 10, 2016 News Comments Off on News 8/10/16

Top News

image

Government initiatives to combat the opioid epidemic take center stage this week: US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, MD launches Turn The Tide Rx, a national campaign and resource-rich website that aims to help physicians understand and share opioid prescribing practices, and better communicate with patients seeking opioid prescriptions. The site offers a two-page fact sheet on leveraging prescription drug monitoring databases.

Meanwhile, the states of Alabama and Rhode Island partner with the AMA and their respective state medical societies to develop Web- and print-based educational toolboxes geared towards helping physicians alleviate prescription drug abuse. The toolboxes, funded by the US Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and scheduled for release next month, will include practice-specific recommendations to help physicians treat patients with chronic or acute pain and opioid use disorders, among other resources.


Webinars

image

August 24 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Surviving the OCR Cybersecurity & Privacy Pre-Audit: Are You Truly Prepared?” Sponsored by HIStalk. Presenter: John Gomez, CEO, Sensato. Many healthcare organizations are not prepared for an OCR pre-audit of their privacy and security policies. This webinar will provide a roadmap, tools, and tactics that will help balance policies and budgets in adopting an OCR-friendly strategy that will allow passing with flying colors.

We’re expecting great attendance for this webinar, given that over 900 people have viewed John’s last presentation, “Ransomware in Healthcare: Tactics, Techniques, and Response,” on the HIStalk YouTube channel.


Announcements and Implementations

Forward Health Group and Leavitt Partners team up to offer turn-key consulting and technology solutions to providers and payers applying to the Comprehensive Primary Care Plus program.

image

Medical Advantage Group joins the Great Lakes Practice Transformation Network. Funded by CMS as part of its Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative, the Altarum Institute-led GLPTN is a group of 33 healthcare organizations that have pledged to deliver quality improvement services to over 2,000 healthcare providers in Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio.


People

image

Cassidy Tsay, MD (Blue Shield of California) joins CAPG as vice president of business development.

image

Marcus Gordon (Evolent Health) joins XG Health Solutions as chief marketing and communications officer.

image

Pam Paris (NextGen) joins Harmony Healthcare IT as director of product management and development.


Telemedicine

A National Business Group survey of its large-employer members shows that 90 percent of companies will offer telemedicine services to employees next year, a 20-percent increase over 2016. Nearly all large employers plan on offering telemedicine by 2020 – a statistic that no doubt will fuel the fire of companies looking to jump into the telemedicine space, and providers looking to finally take the leap of incorporating the technology into their daily (or after-hours) routines.


Research and Innovation

MGMA reports that physician-owned multispecialty practices spent over $32,500 per FTE on IT equipment, staff, maintenance, and other related expenses last year. Related data also shows that technology expenses at such practices have increased by 40 percent since 2009 – no surprise given the current the government’s tech-heavy push to value-based payment programs. What would be more interesting to me is to overlap these statistics (which you can purchase for the low, low member price of $655) with quality scores. I’d also love to know if providers felt the ROI was sufficient in a number of areas – improved workflows, patient satisfaction, etc.


Other

image

Could drones soon enter the teleconferencing market? A new Google patent suggests they will, given that it “outlines a type of small drone that’s been fitted with a screen, that could project a virtual version of someone as it hovers around the office.” Patent details suggest that the drone could be powered by a smartphone sitting in the drone, or paired remotely with another device. Mike Murphy, fast becoming one of my favorite Quartz contributors, asks a pertinent question: Why would anyone want this? “Drones are loud,” he points out, “they have generally very short battery lives (shorter than your average meeting), and their propellers can very easily chop pieces off of you if you’re not careful.”


Sponsor Updates

image

  • Aprima customers make over 150 blankets for the Children’s Medical Center in Dallas at its annual users conference.
  • GE Healthcare looks at how its Centricity technology is impacting Olympic athletes in Rio.
  • The Dallas Business Journal runs “Three Questions with … Michael Nissenbaum, CEO of Aprima Medical Software.”

Blog Posts


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

Platinum Sponsors


  

  

  


  

Gold Sponsors


 

Subscribe to Updates




Search All HIStalk Sites



Recent Comments

  1. The article about Pediatric Associates in CA has a nugget with a potentially outsized impact: the implication that VFC vaccines…

  2. Re: Walmart Health: Just had a great dental visit this morning, which was preceded by helpful reminders from Epic, and…

  3. NextGen announcement on Rusty makes me wonder why he was asked to leave abruptly. Knowing him, I can think of…

  4. "New Haven, CT-based medical billing and patient communications startup Inbox Health..." What you're literally saying here is that the firm…

  5. RE: Josephine County Public Health department in Oregon administer COVID-19 vaccines to fellow stranded motorists. "Hey, you guys over there…