conference program - Health Datapalooza

Transcription

conference program - Health Datapalooza
CONFERENCE PROGRAM
The Health Data Consortium is a collaboration among government,
non-profit, and private sector organizations working to foster the
availability and use of health data to drive innovations that improve
health and health care.
Our mission is to ignite innovation and foster collaboration amongst
health data users and stakeholders for the benefit of everyone. We will
promote responsible health data use and hasten the movement through
advocacy, education, and targeted “catalyst” programs.
We have developed three foundational strategies that we believe will
transform the use of health data and accelerate the benefits dramatically:
Open health data: Focusing initially on government, HDC will
advocate for release of de-identified data at all levels in order to improve
health outcomes, inform choices, increase transparency, and drive
accountability across the system. We will promote the operational
“readiness” of the data—it must be documented, supported, and
continually improved to ensure its safe and broad use.
Enable and promote data sharing across the health system: HDC
will promote responsible health data sharing policies, standards, practices,
collaborations, and reforms that improve health outcomes, catalyze
innovation and facilitate research, and drive efficiencies. This effort
will require a balance between the missions of the public and private
sectors—a balance we believe is achievable through cooperation and
partnering among the many stakeholder groups.
Promote a human-centered health system, powered by health
data: It’s about better health and a more personal healthcare
experience. HDC will promote a vision for health data exchange that
elevates the role of each of us, empowers patients with information and
control of their data, advocates for secure information-sharing policies,
and seeks to create a robust patient information framework to improve
patient outcomes and the healthcare system.
Come join the health data movement.
For more information about Health Data
Consortium, visit www.healthdataconsortium.org
2 I Health Datapalooza 2015
or follow @hdconsortium on Twitter.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Message from Health Data Consortium CEO................3
Steering Committee/Acknowledgements.....................4
General Information..........................................................5-6
Special Recognition and Challenges................................7
Health Datapalooza 2015 Sponsors.................................8
Health Datapalooza 2015 Media Partners......................9
Schedule-At-A-Glance................................................. 10-14
App Demos..................................................................... 16-17
Special Events................................................................. 18-19
Detailed Agenda............................................................ 20-32
Post-Conference Workshops............................................ 33
Main Stage Panels......................................................... 34-35
Keynote Speakers................................................................ 36
Main Stage Emcees and Moderators............................ 37
Exhibitor Listing................................................................... 38
Exhibitor Map....................................................................... 39
Health Datapalooza 2015 Exhibitors....................... 40-45
Hotel Floor Plan............................................................. 46-47
More info can be found on the app
WELCOME TO HEALTH DATAPALOOZA 2015!
On behalf of Health Data Consortium, the event’s partners and
sponsors, and the 2015 Steering Committee, I welcome you to
the sixth annual Health Datapalooza.
I could not be more excited to welcome you to Health
Datapalooza 2015, the only conference which fuels discussion
around the future of health data and its innovative use to invoke
provocative change in the industry. Spend the next three days
networking and hearing from consumers, providers, payors,
researchers, innovators, policy makers, and many more health
data thought leaders – all of whom have come together to focus
on the cultural, technological, and political issues and trends
related to health data. Expand your experience and take the
conversation online using #hdpalooza.
Keep up with the conversation online
using #hdpalooza.
Each day features keynote presentations from impactful
visionaries across the field. Your educational experience is
rounded out with breakout sessions that will explore key
questions and concepts in health data in relation to clinical care,
data science and infrastructure, impact, innovation, patients and
consumers, and more.
We are in the midst of a healthcare data revolution, and each
of us has an important role to play. It is only through crosssector collaboration and forward-thinking dialogue that we
will continue to drive the conversation toward a future where
technology aids in the advancement of patient care and the
healthcare industry as a whole.
During your time at Health Datapalooza,
don’t just join the conversation…
BE the conversation.
Join our year-round mission to ignite innovation using health
data! Learn more at HealthDataConsortium.org.
Your fellow data hippie,
Christopher Boone, PhD, FACHE
Chief Executive Officer, Health Data
Consortium
Taking the conversation from abstract theory to innovative
practice, 40 organizations will showcase their latest apps in our
Apps Expo, with App Demos featured on the main stage. And
explore the exhibit hall where you will find some of the very best
real-life examples and applications of health data.
New Challenges will be announced at Health Datapalooza.
Be the first to hear details regarding these opportunities to
transform health care and win big prizes.
