At the time that the e. Health exchange was stood up and really what is happening with the majority of Healthcare Organizations across the country , they Exchange Information, care summaries, and other Clinical Data. Some other networks popped up. One is the common well alliance which is a gender participation alliance, which they created their own network to Exchange Information with each other. Then i will get into the care quality which is our network, but also a framework. The sequoia project became is a private Public Partnership that oversees and manages the National Network, it is really important the work that the sequoia project is doing because they are joint hip and hip with o. N. C. Just blowing through some of the data that we have, it really is our current capability from our hospitals, exchanging care summaries at about 80 now. Finding data is about 60 now. The ambulatory providers, sharing data outside of the organizations, is probably at 40 or 50 now. When we talk abou
My name is marcus lemonis, and i risk my own money to save struggling businesses. Were not going to wake up every morning wondering if we have a job. Were gonna wake up every morning wondering how many jobs we have to do. Its not always pretty. Everythings gonna change everything. But i do it to save jobs, and i do it to make money. This. Lets go to work. Is the profit. Milwaukee has some of the best food and drink in the country. Something i know well because i went to college there. Thats me when i had hair. And one of the newer local favorites is the soup market. Stephanie hi, honey. How are you . Lemonis a quickservice chain started in 2004 by chef dave jurena and his business partner. Dave anything else for you, sir . Lemonis dave did the cooking while his partner ran the business. Woman thats good. Lemonis and before long, the soup market had expanded to five locations, with plans for many more. Then daves partner and coowner died suddenly, leaving him struggling to run the compa
Other efforts that we did the healthcare continuum is really in the community. So there are four walls of our care settings. The clinics, the centres, the diagnostic centres, the procedural centres, and you look at things like e. M. S. Or ambulances. How do we effectively connect what is happening in the field, and the prehospital or precare setting where patients are actually seen a lot, and is the primary mode of transit or entry into our system. So not surprisingly, the ambulances and what we call the e. M. S. Services, they brought their own version of Electronic Health records and they have a whole different electronic standard. We were able to map those standards together so that if a patient is seen by an ambulance in the field, they are able to connect and do the same kind of korey about patient formation and transmit that to the hospital or anywhere they want and pilots that we have done that came out of some initial successful pilots out of southern california, we did one in
Apple kicked the door open in terms of Patient Engagement and patient control of their own information with the Apple Health Records. What they did, by using emerging and new standards, they made it so that the patient has control of all their information that they get through the portals, which is independent or agnostic of the platform, it is being used in the care setting, so if you are being seen at dignity at ucsf and stanford and sutter and kaiser and you are enrolled in all their portals, as well as independent practitioners who may be using a variety of other systems, and you have their portal, and their systems are subscribed or have an a. P. I. Enabled, this gets pushed to Apple Health Records and on your phone, on your smart device in an encrypted manner and secure manner, the patient has control over their information. Im spending a lot of time on this, but the reason that this is important is his Large Tech Companies have engaged in the healthcare business or tried to get
What happens to the information. The other example i have is working going to a Dignity Health cancer survivor opportunity, and it was one of these special concierge events, and believe it or not, it was at the hospital, and it was a gong event. These people came from all around california. They set up these gongs, cancer survivors all laid down, covered in blank kicks, et cetera et cetera, and they gong for 40 minutes and it was amazing. So that was a really wonderful thing, but it took me 20 phone calls and just actually showing up to get through so that its not a seamless kind of thing. When i went through it, it was dark, and i was take off your shoes, and i was afraid i was going to trip myself finding my way through. Thank you. Thank you. Anybody else . Thank you for that feedback. I think it is very helpful to see whats really happening. You can see a lot on paper, but when people actually experience it, it is more important. Thank you. Anybody else for this item . Seen none see