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Monday, May 20, 2013

How Fragile We Are

I've been driving all day back to LAS from Walnut Creek. Got in to witness this on the news when I got home.

Terrible. Below, a hospital in Moore, Oklahoma.

Wonder if they had EHR with offsite backup and a disaster recovery procedure? More broadly, I wonder how many of the local citizens' docs had EHR with offsite backup and a recovery px? Any REC worth its salt should be able to tell that from its CRM or environmental scan data. What are you waiting for?

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More to come...

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Courage


Notwithstanding that some critics found it necessary to criticize from afar the wisdom of Angie's decision, no one can dispute the courage it took to make it and to undergo this radical, life-altering px. And to then go public about it.

I, for one, wish her a full recovery and a long, healthy life to come.
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UPDATE: 

Why Angelina Jolie’s ‘Medical Choice’ Is Likely Not Yours

SUNDAY UPDATE: GUEST CROSS POST

I've been enthusiastically reading Dr. Gurley's columns in the Chronicle for years, and was blessed to finally meet her at Health 2.0 SF last fall. She is heroic in my eyes.

Dr. Gurley has agreed to serve as Chair of the now-assembling Clinical and Policy Advisory Board for my new project, KHIT. Others include Joe Fortuna, MD, Chair of the ASQ Health Care Division, and my former boss Deb Huber, RN, MSHA, Executive Director, HealthInsight Nevada and HealtHIE Nevada HIE. Nomination of others welcomed.

Jan has graciously assented to a linked cross-posting here.


From her blog, "Posts from an Insane Healthcare System".
Booby Traps: Pitfalls along the path of genetic testing and mastectomies
May 16th, 2013, Jan Gurley, MD


The first time I wrestled with the issue of whether to get my breasts cut off, I was in my early forties.  Partners in life, my breasts had done right by me. They delighted me in all their underwhelming adolescent glory. Then they’d been a source of panting, wriggling joy for so much of my adult life. They’d amazed me after pregnancy when I became a fount of Bessie-the-cow milk production. I could have fed a village — or at least a day care. I’d learned to love and laugh about my breasts, like many motherhood-survivors, because when it comes to your own body, the first casualty of giving birth is your dignity. Post-weaning, the second casualty is your cup size. I’d even written about (and claimed) that frustrating and fascinating sagging that occurs with vintage breasts like mine.

But there was a good chance, like for Angelina Jolie, that mine could be harmed by “faulty” gene.

Booby trap #1: When it comes to family history, how bad is bad enough?

The Affordable Care Act mandates that BRCA genetic testing be covered, when you have a higher risk of breast cancer. What is “higher”? That’s actually a tough question to answer. There are many useful risk calculation tools out there (here and here are two). Plugging in what was known at the time of my own genetic testing, my estimated lifetime risks were between 17%-26%. Bad, sure, but that’s a pretty big range, and, probably, a significant underestimate. Why?

First, my family in rural Georgia, like most of America, struggles with getting good consistent health care, as well as dealing with taboos around women’s health. So when I tried to map out a sprawling family history, there were large numbers of women who had or even died of “female troubles.” Where the heck does that go in a risk calculator?

Second, the current calculators don’t include the gamut of risk factors.  Most are focused on breast cancer, with some including ovarian cancer, which are the risks for BRCA1 genes. BRCA2, however, also increases your risk of melanoma and pancreatic cancer. I’d had a nasty early-stage mole taken off while in medical school, and my mother’s mother died of pancreatic cancer. That’s not in a calculator anywhere.

Since I’m a doctor, and was aware of these caveats, I was able to have a detailed discussion with my provider about my risks, and get my genetic testing covered. Many other people with my exact same family history, might be told theirs wasn’t bad enough to qualify for the roughly $3,000 test.

Booby trap #2:   Are you ready to act if your test is bad?

Shouldn’t we just screen everybody? There is an old medical rule-of-thumb: Don’t get a test, if there’s nothing you’re going to do about the result. Is that true, though? After all, isn’t a blood test just a blood test? Well, no. If you get a positive BRCA result, you can’t ever erase that from your mind, your medical record, your family, or even your world view. Just knowing your results can shift the psychological foundations of your life.

