Recent Articles:

HIStalk Practice Interviews Farzad Mostashari, MD CEO, Aledade

April 8, 2015 News Comments Off on HIStalk Practice Interviews Farzad Mostashari, MD CEO, Aledade

Farzad Mostashari MD is founder and CEO of Aledade.

image

What has the last year been like for Aledade? You mentioned in an interview with Mr. H last year that it will take the “right tools, right tech, right booths on the ground, with the right team, with the right primary care providers” to really make progress in achieving the triple aim. How have those factors come together for your team and clients?
It’s been super fun for me. It’s so totally unlike the federal service, but there’s also a similarity as well. It does feel like we are embarking on something that really matters and that has the potential to impact a whole lot of people. It does feel like I’ve been training for this my whole career, pulling on the skills around analytics, technology, and change management in small practices to start an operation that’s small today, with the ability to be successful when it’s really at scale. We’re keeping our eye on the prize and feet on the ground. We always talked about that at ONC. That’s really what Aledade, if you recall, is all about, keeping your eye on the prize, on the North Star.

Process-wise, it’s been amazing to grow the team. We’re now 25 people, and we’re hiring one or two people a month. We are looking for EHR implementation specialists right now – people who are ninjas with some of the larger ambulatory EHR systems – to really do that turbo charging, that optimizing, that me and our doctors certainly feel is lacking. They have the systems but they haven’t been optimized, and so that’s something we’re engaged in actively with our practices.

We’re growing as the flurry of recent press releases has attested. We started off in four states – New York, Maryland, Delaware, and Arkansas – last year. This year, there’s been a great reception to this idea of independent primary care providers being able to take on these new alternative payment models for which, frankly, they are in a great position to succeed and thrive at with help. We’re now in Kansas. We’re in West Virginia. We’re in Louisiana. We’re in Tennessee, and there’s another state soon to be announced.

Has your business model changed over the last year?
No, it’s still the same basic model. This whole alternative payment model thing says you get paid for outcomes, and our business model is still predicated on showing outcomes. There’s a pretty small membership fee to make sure the docs are committed, but our interests are lined 100 percent with the payers, and with the providers and the patients. Participation in Meaningful Use is still a requirement to work with us, and most of our partner doctors are working on stepping up to stage two.

How many practices and patients does Aledade now serve?
We currently operate three ACOs across four states (DE, MD, AR, NY), covering nearly 30,000 Medicare beneficiaries. Additionally, we are currently undertaking physician recruitment in several other states, including Tennessee, West Virginia, Louisiana, and Kansas. 

How are you handling distributing payments to the individual providers Aledade works with?
As you know, in the Medicare Shared Savings Program, ACOs receive 50 percent of the savings they achieve against Medicare predictions of cost of care. Of that amount, 60 percent is distributed to our individual practices, with 40 percent reinvested in further improvements to the ACO.

Your time at Brookings helped you to better understand what makes an ACO work and what doesn’t. Have those findings generally held up now that you’re seeing ACOs from a boots-on-the-ground perspective?Absolutely – and interesting that you use the phrase "boots on the ground."  While at Brookings, we identified four key competencies for running a successful physician-led ACO:

  1. Identifying and managing high-risk patients.
  2. Developing high-value referral networks.
  3. Using event notifications for hospital admissions, transfers, discharges, and other similar events.
  4. Engaging patients.

A little less than a year into running Aledade, we believe those conclusions even more strongly. We’ve learned a lot from our practices – as well as our regional partners – and it is truly these capabilities, coupled with our data and analytic expertise, as well as the work of our regional partners, that have helped our ACOs succeed thus far.

The foundation of all of our ACO success though, has really been the identification and engagement of top physician leaders everywhere we’re running ACOs.  We’ve been fortunate to partner with docs who are leaders in their communities, are well-versed in EHRs, and, most importantly, share our vision and values for what ACOs can accomplish.

How have Next Generation ACOs impacted your business? Are your practices interested in it?
I really appreciated the Next Generation ACO proposal. Maybe not this year, but next year I think some of our ACOs will be ready to take on that challenge, especially if there are some tweaks made to that model. That’s what, to me, is the most significant part of this type of ACO. It’s further evidence that CMS is committed to figuring this out. This is not a one-shot experiment. There are a whole series of efforts to tweak and modify and work on and adapt and evolve the fundamental ACO model until they find one that really will serve patients, providers, and payers. That to me is the bottom line, not a take it or leave it kind of situation. CMS really wants to work with the providers to make a model that works.