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 3
STEERING COMMITTEE / ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Health Datapalooza 2015
Steering Committee
David Knott, Chair, Steering
Committee, Senior Partner, McKinsey
& Company
Christopher Boone, Chief Executive
Officer, Health Data Consortium
Gregory Downing, Executive Director
for Innovation, U.S. Department of
Health & Human Services
Karen Ignagni, President and CEO,
America’s Health Insurance Plans
Mohit Kaushal, Partner, Aberdare
Ventures
Bob Kocher, Partner, Venrock
Kavita Patel, Fellow and Managing
Director, Engelberg Center for Health
Care Reform, Brookings Institution
Casey Quinlan, the Mighty Mouth,
Mighty Casey Media LLC & Patients
for Clinical Research
Dwayne Spradlin, CEO, Buzz Points
4 I Health Datapalooza 2015
The Health Data Consortium is fortunate to have supporters and friends
who are equally committed to the success of Health Datapalooza. We
would like to acknowledge those efforts to make this year’s conference a
truly remarkable event.
First, we must acknowledge and thank all of our sponsors, including our
Platinum Sponsors, Esri, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Surescripts as well
as our Founding Sponsors, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, California
HealthCare Foundation, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services,
and the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies.
The Health Datapalooza Steering Committee played an instrumental role
in the development of the event’s program and in securing outstanding
speakers. Many thanks to the chair of this year’s event, David Knott, and all
of the Steering Committee members for their time and support.
Numerous outstanding partners helped organize this year’s event. A
partial list includes Courtesy Associates, Feinstein Kean Healthcare, and
SmithBucklin.
Volunteers are critical to the success of Health Datapalooza. Session cotrack leaders, moderators, panelists, reviewers, and judges made possible
a variety of Health Datapalooza activities – we could not have done this
without you!
Finally, we would like to give a special thanks to the U.S. Department of
Health & Human Services for their leadership and support in the area of
health data and for their contributions of time and energy in helping make
Health Datapalooza the success it has become.
More info can be found on the app
GENERAL INFORMATION
Registration Hours
Location: Lobby Level of Marriott
Wardman Park
• Sunday, May 31
4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
• Monday, June 1
7:00 am – 7:00 pm
• Tuesday, June 2
7:00 am – 7:00 pm
• Wednesday, June 3
7:00 am – 12:00 pm
Exhibit Hours
• Monday, June 1
12:00 pm – 7:00 pm
• Tuesday, June 2
11:00 am – 5:45 pm
Accessibility for Registrants
with Disabilities
The meeting staff will work with attendees to
provide reasonable accommodations for those
who require special needs. To request assistance,
please check in at the Registration Desk.
Cameras, Recording Devices,
and Cell Phones
Please refrain from using cameras, recorders and/
or cell phones during the sessions in a manner that
might disturb others. Cell phone ringers should
be set to vibrate or turned off during sessions as a
courtesy to speakers and other attendees. Personal
photography is permitted at social functions.
Conference attendees are encouraged to tweet
about the conference using #hdpalooza
Badges
Badges should be worn to all official functions. If
you forget or lose your badge, you may obtain a
replacement at the Registration Desk.
Consent to Use of Photographic Images
Meals and Refreshments
Registration and attendance at, or participation
in, Health Datapalooza constitutes agreement by
the registrant to Health Data Consortium’s use
and distribution of (both now and in the future)
the attendee’s image or voice in photographs,
videotapes, electronic reproductions, and
audiotapes of the meeting’s events and activities.
Morning Breaks
Lost and Found
Please turn in any found items to the Health
Datapalooza Registration Desk. If you misplace an
item, please check at the Registration Desk during
registration hours. At the end of the conference,
lost items will be turned over to the hotel’s
Security Department.