I thought I knew my priorities when I had my BRCA test. Like Angelina Jolie, I had young children that needed me. They climb into your bed on a Saturday morning and knee your belly as they crawl across you with their stacks of books, demanding you to “read!” Silky little arms snake around your neck, claiming you, your love, your time. Young children are wonderfully, gloriously oblivious to your importance to them. Hell, if losing my breasts was what was necessary to avoid breast cancer, I figured I was “done” with my breasts. I decided to get genetic testing, and I told everyone who cared that if it came back positive, I’d have both my breasts removed. I thought I was ready for that.

I believe getting tested is an act of claiming your choices and your future. However, I am not a huge fan of home-based testing for lethal-type genes – unless it is the only option. Testing is a difficult process. The pivotal time of pondering, arranging the test, then waiting for results, oppresses with a stagnant emotional turmoil that seethes under the surface. A quicksand of fatalism can drag you so far down you find yourself unable to do the minimum-necessary to care for your health. Partners help. Trained health care support helps. I can’t even begin to imagine having to walk a red carpet, facing the world of Internet trolls, as I grimly pushed ahead, day by day, carrying that burden while I waited for the results.

And then results arrive…

Booby Trap #3: Beware of both optimism and pessimism when you’re playing the numbers game.

In cost-effectiveness analyses, researchers try to put an exact number on how bad is bad. Human minds, however, balk at this concept. For example, if I told you there was a 2% chance you’d get breast cancer, you’d likely feel pretty good. If I said there was a 98% chance you’d never get breast cancer, you’d probably feel even better. But if I said you had a one in fifty chance of getting breast cancer – and to imagine yourself sitting in a room with 49 other people, waiting to see if your name would be called out as the one with the diagnosis, you’d be feeling pretty crummy. Yet all of those are the exact same risk.

When you get something rare, you get it 100%. Some of us probably looked at Angelina Jolie’s estimated 87% risk of breast cancer and thought, well, it’s not 100%. We can project ourselves into the 13% good result. Or we may freak and believe, in our heart of hearts that having the gene means we must already have cancer. Neither is true. So how can we live with this constant risk friction?

After looking at the numbers, I approach the issue in a more qualitative way. One option is the Worst Case Scenario approach. What is worse – having your breasts cut off, or having breast cancer? And, for many people, that answer is enough.

But sometimes you have to dig deeper, to ask questions such as: what if I cut off both my breasts, and I never got breast cancer, how would I feel? Or, what if I had my breasts cut off and I still got breast cancer – how would I feel? Or what if I chose to do nothing, never got breast cancer but lived my life in a state of perpetual fear?

This is an approach I call Drafting The Story. You are the protagonist-hero of your life and these are all drafts, of your story. Which narrative can you live with? Which one can you embrace? Angelina Jolie’s statement that she felt “powerful” was authentic because she chose her narrative.

Sometimes, in health care, it’s not the number-crunchers we need; it’s the story-tellers.

Booby Trap #4: Watch out for when a good result can be a bad result.

So what were my test results? And what happened to my beloved breasts? Things didn’t actually turn out how anyone would have expected.

First, I was BRCA negative.

The exploding relief that I felt should have been a warning sign that maybe I wasn’t quite as ready to cut off my breasts as my hyper-logical, algorithmic brain tried to say I was. But I ignored that warning sign and let myself just revel in the joy – joy for myself and joy for my loved-ones.

Second, so what did this mean for me long term, and for all people with higher risks of breast cancer whose BRCA tests are negative? Is there a risk to having a negative result? Well, as in many aspects of medicine, this question is complex and controversial. Those two forces – complex and controversial – are also warning signs that we, as a health care system, are likely to give inconsistent, suboptimal health care. When I got my negative BRCA test results, I tumbled right into those gaps in care, only to crash-land with an invasive breast cancer diagnosis several years later.

What can you learn about health, statistics, and decision-making from my experience? Stay tuned for Booby Traps, Part 2: Pitfalls of the mastectomy decision.
I eagerly await part 2, as should you.

Doc Gurley speaking at Health 2.0: Refactored, May 13th, 2013.
Photo by BobbyG
I have some observations to contribute regarding clinical assays and statistics. For now, a snip from a post of mine a decade ago on a different topic. There are two principal camps among stats practitioners; the "Frequentists" and the "Bayesians."

