MemoryWell grew out of my experience caregiving for my father, who had Alzheimer s, said Jay Newton-Small, MemoryWell founder. I never imagined that story would grow into an AI company that is poised to transform healthcare.
MemoryWell, based in Washington D.C., has partnered with more than 40 care providers since 2017, working in Alzheimer s and dementia care, senior living, home care, Medicare Advantage plans, hospice and palliative care. This quarter, MemoryWell is launching large-scale pilots with
Prospero Health, a home-based supportive care company, and
PCH Mutual Insurance, a national insurer of senior living providers. We are excited to grow with MemoryWell, said Doug Wenners, Co-Founder and CEO of Prospero Health. Our care delivery model is based on knowing our patients and truly understanding what it takes to help them feel cared for and supported in the home. MemoryWell will help us better understand our patients and their social determinants of health.
you re welcome. we re gonna need a bigger room. before we move on to the huge week in d.c., let s take a look at the headlines that you may have miss in the week that was. is that right? do we still have the open here in d.c.? we do. dusted it off. for the good, bad, ugly, time magazine s jay newton small. welcome to you guys. messing my name up. i am. i m on a roll. like put some respect on my name. right. try to have less than nine syllables. avi gupta who won $100,000 on jeopardy! wrote a check for $10,000 to give to the oregon
this is about national security and that s a value that republicans have talked about for decades and they will be forced to ask if question if the evidence continues to unfold this way, are they okay with the president making decisions about foreign policy baseded on personal interest ratter than national security and it s about presidential power. are republicans okay with strong, aggressive use of presidential power or abuse of presidential power. those are two key conservative rhetorical talking points and that s what impeachment is going to force them to answer as well as do they believe in law and order. jay, a new abc news poll shows the majority of americans think trump s actions tied to ukraine is a serious problem. but they re also you know, not ooem even surprised by this kind of behavior. but what does this mean? how do you translate this to the
officials inclueing former envoy to crew ukraineful he s set the appear before three committees, so a lot of the pressure on the administration this week to produce these materials to congress. all right. thank you. let s talk about all this with michael warren, contributor for time magazine. jay newton small and cnn political analyst. michael, you wrote an in depth story on cnn.com. rudy giuliani s ten month missi mission, dealing with the ukraine or the orgin into the russian election interference and giuliani says he was working on behalf of the state department. do you believe that volcker if he testifies this week, he would concur with that? well, we ll have to see. giuliani has been pretty slippery, telling cbs news today
this president doesn t stick to the script. he doesn t stick to the teleprompter. as we saw, you know, at that event and at so many other events recently, he veers off of whatever the official topic and subject is to talk about everything on on in front of him, much. which is political. in fact, this is something he had to say at the event, let s listen. i m going to speak to the union leaders and say we have to support trump. and if they don t vote them the hell out of office because they re not doing their job. it s true. vote them out of office. jay, there is a real fear of how this president retaliates. absolutely. you ve seen him retaliate on on a lot of levels. whether it s going after amazon because they own the washington post, to some degree, they ve never done i should be