Learn, Network, and Win
• Monday, June 1
10:45 am – 11:05 am
Marriott Ballroom Foyer
• Tuesday, June 2
10:35 am – 10:55 am
Marriott Ballroom Foyer
• Wednesday, June 3
10:15 am – 10:35 am
Marriott Ballroom Foyer & Washington Foyer
Afternoon Breaks
• Monday, June 1
3:00 pm – 3:20 pm
Outside session rooms – Various locations
Attend sessions, connect with other attendees
and exhibitors, and win great prizes! Simply
download the Health Datapalooza mobile app,
and check out the Game feature for questions
and objectives. Complete the Game “challenges”
that are assigned by scanning the QR code
or answering the questions correctly to earn
points. Learn more by downloading the app at
www.eventmobi.com/hdp2015
• Tuesday, June 2
2:20 pm – 2:40 pm
Outside session rooms – Various locations
Internet
• Tuesday, June 2
11:50 am – 1:05 pm
Exhibit Hall A & Lincoln 2-3-4
Complimentary standard wireless internet is
available so you can check your emails and tweet
about the great sessions you are attending and
the exhibitors/sponsors you are visiting within the
Exhibit Hall. Use the following network to access
internet at Health Datapalooza:
•Network: Marriott Conference
•Passcode: HDP2015
Transportation and Parking
Taxis are available at the entrance to the hotel. The
Woodley Park Metro Station which connects to
the Red Line is located next to the hotel. Parking is
available at the hotel at the following rates:
•Self-Parking: $41
• Valet Parking: $46
3:55 pm – 4:15 pm
Outside session rooms – Various locations
Lunches
• Monday, June 1
12:30 pm – 1:45 pm
Exhibit Hall A
• Wednesday, June 3
11:50 am – 2:30 pm
Marriott Ballroom Salons 2 & 3
Evening Networking Receptions
• Welcome Reception
Sunday, May 31
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Maryland & Virginia
• The Disruptive Social
Monday, June 1
4:35 pm – 6:30 pm
Exhibit Hall A
• MGE (Meet, Greet & Eat) Reception
Tuesday, June 2
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Marriott Ballroom Salon 1
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 5
Speaker Ready Room
The Speaker Ready Room is located in Park Suite
8217. All presenters are requested to check in at
the Speaker Ready Room at least two hours prior
to their scheduled presentation. Even if you have
already submitted your presentation in advance
and have no changes, please check to confirm
that the uploaded presentation file is correct.
Speaker Ready Room hours are:
• Sunday, May 31
4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
• Monday, June 1
7:00 am – 7:00 pm
• Tuesday, June 2
7:00 am – 7:00 pm
• Wednesday, June 3
7:00 am – 12:00 pm
Mobile App information
Health Datapalooza has a mobile event app you
can use to view and create your own schedule,
connect with other attendees, complete
event surveys, share your Health Datapalooza
experience, and more! This app is available as a
downloadable app for Apple, Android, BlackBerry,
and Windows, or as a mobile website. You can
access the mobile app three different ways:
• Download the app in your device’s app store by searching for HDP 2015
www.rowdmap.com
• Access the app at http://eventmobi.com/hdp2015
• Scan the QR code
Once you have accessed the app, it will store itself
automatically in your browsing cache, making
itself available for offline use. Turn your WiFi off
or place your device on airplane-mode to use the
cached version of the app.
Follow @hdconsortium on Twitter.
Visit Health Data Consortium
at Booth #513
More info can be found on the app
Special Recognition
Challenges
Health Data Liberators Award
The Obesity Challenge
The Health Data Consortium’s Health Data Liberators Award recognizes
extraordinary contributions and leadership in the liberation of health data,
helping to accelerate the pace and multiply the volume of data available to
innovators in order to foster the creation of products and services to improve
health and healthcare. The Award is presented annually and will be bestowed
to the recipient at Health Datapalooza 2015 on Wednesday, June 3, during the
Closing Luncheon in the Marriott Ballroom. HDC Chief Executive Officer Chris
Boone and Charles Ornstein, a representative of last year’s award recipients
(ProPublica’s reporting team of their data-driven series “The Prescribers”), will
present the award.
The Health Data Consortium, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services,
National Health Services of the United Kingdom, and de Beaumont Foundation
will be taking the stage at Health Datapalooza on Monday, June 1, regarding
a groundbreaking initiative to improve health and well-being in both the U.S.
and U.K. Don’t miss this exciting announcement!
Consumers’ Circle
Health Datapalooza recognizes that consumers and/or patients are the
nexus for considering the benefits and challenges of applying health data.