You’ve mentioned that EHR optimization takes up a good bit of Aledade’s time. What type of optimization challenges are you running into the most?
We really want to have the EHRs at the top of their license, and so we need to help the providers be absolutely certain that their systems are not only capable of meeting MU certification requirements in the lab but also in the field. It’s been a little unsettling to see how many certified EHRs providers upgraded to that can’t perform in the real clinical setting. Take portability requirements, for example. They got tested to them in the lab and they could certainly do it in the lab, but they’re not really able to perform that certification function in the field.

This has been something that I was super happy to see ONC take on squarely in the notice of proposed rulemaking. This was also, frankly, what the congress touched on when saying ONC should decertify systems that are, for example, blocking information. It all comes down to not necessarily more requirements to certification, but making sure that the requirements that are there meet the intent and satisfy the customers, and to have a mechanism for customer complaints if they’re not getting what they thought they were buying. It would be beneficial for the certification bodies to do a small sample of practices and actually get in the field and say, "We’ve tested it in the lab, but we’re going to go and test five or 10 practices in the field and make sure the systems are capable of doing what they’re supposed to be doing."

Have you had to assist any in selecting a new EHR?
There are, unfortunately, a number of our practices, and I don’t think they’re unique in this, who are unhappy with their systems, particularly if they’re a little bit older technology. The optimization, the interfacing … it’s just getting so painful for them, so they ask me, "Look, you’re the formal national coordinator for health IT, tell me what should I switch to?" One of the things I’m actually going to be doing at HIMSS, and this is going to be quite interesting for me, is walking around in the mind-frame of a customer, someone who’s looking to buy an EHR that really meets the criteria for practice happiness. A system that is able to achieve MU requirements in a thoughtful and workflow-optimized way, and has the willingness and interest in working with third-party population health applications. Those are the three criteria that I’m going to be looking for so that we can make educated recommendations to our practices who do want to switch systems.

Were there any rumblings from physicians about the 10-year interoperability roadmap? How does that play into your plans for them and how might that be shifting what they had originally intended to try and achieve with their EHRs?
For a lot of the small practice primary care docs, the interoperability that really matters to them is functional interoperability. It’s having their lab results be in their system electronically. It’s having a discharge summary or a referral be sent electronically. It’s being able to electronically report their immunizations to the state immunization registry. Their expectations are not very fancy.

There are two things that have come up that I think the interoperability roadmap intersects with very directly. One of them is that it is incredibly helpful in running an ACO to have technician discharge transfer notifications. If there is one HIE function from a public or private HIE that I would prioritize for population health, it’s just that simple HL7 ADT-fed notification of admissions, discharge,  and then transfers, which is considered pretty bare-bones for an HIE. That’s where there’s so much value today. I think more HIEs should first focus on delivering what people actually need today for population health.

The second interoperability challenge that is really top of mind for these practices is, in many cases, that they have spent years inputting data into the systems that they have paid for, and now, to get their own data out of those systems, they’re having to pay the vendor $5,000 to $10,000 for an interface. We’re covering that cost, but it’s outrageous. What we really want is basically the CCDA that they, for certification purposes, are supposed to be producing anyway. Those are two things that I would highlight as being key, functionally, for ACO participants.

Given that you see so many EHRs and different types of vendors, have you seen them paying more attention to population health management?
It’s the big buzz word, right? That and patient engagement, and soon to come, precision medicine. Everyone talks about it and I feel like saying, “Look, we gave you a roadmap for what population health requirements are. It’s called Meaningful Use. If you had really embraced the intent behind Meaningful Use, you would have not only not frustrated your customers with a compliant approach, but you also would have had a leg up in this new value-based world. It is exactly those things. It’s decision support. It’s tied to quality measurement. It’s quality measurement at the time of care. It’s registry functions. It’s having and sharing data needed for identifying high-risk patients and managing their conditions. It’s safety around medications. It’s engaging patients to be partners in their own care. It’s giving them care plans. It’s all there. Now they are, in many cases, touting their population health bona-fides as if they had discovered it for the first time.

