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“Naked Hospital” is tomorrow!

Posted by: Katy Kirby  /  Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

For  those of you on the fence about attending, check out the final agenda with speakers and topics for tomorrow’s 2nd “Naked Hospital” event being held in Jamison Hall at The Factory at Franklin.  The best and the brightest in our healthcare community will be hosting a frank, revealing discussion about transparency and eHealth.

Interested in attending?  We’ll have limited walk ups, so ensure your seat at the event by registering now! If you can’t attend tomorrow, be sure to follow us on Twitter (@nashtechcouncil, hashtag #nakedhospital) for pics and discussion highlights.

Special thanks to our Titan Sponsors HealthSpring and Peak 10 for underwriting tomorrow’s event. We hope to see you there!



A “Naked Hospital” Preview from David Jarrard

Posted by: Katy Kirby  /  Tags: , , , , , ,

Today we are very pleased to have David Jarrard, President and CEO of Nashville Technology Council member company Jarrard Phillips Cate & Hancock, give us a sneak preview on some of the compelling discussion we will be having at our upcoming Naked Hospital event on August 26th at The Factory at Franklin.  We sold out last year, so be sure to register now to reserve your spot!


Facebook is changing the way we run hospitals. Or, it ought to, if we want to keep our best people, provide the best care, and remain, you know, in business.


Here’s a proposition from the world of the obvious: The “new normal” of information transparency has changed the way we live, how we work together, and what we expect from each other.


It’s also changing the way effective leaders lead today.


At the upcoming Naked Hospital conference, I suspect you’ll rightly hear how healthcare “reform” has made attaining information transparency especially urgent to America’s hospitals — even as it strains rusty IT systems and the sanity of CIOs. Quality of care and quality of balance sheets all hinge on success here, and it impacts just about every operational decision.


But while transparency is changing the healthcare industry, it’s also worth considering how transparency is changing us.


An example: In its 2010 Pulse Report, Press Ganey reported on its survey of 235,000 employees at 383 hospitals. Among its findings:

“Gen X employees (born between1965 to 1983) want frequent and real-time conversations and Gen Y (1984 or later) wants to continuously receive real-time information. They both want to be involved in decisions. Gen X employees place more importance on managing themselves while Gen Y employees have high expectations for full participation and collaboration.”


Sound familiar? It’s a short path between the power of social media (where dialogue and transparency and collaboration is king) to the expectations of today’s workforce. Those Gen X and Gen Y employees want a relationship with leadership; they want engagement; they want information and honesty; they even want some measure of control.


The good news: When hospital leadership engages with these employees in this way, the results can be astounding. We’ve seen hospitals transformed by the power of real transparency and honest engagement with their workforce. A comatose workforce can become an army of leaders and advocates. Market share shifts. Satisfaction scores rise. Votes come in.


Wait…they want some control? Yikes. This can be a very scary proposition for hospitals, by nature conservative and skeptical. But the successful “naked hospital” – the ones that truly embrace transparency in every aspect – will tap a powerful resource that can transform their organization.


How powerful? Ask your Facebook friends.

August 26 – The Naked Hospital

Posted by: earmstrong  /  Tags: , , , , ,  /  Comments: 1

The Naked Hospital is a super roundtable, half day event being held August 26th, 7:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at Jamison Hall in The Factory at Franklin.

Transparency has become even more important in the past year as we begin the healthcare reform discussion. The Naked Hospital is the fist event in Nashville to bring quality, marketing, transparency, and technology in health care together. We will focus on how and why health systems and hospitals should focus on quality reporting as well as financial reporting. At the end of the day,this level of reporting puts additional strains on the information systems and resources deployed by most health systems and hospitals. How will they cope? What is the next step? The Naked Hospital will take the user experience from high level strategy through national and state legislative issues through practical, hands on tools to walk away with.


CONFIRMED SPEAKERS ARE:
– Congressman Jim Cooper
Miriam Paramore (SVP, Emdeon)
– Dr. Stephanie Bailey, MD, MSHSA (Former Chief of Public Health Practice, CDC)
– Michael Boroch (CEO, Smart Room)
– Bill Brown (CEO, Entrada)
– Janet King (Nashville Health Exchange)
- Sean Cassidy (SVP, IBM Global Health Services)
-David Jarrard (Jarrard, Phillips, Cate, & Hancock)


Admission is $50 for NTC members, $75 for non-NTC members, and $200 for a member table of 8. Breakfast and lunch will be served.

 

Click Here to Register


Naked Hospital is Underwritten by:

 

Breakfast Sponsor



Lunch Sponsor


Track Sponsors

Congressman Blackburn Addresses Health Care Reform at “Naked Hospital” Event

Posted by: tfetherling  /  Tags: , , , , , , ,

The Nashville Tech Story (8/6/2009)

The Nashville Technology Council hosted our “Naked Hospital” event this morning.  The event revolved around health care reform and transparency.  Our second speaker was U.S. Congressman Marsha Blackburn who provided the audience with a legislative update on the health care reform issue.