Count me squarely in the latter encampment.


My core concerns:
  1. Sensitivity: the ability of an assay to indentify true positives;
  2. Specificity: the power of an assay to eliminate true negatives;
  3. Prevalence: the proportion of true positives in a population of interest;
  4. The upshot of error: the relative consequences of being wrong either way.
And, in addition to Lab QA (both intra- and inter), add to the foregoing what you might call the "Empirical Moving Target" problem. Past may well be significant prologue in many cases (a fundamental necessity of the Bayesian paradigm), but not inexorably.

ON ANALYTICAL "ACCURACY" AND "PRECISION"

From my 1998 grad Thesis:
The terms “accuracy” and “precision” are not synonyms. The former refers to closeness of agreement with agreed-upon reference standards, while the latter has to do with the extent of variability in repeated measurements. One can be quite precise, and quite precisely wrong. Precision, in a sense, is a necessary but insufficient prerequisite for the demonstration of “accuracy.” Do you hit the “bull’s eye” red center of the target all the time, or are your shots scattered all over? Are they tightly clustered lower left (high precision, poor accuracy), or widely scattered lower left (poor precision, poor accuracy). In an analytical laboratory, the “accuracy” of production results cannot be directly determined; it is necessarily inferred from the results of quality control (“QC”) data. If the lab does not keep ongoing, meticulous (and expensive) QC records of the performance histories of all instruments and operators, determination of accuracy and precision is not possible.
I don't claim any expertise with respect to commercial genomic assays. Nonetheless, there are some basics that do in fact apply:
Processing DNA samples requires that humans collect and handle biological samples, which are then subjected to laboratory techniques run by human technicians. DNA testing is only as reliable as are the people overseeing each of these processes, and infallibility simply cannot be achieved. Therefore, forensic scientists must depend on quality control, retesting, troubleshooting, and transparency of every decision made in the process to achieve reliable, trustworthy forensic evidence every time.

Krimsky, Sheldon; Simoncelli, Tania (2010-06-01). Genetic Justice: DNA Data Banks, Criminal Investigations, and Civil Liberties (Kindle Locations 5646-5650). Columbia University Press. Kindle Edition.
apropos of all of the foregoing...

Sometimes, more medical information is a bad thing. The influential United States Preventive Services Task Force recommends against most women getting genetic screenings for their susceptibility to breast cancer. Why? Because the tests are imperfect: for every woman who gets tested for genes associated with onset breast cancer, even more will falsely test positive, leading spooked patients into needless surgery or psychological trauma. Super cheap genetic testing from enterprising health startups, such as 23andMe, have complicated cancer detection for us all by increasing the accessibility of imperfect medical information.

After discovering a mutated BRCA1 gene, known to increase breast cancer 60 to 80%, actress Angelina Jolie’s underwent a radical preventive double mastectomy. Her brave confession in the New York Times brought much needed attention to breast cancer awareness, but it’s dangerous in the hands of a statistically illiterate population...
Link to full article here.
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UPDATE:

"It took less than a day for various quacks to attack Angelina Jolie’s decision, as reasonable and science-based as it was, to undergo prophylactic bilateral mastectomies to prevent breast cancer."

ScienceBasedMedicine.org
I had been debating whether to blog about Angelina Jolie’s announcement last week in a New York Times editorial entitled My Medical Choice that she had undergone bilateral prophylactic mastectomy because she had been discovered to have a mutation in the BRCA1 gene that is associated with a very high risk of breast cancer. On the one hand, it is my area of expertise and was a big news story. On the other hand, it’s been nearly a week since she announced her decision, and the news story is no longer as topical as it was. Also, I’ve already written about it a couple of times on my not-so-super-secret other blog, making the division of blogging…problematic. So, if some of this is a bit repetitive to those who are also fans of my more—shall we say?—insolent persona, I apologize, but try to be patient. I will be doing more than just rehashing a couple of posts from last week (although there will unavoidably be at least a little of that), because there have been even more examples of reactions to Jolie’s announcement that provide what I like to consider “teachable moments.” I will start by asserting quite bluntly that in my medical opinion, from the information I have available, Angelina Jolie made a rational, science-based decision. How she went about the actual mechanics might have had some less than scientific glitches along the way (more about that later), but the basic decision to remove both of her breasts to prevent breast cancer associated with a BRCA1 mutation that she carried was quite reasonable and very defensible from a scientific standpoint...
SBM never disappoints.
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More to come...