In working with different practices in different states, have you seen any using their EHRs or other types of health are IT creatively, in a way that you thought might work for a different provider in a different part of the country?
Yeah, absolutely. Holly Dahlman, MD is at one of our practices, Greenspring Internal Medicine near Baltimore, and she is a nationally recognized Million Hearts champion. She’s doing amazing work with hypertension control. Her use of the EHR is fairly sophisticated. She uses registry functions to identify unrecognized, under-diagnosed, or under-treated patients so that she can then work to engage with them on their heart health. She’ll then initiate home monitoring and reporting of blood pressures from home monitors into her system. It’s great to see one of our practices being one of the stars in that initiative. We’re rolling that out to our other practices.

How many RECs do you interact with? How have you seen their role evolving (or drying up) as EHR adoption plateaus? 
Right now, we have partnerships with eight RECs – in New York, Delaware, West Virginia, Tennessee, Kansas, Louisiana, Florida, and Arkansas.  As EHR adoption has plateaued over the last year or so, the role of the RECs has evolved, and possibly become more important.  Even as EHR market penetration has increased, we’re seeing doctors and their office staff still struggling with operability of some of these systems – not just functionality with other systems, but functionality on their own systems, accessing their own patient data. Some of this has to do with business practices of some EHR vendors, but regardless, the RECs have been there, on the ground with these practices, working to help them get the highest level of functionality out of their system. They are an invaluable piece of on-the-ground support for independent physician practices, and that’s why we’ve chosen to partner with so many of them.

Do you have any final thoughts?
Health IT and delivery reform are twins. You can’t get the full value of each one independently without the other. You can’t do these new payment models without pretty sophisticated use of information technology, but this is a point that is often lost. A lot of these population health-oriented, prevention-oriented, care coordination-oriented technologies don’t make sense in a fee-for-service world, but they make perfect sense in a world where people are paid for outcomes. For the HIStalk listeners, their work in making health IT that works has never been more needed and more significant, and this is going to go not only to the professional and healthcare desires to take the best care possible of patients. It’s actually going to determine the financial and business viability of their organizations; so kudos, keep up the hard work. I’m cheering on both populations.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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

JennHIStalk

News 4/7/15

April 6, 2015 News Comments Off on News 4/7/15

Top News

image

The AMA submits comments on the ONC’s Interoperability Roadmap, offering the following recommendations:

  • Prioritize “cornerstone” interoperability issues and high-value use cases.
  • Forego using a punitive approach on providers to achieve interoperability.
  • Address cost and EHR usability barriers to interoperability.
  • Continue to allow private sector governance efforts to flourish.
  • Acknowledge the impact Meaningful Use is having on interoperability.

HIStalk Practice Announcements and Requests

image

Join me and our patient advocate HIMSS conference scholarship winners for an #HIStalking tweet chat Tuesday, April 7 at 11 a.m. ET. @LAlupusLady, @woodymatters, @leffet_papillon, @CarlyRM and @bostonheartmom will talk about patient engagement, advocacy, and healthcare IT. You can brush up on their backgrounds here and check out discussion topics here. They’ll be wearing their Walking Gallery shirts at the conference as they follow a busy schedule of interviews, meetings, and exhibit-hall cruising.

image

I can’t believe there is less than a week to go until HIStalkapalooza. My ensemble is ready, and I can’t wait to see what others will sport on our red carpet. While I don’t expect anyone to don Cinderella-type shoes, I do hope guys and gals will make an effort to put their best feet forward, especially in light of the fact that we’ll honor two lucky winners with a unique award to proudly display at your HIMSS booths or tout around the exhibit hall the next day. (And speaking of the exhibit hall, find out what HIStalk sponsors are doing on the HIMSS show floor by checking out our guide.)

Thanks to the following sponsors, new and renewing, that recently supported HIStalk Practice. Click a logo for more information.

image

image

image

image

Reading: The Portlandia Cook Book. (And yes, they put a bird on it!) This $5 find is yet another reason why I love the books-for-sale shelf at my local library. This tome, which does have actual recipes, is similar in genre to one of my all-time favorites, America (The Book).