In an effort to more strongly engage the citizen interests in the health
data ecosystem, the Health Data Consortium sponsors the Consumers’
Circle to enable public representation in a meaningful way to contribute
expert viewpoints and considerations to the dialogue. The participants and
sponsors of Health Datapalooza benefit from this experience by gaining new
perspectives and opportunities for obtaining patient- or consumer-specific
inputs on new services, non-monetary benefits of data and information
services, community-level values, and the potential to establish longer
term enrichment through partnerships. Circle members will be present in
many aspects of Health Datapalooza and contribute their knowledge of the
consumer and patient perspective to the health data discussion. Fourteen
advocates comprise this year’s Consumers’ Circle:
Meryl Bloomrosen, Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America
Rene Cabral-Daniels, Community Care Network of Virginia
Loran Cook, Billian’s HealthDATA
Mark Gorman, Unaffiliated
Francie Grace, CatchAndHoldConsulting.com
Adrian Gropper, Patient Privacy Rights
Support the HDC George Thomas
Post-Graduate Fellowship!
At last year’s Health Datapalooza, the Health Data Consortium
launched the George Thomas Post-Graduate Fellowship in honor
of George Thomas, a pioneer of the open data movement who
understood not only data and technology, but the power that the
two combined can have in creating a healthier world. This annual
fellowship supports one individual for a year of graduate work
focused on key problems in data infrastructure and architecture
that could be applied to health and health care.
If you believe in the power of data and innovation to improve
health care, contribute to our matching campaign and double your
donation. To make your contribution, simply visit the Health Data
Consortium home page (www.healthdataconsortium.org) and click
on the “Donate Now” button. Support budding academic talent in
health data today!
Geraldine Gueron, The Wikilife Foundation
Krishnan Iyer, mohCare
Carly Medosch, Unaffiliated
Casey Quinlan, Mighty Casey Media + Patients for Clinical Research
Daniel Rode, Dan Rode & Associates
N. Lee Rucker, Enhance Value
Walter Weiss, Mobile Medical Care, Inc
Katrina Wells, Curiosity Saved the Kat
For more information about
Health Data Consortium, visit
www.healthdataconsortium.org or
follow @hdconsortium on Twitter.
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 7
HEALTH DATAPALOOZA 2015 SPONSORS*
P L AT I N U M
GOLD
S I LV E R
*As of May 8, 2015
8 I Health Datapalooza 2015
More info can be found on the app
HEALTH DATAPALOOZA 2015 MEDIA PARTNERS*
*As of May 8, 2015
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 9
SCHEDULE-AT-A-GLANCE
Sunday, May 31
4:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Registration Open
5:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Welcome Reception Location: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
Location: Maryland & Virginia
Monday, June 1
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Yoga 7:00 am - 7:00 pm
Registration Open
Location: Washington 1-2
Location: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
9:00 am - 10:35 am
Opening General Session
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Featuring: Christopher Boone, Chief Executive Officer, Health Data Consortium; David Knott, Chair,
Health Datapalooza Steering Committee, Senior Partner, McKinsey & Company
Main Stage Emcee: Kavita Patel, MD, MS, Managing Director of Clinical Transformation, Brookings Institution
Keynote Speaker: Esther Dyson, Founder, HICCup
App Demo: Sensentia
Panel: Big Changes from Big Data in Health Care
Moderator: Ceci Connolly, Managing Director, Health Research Institute, PricewaterhouseCoopers
Panelists: Bob Kocher, MD, Partner, Venrock; Farzad Mostashari, MD, Founder, Aledade;
Ed Park, Executive Vice President & COO, Athenahealth
Challenge Announcement
10:45 am - 11:05 am
Break
Location: Marriott Ballroom Foyer
11:05 am - 12:30 pm
General Session
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Panel: The Power of Transparency and Data to Remake Health Care
Moderator: Sarah Kliff, Senior Editor, Vox
Panelists: Niall Brennan, Chief Data Officer, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Bernard Lo, MD, President,
Greenwall Foundation; Nick Sinai, Venture Partner, Insight Venture Partners
App Demo: The Advisory Board Company
12:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Exhibit Hall Open
Location: Exhibit Hall A
12:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Mini Golf
Location: Exhibit Hall A
12:30 pm - 1:45 pm
Lunch
Location: Exhibit Hall A
12:30 pm - 6:30 pm
App Demo Booth Open
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
DataLab
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Healthcare Transformer Showcase
1:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Genius Bar Open
1:00 pm - 6:20 pm
Apps Expo Live Demos
10 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #309
Location: Lincoln 2
Organizer: Startup Health
Location: Lincoln 3-4
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #407
Location: Washington 5-6
More info can be found on the app
SCHEDULE-AT-A-GLANCE (CONT.)