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

California State HIT Day


Got here without a problem (getting up at 5 was the problem). 82 miles, took only about 80 minutes, right up the 680 to the 80 to the 5 to L Street, NPR all the way on the radio. 15th floor of the Hyatt, overlooking the state Capitol.


Beautiful day. Packed agenda, much to see, hear, learn, and document.

THOMAS S. KEEFE, MA, Keynote Speaker

Senior Director, State Government Affairs.
"HIMSS State Health IT Days are some of the most important HIMSS events each year. Supported by HIMSS Chapters and HIMSS State Government Affairs, State Health IT Days aim to connect subject matter experts in health IT with their state elected officials to foster relationship building and education. Typically conducted when a state legislature is in session, a State Health IT Day may include meetings with legislators, site visits to healthcare facilities and presentations from policy experts. Alternatively, a chapter may use virtual technologies to plan a State Health IT Day or one focused on visiting state legislators within their home districts to ensure mass participation across their state..."
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POST KEYNOTE GROUP PHOTO-OP

I got drafted into photographer duty. My first "official act" as a HIMSS NoCal member.






Above, Salim Kizaraly of Stella Technology.
Nancy Hall, HIMSS NoCal Board Member and CIO panel moderator
Dave Minch, President & COO Health Share Bay Area
Above: CALHIPSO's Speranza Avram reported on the status of the ONC's REC program, from which I recently retired. She nailed it pretty well.
Above: Pamela Lane, MS, RHIA, CPHIMS, Deputy Secretary for Health Information Exchange Director for the Office of Health Information Integrity California Health & Human Services
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LEGISLATIVE "ADVOCACY"

I'd not really understood this, but a couple of afternoon hours were slated for going across the street to the state Capitol to buttonhole legislators or their staffs to "advocate" (not "lobby") for Health IT support.

Interestingly, there was a loud concomitant health care reform rally ensuing on the Capitol grounds.


Nice. I first made my way to the adjacent park's statue of Friar Farzad, Patron Saint of Interoperability on my way to "my representatives'" offices.


Just kidding, obviously.

On to tout "the Ask."


Notwithstanding that I am still a legal resident of Nevada, I've been paying California state income tax for nearly 5 years as a result of my wife's work in Walnut Creek (Cheryl has had to become a California legal resident), so these legislators are in my view my reps as well in a very real, quantifiable sense.

I candidly made that clear while talking with their staffs, and they were fine with that. Nice people, all of them. They were graciously generous with their time, in part no doubt because I'm now "Health IT Press," and nothing gets pols' attention like the words "constituent" and "press" in the same sentence.

All in all, a fun day. Met a lot of fine people. Learned some stuff. Can't ask for more than that.
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More to come...

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Refactored Day 2

What a difference 30 minutes makes. Yesterday I left Walnut Creek at 6 a.m. and got to the Refactored Conference in an hour and five minutes. Today I didn't get off until 6:30 and it took an hour and 35 minutes.

Heard about this dustup the other day, and there's a news update this morning.

WASHINGTON (Reuters, David Morgan) - An Obama administration effort to raise private donations to help implement President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law came under fire on Monday from congressional Republicans who claim the action could violate the law.

As the Republican-controlled House of Representatives prepared to mount a new vote this week to try to repeal the law, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton asked the administration to identify the companies and organizations that have received fundraising calls from Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.


The committee also sent letters to nearly a dozen healthcare companies asking if they have received solicitations from Sebelius. The list includes insurers Aetna Inc, Cigna Corp., Coventry Health Care Inc, Humana Inc, UnitedHealth Group Inc and WellPoint.


Meanwhile, Republican Senator Lamar Alexander called on Sebelius to end the fundraising, saying her actions could violate Congress' power to direct policy through appropriations...
Interesting question. Anti-ObamaCare obstructionist Republicans vow to throw tactical sand in the PPACA gears at every turn, given that they will never get the votes to repeal it outright (Rep Cantor's tiresome iterative posturing notwithstanding). By refusing to approve appropriations for the upcoming HIX deployment, they hope to help make the ACA health insurance exchanges the Cluster[bleep] they want it to be.