Webinars

April 8 (Wednesday) noon ET. “Leveraging Evidence and Mobile Collaboration to Improve Patient Care Transitions.” Sponsored by Zynx Health. Presenter: Grant Campbell, MSN, RN, senior director of nursing strategy and informatics, Zynx Health. With mounting regulatory requirements focused on readmission prevention and the growing complexity of care delivery, ACOs, hospitals, and community-based organizations are under pressure to effectively and efficiently manage patient transitions. This webinar will explore the ways in which people, process, and technology influence patient care and how organizations can optimize these areas to enhance communication, increase operational efficiency, and improve care coordination across the continuum.

April 22 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Microsoft: The Waking Giant in Healthcare Analytics and Big Data.” Sponsored by Health Catalyst. Presenter: Dale Sanders, SVP of strategy, Health Catalyst. Microsoft has been quietly reengineering its culture and products to offer the best value and most visionary platform for cloud services, big data, and analytics in healthcare. This webinar will cover the Healthcare Analytics Adoption Model, the ongoing transition from relational databases, the role of new Microsoft products such as Azure and Analytic Platform System, the PowerX product line, and geospatial and machine learning visualization tools. Attendees will learn how to incorporate cloud-based analytics services into their healthcare analytics strategies.


Announcements and Implementations

image

The New Mexico HIE goes live with technology provided by Orion Health.

image

Non-profit health information provider Healthwise offers a course on shared decision-making.


Telemedicine

image

Telemedicine startup PointNurse partners with the crowdfunding platform Swarm Fund to create the first Global Telemedicine and Telehealth Distributive Collaborative Organization, enabling providers to join the community as members, receive fees, and have a proportional stake in the software.


Government and Politics

image

Patient advocates and state legislators breathe a sigh of relief when New York Governor Andrew Cuomo decides not to cut the budget of nydoctorprofile.com, the state Dept. of Health’s physician profile website. “As we move towards more transparency and public access to health care information,” explains Assembly Health Committee chairman Richard Gottfried, “this budget language will speed up both reporting by physicians and website updates by the Department of Health.”

Mental health professionals, dentists, and chiropractors push back on a Minnesota law that requires all healthcare providers to implement EHRs. St. Paul psychologist Peter Zelles intends to comply with the law, despite reservations about patient privacy. “Some patients are treated differently because they are being treated for mental health problems,” he explains, adding that some female patients worry about being stigmatized by physicians once they see they’ve had an abortion.

CMS announces that nearly 36,000 consumers have signed up for health insurance via Healthcare.gov during the extended enrollment period, which ends on April 30. That figure is well below the administration’s estimate of 220,000.


Research and Innovation

A UCSF study finds that patients prefer getting biopsy results over the phone rather than via secure email. As someone who has received biopsy results, I can tell you a phone call is the most appreciated option, as it gives patient and physician an opportunity to discuss next steps in real time. I found it interesting that just over half of physicians in the study would pick up the phone to deliver bad news, while 31 percent would take the time to make a call for good news.

image

An eClinicalWorks physician survey finds that top portal patient engagement benefits are the ability to review and share medical records, schedule appointments, and receive automatic appointment alerts and reminders. Over half believe having access to patient information from wearable devices or fitness trackers would be somewhat useful to help treat them, though the survey’s findings did not delve into just how they’d incorporate that data into patient medical records or office workflows.

image

The Health Information Trust Alliance announces that it will sponsor a broad, empirical study of health IT security threats aimed at analyzing “the methods, severity and pervasiveness of cyber threats targeting a variety of healthcare organizations.”

A WEDI survey on ICD-10 compliance reveals that over half of respondents are still uncertain as to if and when the transition to ICD-10 will take place. Not surprisingly, only 25 percent of providers have completed end-to-end testing, a decrease from the 35 percent that had begun testing in August 2014.


Other

Kroger’s The Little Clinic earns The Joint Commission Gold Seal of Approval for the third time. The Tennessee-based chain of retail clinics implemented its first EMR in 2006, and most recently went live on VisualDX’s Web-based diagnostic tool for physicians.

image

I’m kicking myself for missing this: CERN reports on April 1 the “first unequivocal evidence for The Force” using its Large Hadron Collider. Ben Kenobi of the University of Mos Eisley, Tatooine, explained that “The Force is what gives a particle physicist his powers.”