1:45 pm - 3:00 pm
Track:
Clinical Care
Track:
Data Science &
Infrastructure
Track:
General
Track:
Impact
Track:
Innovator
Track:
Patient/Consumer
Track:
Special Panels
Session:
Innovation in
Action: From
Algorithms to
Clinical Change
Session:
Transforming
Location Health
Data To Meaningful
National
Benchmarks
Session:
Leveraging
Big Data for
Better Quality
Measurement
Session:
Applications of
Transparency:
From Visibility to
Action
Session:
Personalized
Medicine: When
Will We Get There?
What’s the Path
Forward?
Session:
Patient Hackers: The
#WeAreNotWaiting
Movement and the
Way Forward for
Open Device Data
Session:
The Future of
Health Data is on
FHIR!
Location:
Virginia
Location:
Washington 1-2
Location:
Delaware
Location:
Washington 4
Location:
Maryland
Location:
Washington 3
Location:
Lincoln 6
3:00 pm - 3:20 pm
3:20 pm - 4:35 pm
Break
Location: Outside of session rooms - Various locations
Track:
Clinical Care
Track:
Data Science &
Infrastructure
Track:
General
Track:
Impact
Track:
Innovator
Track:
Patient/Consumer
Track:
Special Panels
Session:
How Do You Get
Clinical Validation
From PatientGenerated and
Open Health Data
in Obsteric Care?
Session:
Moving Beyond
Sensational
Outliers to
Meaningful
Analysis,
Interpretation,
and Application
of Public Health
Care
Session:
Copyright Issues
and Customer
Outcome Data
Session:
Insurer
Perspectives:
Health Plan
Strategy and
Investment
Session:
How Businesses
Are Using Data to
Select and Best
Utilize Health
Care Centers of
Excellence
Session:
Using Data &
Technology to
Enable Better
Patient Health,
Support and Care
Session:
Using Open
International
Health Data in
Decision-Making
Location:
Virginia
Location:
Washington 1-2
Location:
Delaware
Location:
Washington 4
Location:
Maryland
Location:
Washington 3
Location:
Lincoln 6
4:35 pm - 6:30 pm
The Disruptive Social
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Featured Speaker: Todd Park, Technology Advisor, Executive Office of the President, The White House
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 11
SCHEDULE-AT-A-GLANCE (CONT.)
Tuesday, June 2
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Fun Run
Sponsored by: Stride Health Location: Marriott Wardman Park Hotel
(Outside of 24th St. Entrance)
7:00 am - 8:00 am
Yoga 7:00 am - 7:00 pm
Registration OpenLocation: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
Location: Washington 1-2
9:00 am - 10:35 am
General Session
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Main Stage Emcee: Thomas Goetz, Co-Founder, Iodine
Fireside Chat: Bruce Broussard, President and Chief Executive Officer, Humana
Moderator: Kavita Patel, MD, MS, Managing, Director of Clinical Transformation, Brookings Institution
App Demo: Healthy Communities Institute
Panel: Rethinking Healthcare Delivery with 21st Century Data
Moderator: Susan Dentzer, Senior Policy Advisor, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Panelists: Patrick Conway, Deputy Administrator for Innovation & Quality, CMS Chief Medical Officer, Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services; Karen DeSalvo, Acting Assistant Secretary for Health, National Coordinator
for Health Information Technology, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services; Tim Kelsey, National Director
for Patients & Information, NHS England; Todd Park, Technology Advisor, Executive Office of the President,
The White House; Joe Selby, Executive Director, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
10:35 am - 10:55 am
Break
Location: Marriott Ballroom Foyer
10:55 am - 11:50 am
General Session
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Keynote Speaker: Andy Slavitt, Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Fireside Chat: Aaron Levie, Co-Founder, Box
Moderator: Aneesh Chopra, Co-Founder and Executive Vice President, Hunch Analytics
App Demo: HealthLabs
11:00 am - 5:45 pm
Exhibit Hall Open
Location: Exhibit Hall A
11:00 am - 5:45 pm
Mini Golf
Location: Exhibit Hall A
11:50 am - 1:05 pm
Lunch
12:05 pm - 1:05 pm
Track: Special Panels
Location: Exhibit Hall A & Lincoln 2-3-4
Session: Data, Drugs, and Diversion: HIT Tools and the Prescription Drug Epidemic Sponsored by: Surescripts
Location: Lincoln 2-3-4
12:25 pm - 4:45 pm
Apps Expo Live Demos
12:30 pm - 5:00 pm
App Demo Booth Open
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #309
1:00 pm - 4:15 pm
Genius Bar Open
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #407
12 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Location: Washington 5-6
More info can be found on the app
SCHEDULE-AT-A-GLANCE (CONT.)
