Issue link: https://beckershealthcare.uberflip.com/i/731691
20 Before joining Baystate, Dr. Keroack was senior vice president and CMO of Oak Brook, Ill.-based University HealthSystem Consortium, a national alliance of 112 medical centers. He is the co-creator of the Faculty Prac- tice Solutions Center database and the UHC Patient Safety Net adverse event reporting system, and he led UHC's research to define the leader- ship and management practices associated with top organizational per- formance in quality care. M. Narendra Kini, MD. CEO of Miami Children's Health System. Dr. Kini has served as president and CEO of Miami Children's Health Sys- tem, which includes Nicklaus Children's Hospital and its eight outpatient centers, since January 2008. He is a board-certified pediatric emergency medicine physician. Prior to joining Miami Children's, Dr. Kini served as executive vice president for clinical and physician services at Livonia, Mich.-based Trinity Health. Before that, he held various roles related to IT at GE Healthcare Leadership Institute and GE Medical Information Technologies in Waukesha, Wis., and at Children's Hospital of Wiscon- sin in Milwaukee, where he was vice president of clinical and support services. Stephen Klasko, MD. President and CEO of omas Jefferson Univer- sity and Jefferson Health (Philadelphia). Under the leadership of Dr. Klasko, Jefferson Health has grown from a three-hospital urban academic medical center to an eight-hospital system, aer the 2014 merger of Jef- ferson with Abington (Pa.) Health. Dr. Klasko served as CEO of Tampa, Fla.-based USF Health and dean of the Morsani College of Medicine at the University of South Florida before joining Jefferson. He has authored multiple books, including his latest, We CAN Fix Healthcare in America, and serves as editor-in-chief of the journal Healthcare Transformation. In addition, Dr. Klasko serves on several boards, including that of Bethle- hem, Pa.-based Lehigh University. Arthur Klein, MD. President of Mount Sinai Health Network (New York City). Dr. Klein, a pediatric cardiologist, was named president of Mount Sinai Health Network in February 2013. Previously, he served as western regional director at North Shore-LIJ Health System, now called Northwell Health in New Hyde Park, N.Y. Before that, he was executive director of Northshore-LIJ's Steven and Alexander Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York. Dr. Klein is a fellow of the American Acade- my of Pediatrics and the American College of Cardiology. He has written extensively on pediatric cardiology. Mark Laney, MD. CEO of Mosaic Life Care (St. Joseph, Mo.). Before joining Mosaic Life Care in 2009, Dr. Laney worked at Fort Worth, Tex- as-based Cook Children's Health Care System for 20 years. For eight of those years, he served as president of the Cook Children's Physician Network. In addition, Dr. Laney is the former president of the Mayo Clinic Alumni Association and a past chairman of the St. Joseph Metro Chamber of Commerce and the Missouri Hospital Association. Under Dr. Laney's leadership, Vice President Joe Biden presented Mosaic Life Care with the 2009 Malcolm Baldridge National Quality Award, which recognizes organizations for quality and organizational performance ex- cellence. Vivian S. Lee, MD, PhD. CEO of University of Utah Health Care (Salt Lake City). Dr. Lee has served as senior vice president for health sciences at the University of Utah, dean of the university's school of medicine and CEO of University of Utah Health Care since July 2011. At the helm of the health system that includes four hospitals, 10 neighborhood health centers, a health plan, more than 1,330 physicians and five colleges, she is responsible for an annual budget of $3.3 billion. A recognized leader in academic medicine and health sciences, Dr. Lee serves on the Council of Councils of the National Institutes of Health, the administrative board of the Council of Deans of the Association of American Medical Colleges, JAMA's Journal Oversight Committee, the Health Care Delivery System Reform Advisory Committee of e Commonwealth Fund and the sci- entific advisory board of Boston-based Massachusetts General Hospital. James Leonard, MD. President and CEO of the Carle Foundation Hospital (Urbana, Ill.). As president and CEO of Carle, Dr. Leonard oversees clinical and business operations for the hospital, which serves more than 850,000 inpatient and outpatient visits each year. He has held this role since 2000. In November 2015, Dr. Leonard was named CEO of Health Alliance Medical Plans. He is board-certified in family practice medicine with additional training in sports medicine and ad- diction medicine. Alan List, MD. President and CEO of Moffitt Cancer Center (Tampa, Fla.). In addition to serving as president and CEO of Moffitt Cancer Center, Dr. List is internationally recognized for his contributions to the development of more effective treatment strategies for myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myeloid leukemia. He helped develop treatment for patients with MDS and multiple myeloma. Previously, Dr. List served as executive vice president and physician-in-chief, vice deputy physi- cian-in-chief and chief of the malignant hematology division at Moffitt, where he holds the Morsani Endowed Chair. Prior to joining Moffitt in 2003, he was a professor of medicine at the University of Arizona, Tuc- son, where he also served as director of the Leukemia and Blood Mar- row Transplant Program and director of the Division of Translational/ Clinical Research Program. William Lunn, MD. CEO of Tulane Medical Center (New Orleans). Dr. Lunn became CEO of Tulane Medical Center in July 2014. Previous- ly, he served as COO of Irving, Texas-based Christus Health, a position he took in 2009. While at Christus, he helped lead a financial and opera- tional turnaround resulting in improved quality, increased market share and a $55 million expansion project. Before that, he spent five years at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston as assistant dean of clinical af- fairs and director of interventional pulmonology. ere, he received the Fulbright and Jaworski LLP Faculty Excellence Award for leadership in medical education while holding dual appointments in the departments of medicine and otolaryngology. John Mazziotta, MD, PhD. Vice Chancellor of UCLA Health Sci- ences and CEO of UCLA Health (Los Angeles). Dr. Mazziotta has been a member of the UCLA faculty since 1983. Prior to his current appointment as vice chancellor of UCLA Health Sciences and CEO of UCLA Health, Dr. Mazziotta served as associate vice chancellor for health sciences and executive vice dean of the school of medicine. He was also chair of the department of neurology and director of the Ah- manson-Lovelace Brain Mapping Center, which he founded. He has published more than 260 research papers and eight texts, and he is the recipient of many awards, including the Oldendorf Award from the American Society of Neuroimaging, the S. Weir Mitchell Award and the Wartenberg Prize from the American Academy of Neurology and the Von Hevesy Prize from the International Society of Nuclear Med- icine. Dr. Mazziotta also has been elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and he is a member of the Royal College of Physicians. John McCabe, MD. Senior Vice President for Hospital Affairs and CEO of Upstate University Hospital (Syracuse, N.Y.). Dr. McCabe served in various key leadership positions with Upstate Medical Univer- sity for 22 years before being named CEO of the hospital and senior vice president for hospital affairs in August 2009. Prior roles include medical staff president, medical director of University Hospital, vice president and vice dean for hospital affairs, senior associate dean for planning/ resource management and chair of the department of emergency med- icine. In addition to his executive duties, Dr. McCabe is a professor of emergency medicine at Upstate Medical University. He has had several