Congressman Blackburn is concerned by the state of confusion revolving around patients.  She fully believe’s that it’s frustrating to both employers and patients because the system is currently not as transparent as it should be.  Many individuals have issues with simply finding where to go when they don’t understand the paperwork they recieve from their physician, hospital or insurance provider.

While transparency is extremely important, one of the components that cannot be overlooked and must also be transparent is the educational aspect.  Patients need to be able to understand their insurance policies, bills being sent to them by their doctor ’s, and what the information means that hospital’s are giving them.  With education will come the discussion to start making patients liable.

Everyone agrees that costs are too high, access is very limited and tort reform needs to take place.  Currently, some of the conversation taking place in government revolves around making individuals more responsible, which includes something as simple as following a doctor’s orders and taking prescription drugs as they are prescribed.   

Health IT is also a very important component that needs to be addressed.  The benefits that Health IT can provide can provide an enormous source of savings and efficiency.  One example of this is taking advantage of Electronic Medical Records (EMR).  Congressman Blackburn is a big believer that every patient should own their medical record, which would create a huge cost savings for the health care industry.  The best example of this was after Katrina, which would have saved cost had individuals had access to an EMR. 

“Our hope is that going back you will see a beginning to whittle down and find the areas of agreement to yield efficiencies and savings,” said Congressman Blackburn.  ”We want to be able to move something to the President’s desk by the end of the year that will deal with IT issues and create some reform.”

If you want to learn more about these issues, visit Congressman Blackburn’s website at www.Blackburn.house.gov

Congressman Marsha Blackburn to Address Nashville Technology Council About Health Care Reform

Posted by: tfetherling  /  Tags: , , , , ,

The Nashville Tech Story (8/4/2009)

The Nashville Technology Council will be hosting “The Naked Hospital” on Thursday, August 6th at the Hillwood Country Club.  This is a special Super Roundtable event that will be a provocative look at transparency and eHealth.  We will discuss how and why health systems and hospitals should focus on quality and value as part of their business strategy.

The half day event will feature expert speakers including:

  • U.S. Congressman, Marsha Blackburn
  • Paul Keckley, Executive Director, Deloitte Center for Health Solutions
  • David Jarrard, CEO, Jarrard, Cate, Phillips, Hancock

Panel discussions will also be included and focus on Measuring Quality/Value as well as Personal Health Records, Electronic Health Records, and Electronic Medical Records.  Companies represented on panels include: HMS, Emdeon, Healthways, CHS, HealthStream, and Credence Healthcare.

Don’t miss out on this exciting event that is targeted at health care and technology industry professionals. Registration for this event will end tomorrow (8/5) at noonClick here for more information

“Naked Hospital” – EHR & EMR Programs Provide Real Solution?

Posted by: tfetherling  /  Tags: , , , ,

The Nashville Tech Story (July 15, 2009)

Each year the concern over environmental protection continues to grow.  New programs are formed everyday to find new ways to recycle and make the world a more efficient and cleaner place.  The EPA estimates that a single person uses more than 700 pounds of paper products each year.  The health care industry has been a major contributor to that consumption in the past.  However, health care professionals have been continuously experimenting and working to implement electronic medical and health record programs (EMRs / EHRs) into their organizations.

With more than 300 EMR and EHR programs, electronic medical records continue to be a hot topic in the health care industry.  Not only does an EMR program offer a new way to chart patients, but it also offers health care professionals and their organizations advantages that can be overlooked.  While the most noticeable advantage of the programs is going “paperless,” these programs also offer:

• E&M coding advice
• electronic prescribing and formulary
• bi-directional laboratory integration
• pay-for-performance tracking
 
An EMR program can be tough to implement because most are designed for certain specialties and sizes of clinics.  Electronic medical records is similar to a CRM database for a business where the EMR can be purchased billing software or medical practice management software within a fully-integrated suite.

Another fact that some health care professionals tend to overlook is the help that the federal government can provide.  The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, was recently put in place by congress as part of the national stimulus package.   It states that providers that qualify as “meaningful users” of EHR systems are eligible to receive $40K – $60K in incentive payments paid out over a five year period in the form of Medicare and Medicaid premiums.

While EMR and EHR programs are definitely important to the health care industry, some professionals still need to learn the in’s and out’s of the process and what resources are available to them.  The Nashville Technology Council can be one of your resources.

The Council will be hosting our Super Roundtable event, “The Naked Hospital” on August 6th at the Hillwood Country Club.  We will be hosting a panel during the event based specifically on PHR, EHR or EMR.  For more information on this panel or the other elements of this event, please click here.