1:05 pm - 2:20 pm
Track:
Clinical Care
Track:
Data Science &
Infrastructure
Track:
General
Track:
Impact
Track:
Innovator
Track:
Patient/Consumer
Track:
Special Panels
Session:
Role of Data in a
Time of Massive
Healthcare
Transformation
Session:
No, You Can’t
Always Get What
You Want: Getting
What You Need
From HHS
Session:
A Delicate
Balance: A Town
Hall on Healthcare
Data Privacy and
Security Issues
Session:
Public Program
Changes, Private
Sector Benefits
Session:
Open Data
for Social
Determinants of
Health
Session:
Patient-Generated
Health Data in the
Real World
Session:
Using Open
Data to Promote
Entreprenearship
and Innovation in
India
Location:
Virginia
Location:
Washington 1-2
Location:
Delaware
Location:
Washington 4
Location:
Maryland
Location:
Washington 3
Location:
Lincoln 6
2:20 pm - 2:40 pm
2:40 pm - 3:55 pm
Break
Track:
Clinical Care
Track:
Data Science &
Infrastructure
Track:
General
Track:
Impact
Session:
Democratizing
Health Quality
Improvement
Session:
Old School Data
Sets, Rebooted,
Repurposed, and
Creating Killer
New Value
Session:
Government
Insights on Privacy
Rules in the Health
IT Tech Era
Location:
Virginia
Location:
Washington 1-2
Location:
Delaware
3:55 pm - 4:15 pm
4:15 pm - 5:30 pm
Location: Outside of session rooms - Various locations
Track:
Patient/Consumer
Track:
Special Panels
Session:
Health Plans
Collaborating with
Providers
Session:
Value-Based Care:
Going All In
Session:
Leveraging the
Potential of
Patient-Generated
Data: Progress and
Opportunities
Session:
Centers for
Medicare &
Medicaid Services
Data: Policies,
Programs & Plans
Location:
Washington 4
Location:
Maryland
Location:
Washington 3
Location:
Lincoln 6
Break
Location: Outside of session rooms - Various locations
Track:
Clinical Care
Track:
Data Science &
Infrastructure
Session:
Clinical
Transformation to
Address Care Gaps
and Improve Quality:
Reflections on a
Unique Platform
Session:
Direct-to-Consumer
Data Structures
and Scientists for
Your GovernmentSponsored DTC
Business
Session:
Turning Health Data
into Investigative
Journalism
Location:
Virginia
Location:
Washington 1-2
Location:
Delaware
Track:
General
4:15 pm - 5:30 pm
Track: Special Panels
5:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Track:
Innovator
MGE (Meet, Greet & Eat) Reception
Track:
Impact
Track:
Innovator
Track:
Patient/Consumer
Session:
Providers Operating
Health Plans
Session:
Navigating the FDA
Review Process for
Health Innovators
Session:
iConquerMS™
Patient-Powered
Research: Kicking
Butt and Taking No
Names in the Fight
Against Disease
Location:
Washington 4
Location:
Maryland
Location:
Washington 3
Session: Healthcare Entreprenears Bootcamp:
Matching Public Health Data with Real-World Business Models Location: Lincoln 2-3-4
Sponsored by: Esri Location: Marriott Ballroom Salon 1
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 13
SCHEDULE-AT-A-GLANCE (CONT.)
Wednesday, June 3
7:00 am - 12:00 pm
Registration Open
Location: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
8:30 am - 10:15 am
General Session
Location: Marriott Ballroom Salons 2 & 3
Main Stage Emcee: Bryan Sivak, former Chief Technology Officer, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Keynote Speaker: Glyn Elwyn, BA, MD, MSc, PhD, Physician-Researcher, The Dartmouth Institute for Health &
Clinical Practice
Fireside Chat: Dhanurjay “DJ” Patil, PhD, Chief Data Scientist and Deputy Chief Technology Officer for Data
Policy, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Moderator: Alyssa Bereznak, NationalCorrespondent, Yahoo News
App Demo: Kuveda, Inc.
