Becker's Hospital Review

October 2016 Hospital Review

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109 CIO / HEALTH IT Jeremy Malecha, ResMed. Mr. Malecha is the vice president of prod- uct management for ResMed's Global Healthcare Informatics Busi- ness Unit, responsible for the company's health IT offerings across ev- ery global market. e company develops connected medical devices and cloud-based soware apps for diagnosing, treating and managing chronic conditions. e technology monitors 2 million patients re- motely every day. James McHugh, McKinnis Consulting Services. Mr. McHugh is a managing director with McKinnis Consulting Services, a Navigant consulting practice. He is responsible for setting the strategic vision and client relationship management, focused on leveraging next-gen- eration EHR technology to support best practice revenue cycle oper- ations. Santosh Mohan is chairperson of HIMSS National Innovation Com- mittee and board member of HIMSS NorCal. He also serves as a man- agement fellow in the office of the CIO at Stanford Health Care and was director—senior consultant with e Advisory Board Company for three years. Jake Myers, MedPilot. Mr. Myers is the co-founder and CEO of Med- Pilot, a tool designed to make billing and collections departments more efficient. He has about a decade of experience in revenue cycle management and has been featured in HIT Consultant, AlleyWatch and mHealth Spot. Rebecca Palm, Copatient. Ms. Palm is co-founder and chief strate- gy officer of Copatient, a Boston-based start-up focused on helping patients with medical bills that has received support and financial backing from athenahealth CEO Jonathan Bush. Copatient identifies billing errors, estimating 90 percent of patient medical bills reviewed contain errors or overcharges and the company can save customers 40 percent or $3,000 on their medical bills on average. Oscar Perez, Memorial Healthcare System. Mr. Perez is the vice president of IT at Memorial Healthcare System in Hollywood, Fla. He previously served as director of informatics at Miami-based Jackson Health System. Nick Reddy, Baylor Scott & White Health. Mr. Reddy is the chief digital officer and senior vice president of information services at Bay- lor Scott & White Health in Dallas. He helped develop the system's first mobile app and was named one of CIO Magazine's Ones to Watch in 2014. Emily Richmond, MPH, Able Health. Ms. Richmond is the vice president of quality and performance improvement at Able Health, a start-up that helps providers participate in value-based payment pro- grams. She has 10 years of experience working in healthcare quality improvement and pay-for-performance, formerly working at Practice Fusion and chairing the EHR Association's Clinician Experience work group. Allyson Schiff, Newport Credentialing Solutions. Ms. Schiff is vice president of operations at Newport Credentialing Solutions, a creden- tialing service coupled with cloud-based data management tools to maximize reimbursement. She has published several articles on cre- dentialing focused on third-party payer reimbursement. Michael Sherling, MD, Modernizing Medicine. Dr. Sherling is the CMO and co-founder of Modernizing Medicine. He received the 2014 U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Leadership in Healthcare award and is responsible for developing and growing the company's dermatology, gastroenterology, ophthalmology, orthopedics, plastic surgery, otolar- yngology, urology and rheumatology verticals. Joshua Silver, Patientco. Mr. Silver is the co-founder and vice president of strategy at Patientco, a patient billing and payments platform. He is responsible for overall technology strategy and product direction. Nick Stepro, Arcadia Healthcare Solutions. Mr. Stepro is the senior director of product management at Arcadia Healthcare Solutions de- signing healthcare analytics applications. He has experience working with large health systems and payers to design and develop clinical integration and business intelligence solutions to improve health out- comes and reduce system costs. Kyle Wailes, Intermedix. Mr. Wailes is the executive vice president of physician services for Intermedix where he oversees the services and technology the company provides to physicians. He has more than 10 years of experience in healthcare focusing on physician practice innovation and investment. He earned an MBA from Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Medicine in Chicago. YiDing Yu, MD, Atrius Health. Dr. Yu is the chief innovation en- gineer of Atrius Health. She founded Twiage, a mobile technolo- gy company that enables hospitals to prioritize ambulances going to emergency departments and serves as the company's CMO. She was also included on Boston Business Journal's "40 Under 40" list in 2015. n Why One Security Expert Gives Banner Health's Handling of its Breach a 'C-Minus' By Max Green I n August, Phoenix-based Banner Health announced the largest data breach of any hospital so far this year. Cyberattackers gained access to the system's servers, including those processing credit card informa- tion for cafeteria sales, and others containing data from health plan members and beneficiaries — more than 3.7 million patients were affected overall. In a recent interview with Forbes, Jeff Williams, chief technology officer and cofounder of Contrast Security, shared what rating he would give Banner if the health- care industry evaluated organizations on how they han- dled themselves during and after a data breach. Taking into consideration factors like the timeline of the breach, tone of the disclosure, scope of information sto- len, number of individuals affected, cause, efforts to pick up the pieces and where the blame was placed, Mr. Wil- liams graded Banner's performance during the course of the breach and gave the system a barely passing grade. "Overall I give them a C-/D+," Mr. Williams told Forbes in an emailed statement. "There is still an awful lot of miss- ing information. What is there isn't bad, but we only have a tiny piece of the story of this breach. And they don't seem too sorry." Banner is in the process of notifying anyone who could potentially be impacted by the breach, and is offering free identity theft and credit monitoring services. n

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