We shall see.

UPDATE


Uh, OK... Taking time out from her breathless warnings about the New Soviet Menace, I see. Her latest is that Obama is going to use the IRS to deny health care to Conservatives and "kill" them.

Is this a great country or what?

UPDATE2: Bachmann will have a cow...

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Off to witness far more interesting and value-adding stuff at Health 2.0 Refactored Day 2. to wit...

L to R: Adrian Gropper, Patient Privacy Rights, Arien Malec, RelayHealth, and The Bolty Boy
Health 2.0's Jess Goldband
Fred Trotter (center) and Laura Herzog (right) presented a searing session.
Fred Trotter is a Health Hack Badass. I've reviewed his work before.
Karen Herzog
Ryan Panchadsaram, White House Special Advisor. Another brilliant youngster.
Jess Jacobs, FDA
Karen Herzog
I am way behind in posting captions and narrative updates. They will probably have to await my returning from HIMSS California State HIT Day in Sacramento tomorrow. I have copious notes.

Didn't help that I spent five hours total today in heavy Bay Area commuter traffic.
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UI, UX, and U

Mike Cuesta, CareCloud
Sean Mehra, HealthTAP
Mike Cuesta moderated the Day 2 UI, UX, and U: Designing for Health session. Sean Mehra dazzled me fairly well with his eloquent HealthTAP presentation, which went through their design and coding proess for their product, written principally to agnostically accomodate iPhones, iPads, and Android product platforms (in addition to desktop web browsers) using combined HTML5 + JavaScript + CSS coding tools.

These kids are all really smart and into it.
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More to come...

Monday, May 13, 2013

"Refactored" - a jam-packed two days in Mountain View


Up at 5 a.m. (ugh), zip down the 680 from Walnut Creek to the Nimitz and over to the 101 and the Computer History Museum for a day in UberGeekIstan with the Cyberscenti.

www.computerhistory.org

So, "refactored" is software development slang basically synonymous with Lean/Rapid Cycle PDSA, maybe even "Agile." This conference is focused on helping health IT developers become more adept at shaping the future of health care via information technology advances. As reported in the Sacramento Bee:
"Health:Refactored not only serves as an impetus for developers and designers to leverage their skills and creativity to build and create, but it also provides a portal into the future of health technology," said Indu Subaiya, Co-Chairman & CEO of Health 2.0.

Here are the predictions:

  • "Technology will catalyze dramatic system-wide cost savings and efficiencies. Out of $500 billion spent annually in the U.S. on doctor visits, $125 billion translates into unnecessary costs since 25% of the visits are strictly informational. Technology will serve these patients the information they need without the physical appointment."  --Sean K. Mehra, Head of Product, HealthTap
  • "In 10 years, human-centered data collection of medical records, observations, labs, etc., will go away in favor of body-worn health sensors that will be woven into fabrics, built-into our mobile phones, integrated into homes (e.g. toilets, sinks, etc.), and even embedded under our skin." -- Shahid Shah, HIT Expert/CEO, Netspective
  • "The 'wall-less hospital' will meet the empowered patient. As sensors and devices increase their power and accuracy, doctors will be able to monitor and adjust treatment approaches in real-time." -- Jan Gurley, MD, Physician and App Designer, DocGurley.com
  • "Food, physical activity and sleep recommendations will be personalized based on health risks, biomarkers, environmental factors, preferences and budget. They'll be prescribed by doctors and dietitians in the grocery store assisted by cutting-edge health technologies, and directly by apps." -- Jason Langheier, MD, MPH, CEO & Founder, Zipongo
  • "Telemedicine will allow hospitals to extend care well beyond their four walls. Consumer diagnostic devices and wearables will empower patients to proactively monitor and manage their health and physicians can transition from passive managers of health to active, ever-present participants in patients' health." -- David Chao, Senior Product Manager, MuleSoft
  • "In 5 years, when data is more portable and expectations are that data follows me and my care, rather than hide from my view....well, then things gets really interesting! Then we can really start getting deep, meaningful insights from all our shared data, and the pace of innovation in digital health will grow exponentially." -- Geoffrey Clapp, Co-Founder, Better
  • "We will shift into a synchronous 'care stream' which values preventative care over treating symptoms." -- Mike Cuesta , Director of Design and Community, CareCloud
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UPDATE: SHOTS FROM MORNING ONE SESSIONS

Some random pics...