Panel: How Leading Healthcare Companies Are Powering Their Businesses with Big Data
Moderator: David Knott, Senior Partner, McKinsey & Company
Panelists: Tim Ferris, MD, Senior Vice President, Massachusetts General Hospital and Partners HealthCare;
Eric Perakslis, Executive Director, Center for Biomedical Informatics, Harvard; David Watson, CEO, Cal INDEX
10:15 am - 10:35 am
10:35 am - 11:50 am
Break
Location: Marriott Ballroom Foyer & Washington Foyer
Track:
Clinical Care
Track:
Data Science &
Infrastructure
Track:
General
Track:
Impact
Track:
Innovator
Track:
Patient/Consumer
Session:
Myths vs. Reality:
The Current State of
Consumer Access
and Use of Their
Digital Health Data
Session:
But What if I Want to
Share? Contributing
Your Own Data to
Foster Public Good
Session:
Challenges Facing
Public Access to VA
Health Data
Session:
The Role of Retailers
in the U.S. Healthcare
System
Session:
Innovative ValueBased Uses of Open
Data
Session:
Engaging Patients
in Generating and
Using Big Data
Location:
Lincoln 2
Location:
Washington 1-2
Location:
Lincoln 3
Location:
Washington 4
Location:
Lincoln 6
Location:
Washington 3
11:50 am - 2:30 pm
Closing Luncheon
Location: Marriott Ballroom Salons 2 & 3
Health Data Consortium Overview
Health Data Liberators Award
Keynote Speaker: Steven Brill, Founder, Court TV and The American Lawyer, Author
Panel: How State and Local Governments are Using Big Data to Transform Their Healthcare Systems
Moderator: Karen DeSalvo, MD, MPH, MSc, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology,
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Panelists: Greg Moody, Director, Ohio Office of Healthcare Transformation; Michael Nutter, Mayor,
City of Philadelphia
Announcements
Keynote Speaker: Sylvia Mathews Burwell, Secretary, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
14 I Health Datapalooza 2015
CONCORDIUM2015
Data and Knowledge Transforming Health
CONCORDIUM2015
Data
and Knowledge Transforming Health
SEPT21-22,2015
CONCORDIUM2015
Washington, DC
DataSponsored
and Knowledge
Transforming Health
SEPT21-22,2015
by: AcademyHealth
Washington, DC
Sponsored by: AcademyHealth
SEPT21-22,2015
Washington, DC
Sponsored by: AcademyHealth
Introducing Concordium 2015:
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HS19564-010. Ongoing support for the EDM Forum comes from AHRQ Grant #U18 HS022789-01.
• Data scientists and analysts
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APP DEMOS
See first-hand the innovation that occurs when health data meets app technology. Live app demonstrations will take place on the Health Datapalooza
main stage and the live app demo area. App demo companies will also be featuring their products at the App Demo Booth in the Exhibit Hall.
Monday, June 1
Tuesday, June 2
Featured App Demos – Main Stage
Featured App Demos – Main Stage
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Location: Marriott Ballroom
9:35 am
11:25 am
Sensentia
The Advisory Board Company
9:25 am
11:15 am
Healthy Communities Institute
HealthLabs
Apps Expo Live Demos
Apps Expo Live Demos
Moderators: Stephen Agular, Managing Director, Zaffre Investments;
Shefa Gordon, PhD, Acting Director, Office of Program Planning and
Analysis, National Eye Institute
Location: Washington 5-6
Time: 1:00 pm - 6:20 pm
Moderators: Shefa Gordon, PhD, Acting Director, Office of Program
Planning and Analysis, National Eye Institute; Mark Tomaino, Senior
Industry Executive, Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe
Location: Washington 5-6
Time: 12:25 pm - 4:45 pm
TimeCompany
TimeCompany
1:00 pm
1:05 pm
1:17 pm
1:29 pm
1:41 pm
1:53 pm
2:05 pm
2:17 pm
2:29 pm
2:41 pm
2:53 pm
3:05 pm
3:17 pm
3:29 pm
5:17 pm
5:29 pm
5:41 pm
5:53 pm
6:05 pm
6:17 pm
Welcome
HealthLucid
Wellth
3M Health Information Systems
Gather Health
Ostonics
Mana Health
Allscripts
My Clinical Outcomes
Symptify Inc.
Mental Affect
AEGIS.net, Inc.
Personal Air Quality Systems Pvt Ltd.