I did a double take when I came across this headline: “Seattle’s Medical Records Offers Electroconvulsive Therapy on Record Store Day.” It’s amazing how susceptible my mind has become to healthcare references.


Sponsor Updates

  • Versus Technology offers a blog on how wireless technology works to track the spread of infection.
  • NVoq describes “The Link Between the Simple Checklist and Improved Patient Safety.”
  • ESD posts 25 days of its history as it commemorates its 25th anniversary. Check out Day 7, where you’ll see its video of HIStalkapalooza 2012 in Las Vegas, which it did a great job of sponsoring.
  • Healthwise shares “The Secret Behind Serving Up the Right Information Every Time.”

Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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

JennHIStalk

The Role of Patient Engagement and Advocacy in HIT – #HIStalking Tweet Chat Tuesday, April 7 at 11 am ET

April 5, 2015 News Comments Off on The Role of Patient Engagement and Advocacy in HIT – #HIStalking Tweet Chat Tuesday, April 7 at 11 am ET

Join @JennHIStalk and HIStalk’s HIMSS15 patient advocate scholarship winners – @LAlupusLady, @leffet_papillon, @CarlyRM, @woodymatters and @bostonheartmom -  for a discussion on patient engagement, advocacy, and healthcare IT. You can check out their backgrounds here, preview discussion questions below, and brush up on how to participate in a tweet chat towards the end of this post.

image image image image image

#HIStalking Discussion Questions

Q1 from @bostonheartmom: How can we use HIT to democratize our data, giving patients and MDs equal access? EHR #UX have role to play? #HIStalking

Q2 from @LAlupusLady: How can HIT include patients in the development and design process? #HIStalking

Q3 from @CarlyRM: How might we use HIT to reinforce human connection and the expertise of patients across the world? #HIStalking

Q4 from @woodymatters: How can technology assist in post-market safety of drugs from a consumer perspective? #HIStalking

Q5 from @leffet_papillon: How can online patient communities improve the quality of patients’ lives, and their care? #HIStalking

image

Join us on Tuesday, April 7 at 11 am ET for the #HIStalking tweet chat, and then look for @bostonheartmom @leffet_papillon @CarlyRM and @LAlupusLady in #HIStalking shirts at #HIMSS15.


Tweet Chat Instructions

It’s easy to join the Twitter conversation by logging into TweetChat, which automatically keeps you in the conversation by tagging all tweets with the #HIStalking hash tag. If you are unable to access the TweetChat room, simply search in Twitter for #HIStalking and follow the conversation. To contribute, be sure and tag your tweets with #HIStalking so they can be seen by other chat participants.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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

JennHIStalk

News 4/2/15

April 1, 2015 News Comments Off on News 4/2/15

Top News

image

Marlin Equity Partners acquires PM/EHR vendor e-MDs and merges the company with another of its portfolio holdings, revenue cycle services vendor MDeverywhere. E-MDs founder and CEO David Winn, MD will retire.


HIStalk Practice Announcements and Requests

clip_image003

The RSA Conference bans scantily clad booth babes from the exhibit hall, specifically mandating business attire that doesn’t include tops that display excess cleavage, miniskirts, and Lycra body suits. I don’t think I need to go into too much detail as to why this is a good thing for women and humanity in general. I don’t recall seeing too many booth babes at last year’s HIMSS, though the dancing duo at the Medecision booth did catch my eye. If you’re going to don Lycra, I suppose this is the most tasteful way to do it.

image

Check out the great painting Regina Holliday created for the T-shirts our HIStalking patient advocate scholarship winners will wear at HIMSS. Brush up on their backgrounds here, and then join me Tuesday, April 7 at 11 am ET for a #HIStalking tweet chat. All five scholarship winners will be there, posing questions related to patient engagement, advocacy and healthcare IT. 

Patient Engagement Pet Peeve: In an effort to organize my health data, I messaged my PCP to ask if she could upload my most recent test results to the patient portal. I like to have a digital history of medical encounters that I can go back and review as needed. My attempts to retain verbal explanations of the results, or those written on scraps of paper found at the bottom of my purse have proven unsuccessful. I was a tad frustrated when her nurse called to relay the information to me over the phone, forcing me to grab the very pen and paper I had tried so hard to avoid.

image  image

Several April Fool’s Day-related messages crossed my inbox and Twitter feed yesterday. I especially liked the these two.