Above, Health 2.0 co-founder Indu Subaiya
L to R: Jean Luc-Neptune, Jessica Goldband, and Edbury Enegren
Brian Sivak
Above: legendary philantropist and VC investor Esther Dyson moderates a panel discussion featuring Jim Kean and Anmol Madan.
I missed this fellow's name. He's with Microsoft. Wincingly, his slide deck would not launch. He made some anxious remark about "all of the whiteboards in the room" -- i.e., all of our MacBooks.
Atlantic Monthly journalist and author David Ewing Duncan
Health 2.0 co-founder Matthew Holt
Above and below, my hero, Doc Gurley
Ethan Prater, Castlight Health
John Mattison, MD, CMIO Kaiser

Brad Weinberg, MD, Venture Capital Investor
Again, Health 2.0 co-founder Indu Subaiya
Dr. Jean-Luc Neptune of Health 2.0
Edbury Enegren, Health 2.0
Esther Dyson
Jim Kean
The fabulous Doc Gurley
A great first day. I dressed "business professional/casual" and felt way over-dressed. While the look was totally loose and hip, the aggregate intellect on display was both humbling and inspiring. Nice summary here by Kim Krueger:
If Subaiya’s survey is any indication, the Health:Refactored crowd is pretty heavily weighted on the technical and entrepreneurial side with maybe a slightly smaller representation of designers. Attendees also seemed evenly distributed between health care veterans and health care newbies (exciting, welcome new friends!). These buckets were hardly mutually exclusive though as most everyone seems to dabble in business, and the brave seem to dabble in everything.

The questions continued throughout the day, and with the right combination of imagination, lighting, and squinting you could almost see the raised hands shape shifting into ven diagrams. We are software developers and MBAs, but on a broader scale we are patients and stakeholders interested in fundamentally changing the world.
..
Indeed. The fermenting mixture of optimism and applied expertise was palpable.

KP's Dr. Mattison made some interesting observations. First he noted that his son, just graduating medical school, had received virtually the same medical education that he had. The pedagogy is stuck in neutral. Brings to my mind some observations of Messrs Weed in "Medicine in Denial"
VIII. Medical Education and Credentialing as Barriers to Progress
A. Extending the health care reform agenda to medical education and credentialing


1. A century of stagnation


...Were Flexner to return today, he would find that current knowledge has he power to confer vastly greater advantage than it did a century ago. But he would not find that society reaps a greater fraction of that advantage. “Between the health care that we have and the care we could have lies not just a gap but a chasm,” the Institute of Medicine has found.
 

Failings in medical education and credentialing are a central reason the chasm exists. These failings are rooted in Flexner’s embrace of the university model of formal education. This model was seen as the only way to bring scientific advances to medical practice...

2. The medical school experience
According to the Institute of Medicine, “many believe that, in general, the current curriculum is overcrowded and relies too much on memorizing facts” and that “the fundamental approach to clinical education has not changed since 1910.” [pp 195 - 197]
Beyond that, looking forward Dr. Mattison proffered five fundamental areas of improvement concern:
  1. The prevailing perverse incentive model;
  2. Uncoordinated care / lack of prevention effort;
  3. Opacity of pricing;
  4. End of Life care (he cited the UK's much higher "% of deaths at home");
  5. Lifestyle disorders.
Pretty much a recitation of the litany we've mostly all increasingly heard across the past 4-5 years.
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More shots...

Joe DeLuca, Health Care Investment Visions. Joe said "there's not much new in ObamaCare," and admonished the developer community regarding the potential for patient harm via HIT done poorly.
Jeff Schox of Schox PLC Patent Group. Excellent speaker. Looks like he's 16. He presented on patent / intellectual property protection issues for progressive health/medical apps.
Deven McGraw, CDT. Nice to see and talk with her again.
My new friend Leslie Kernisan, MD, MPH, Geriatrician, frequent THCB contributor
SATURDAY 18th UPDATE: JEFF SCHOX

I'm watching his 1st Patent / IP lecture. Excellent. Free.



Share Information, Sell Services.
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More to come...