Watching: It doesn’t have to be April Fool’s Day for me to enjoy the comedy of Tim Hawkins. Check out his bit on visiting the doctor’s office for a glaucoma test.


Webinars

April 8 (Wednesday) noon ET. “Leveraging Evidence and Mobile Collaboration to Improve Patient Care Transitions.” Sponsored by Zynx Health. Presenter: Grant Campbell, MSN, RN, senior director of nursing strategy and informatics, Zynx Health. With mounting regulatory requirements focused on readmission prevention and the growing complexity of care delivery, ACOs, hospitals, and community-based organizations are under pressure to effectively and efficiently manage patient transitions. This webinar will explore the ways in which people, process, and technology influence patient care and how organizations can optimize these areas to enhance communication, increase operational efficiency, and improve care coordination across the continuum.

Here’s MedData’s webinar from Tuesday titled “Best Practices for Increasing Patient Payments.” You can also check out the tweet recap here.


Announcements and Implementations

image

MultiCare Connected Care, a Washington-based commercial ACO, will implement Sandlot Connect from Sandlot Solutions to support its community-wide information gathering and exchange. Once up and running, the Clinically Integrated Network will connect employed and independent physicians who offer care to members of the ACO.

image

Nationwide cancer treatment service provider 21st Century Oncology selects Navigating Cancer’s patient engagement and management platform.

Regional HIE Georgia Health Connect joins the statewide Georgia Health Information Network, which itself made news last November when it connected to South Carolina’s SCHIEx statewide HIE.

Meditech, Merge, Kareo, Surgical Information Systems, and PointClickCare join the CommonWell Alliance health information exchange platform. With the new partners, CommonWell reports that its platform covers 70 percent of the acute care market and 20 percent of the ambulatory market. The organization named its first executive director, Jitin Asnaani, earlier this week.

Clinical trial patient recruitment company EPatientFinder joins the Greenway Health online marketplace of value-added sellers.


Telemedicine

image

San Francisco-based Spruce raises $15 million in Series A financing led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers with participation from Baseline Ventures, Cowboy Ventures, and Google Ventures. The company’s online dermatology app is available to patients in California, New York, Florida, and Pennsylvania. The new funds will no doubt enable it to scale to other states in the near future. It’s worth noting that the investment is Kleiner’s first since winning a high-profile sexual discrimination suit last week. As Fortune noted, “With this latest investment, Kleiner can show that it is returning to some semblance of business as usual after the court room drama of the past month.” The Spruce investment is not Kleiner’s first in a telemedicine company. The VC firm made similar commitments to Teladoc in 2011.

Delaware moves forward in its attempts to improve upon the “F” rating the American Telemedicine Association gave it last year for telemedicine services under private insurance coverage. A bill to expand such services is released by a State House Committee for a vote in the House of Representatives.


People

image

Charles Christian (St. Francis Hospital) joins the Indiana HIE as vice president of technology and engagement beginning May 1.


Research and Innovation

AHRQ releases a white paper on “Using Health Information Technology to Support Quality Improvement in Primary Care.”


Government and Politics

image

ONC reminds everyone that comments are nearly due on its Interoperability Roadmap. Is it wishful thinking to hope it will pen a final draft in time for HIMSS?


Other

image

Sad: Nine providers are among 23 defendants named in a 199-count indictment that alleges they participated in a massive Medicaid and Medicare fraud scheme in which they lured poor and homeless people to corrupt medical clinics for unnecessary tests with the promise of free footwear.

image

The New York Times publishes a piece highlighting the OpenNotes movement and calling for broader patient access to medical records data.


Sponsor Updates

  • ADP AdvancedMD offers “4 Foolproof Tips to Collect More Patient Payments.”
  • Culbert Healthcare Solutions offers “Improving Patient Satisfaction.”
  • HX360 names Clockwise.MD as one of four finalists in its innovation competition at HIMSS15.
  • Healthwise offers “Creating a Group Health Culture Where Shared Decision Making is the Norm.”
  • The latest episode in Nordic’s Making the Cut video series covers preparing for cutover and the role of operational management.

Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan, Dr. Travis

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…