Break
DocSpot
FindTheBest
Health&Code Software Solutions
MobiDox Health Technologies, Inc.
The Ohio State University
Closing
16 I Health Datapalooza 2015
12:25 pm
12:30 pm
12:42 pm
12:54 pm
1:06 pm
1:18 pm
1:30 pm
1:42 pm
1:54 pm
2:06 pm
2:18 pm
2:30 pm
2:42 pm
2:54 pm
3:06 pm
3:18 pm
3:42 pm
3:54 pm
4:06 pm
4:18 pm
Welcome
Partnership of UNC Chapel Hill and Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America
Esri
@Point of Care
CVOffice, LLC
Intrigma, Inc.
Audacious Inquiry for CRISP
Break
Caremerge
Noblis
Avhana Health
Caspio, Inc.
Klio Health
realFIT, Inc.
TimeDoc
Break
Healthy Me Mobile Solutions
Carevoyance
Tapasvi Clin-MolBio Solutions, Inc.
Amida Technology Solutions
More info can be found on the app
APP DEMOS
Tuesday, June 2 (cont.)
Wednesday, June 3
App Expo Live Demos
Featured App Demos – Main Stage
TimeCompany
4:30 pm
Dimensional Dosing Systems, Inc.
4:42 pmClosing
Location: Marriott Ballroom
9:25 am
Kuveda, Inc.
APP DEMO BOOTH
Monday, June 1
Tuesday, June 2
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #309
Time: 12:30 pm - 6:30 pm
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #309
Time: 12:30 pm - 5:00 pm
TimeCompany(s)
TimeCompany(s)
12:30 pm
1:00 pm
1:30 pm
2:00 pm
2:30 pm
3:00 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
4:30 pm
5:00 pm
5:30 pm
6:00 pm
12:30 pm
1:00 pm
1:30 pm
2:00 pm
2:30 pm
3:00 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
4:30 pm
DocSpot; FindTheBest
Sensentia; The Advisory Board Company
Health & Code Software Solutions
Amida Technology Solutions; Carevoyance
Dimensional Dosing Systems, Inc.;
Tapasvi Clin-MolBio Solutions, Inc.
MobiDox Health Technologies, Inc.; The Ohio State University
Klio Health
TimeDoc; Healthy Me Mobile Solutions
HealthLabs; HealthLucid
Partnership of UNC Chapel Hill and Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America; Wellth
Esri; 3M Health Information Systems
Avhana Health; Caspio, Inc.
Kuveda, Inc.; Health Communities Institute
Gather Health; Caremerge
Ostonics; Mental Affect
Mana Health; realFIT, Inc.
Allscripts
Intrigma, Inc.; My Clinical Outcomes
Audacious Inquiry for CRISP; Symptify, Inc.
@Point of Care; AEGIS.net, Inc.
Noblis
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 17
SPECIAL EVENTS
Monday, June 1
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Yoga
Location: Washington 1-2
Pre-registration required
Awaken your mind, body, and spirit with a yoga session. Towels will be
provided; attendees are encouraged to bring their own mat.
12:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Mini Golf
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Think you have the skills to earn a green jacket? Test your luck at our sixhole mini links golf area! Network with sponsors, attendees, and exhibitors
as you try to sink a hole-in-one!
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Healthcare Transformer Showcase
Location: Lincoln 3-4
The Healthcare Transformer Showcase is an opportunity
to experience breakthrough digital health innovations and
meet the entrepreneurs transforming the space. The event
will include a fireside chat with key innovation stakeholders,
StartUp Health entrepreneurs pitching their innovations, and
structured networking for HDP attendees to make meaningful
connections with the entrepreneurs and fellow attendees.
Organizer: StartUp Health
1:00 pm – 3:30 pm
DataLab
Location: Lincoln 2
HHS has so much data! Medicare, substance abuse and mental
health, social services and disease prevention are only some
of the MANY topical domains where HHS provides huge
amounts of free data for public consumption. It’s all there on
HealthData.gov! Don’t know how the data might be useful for
you? In the DataLab you’ll meet the people who collect and
curate this trove of data assets as they serve up their data for
your use. But if you still want inspiration, many of the data
owners will co-present with creative, insightful, innovative
users of their data to truly demonstrate its alternative value for
positive disruptions in health, health care, and social services.
18 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Moderator: Damon Davis, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Panelists: Natasha Alexeeva, CEO, Caretalia; Christina Bethell, PhD, MBA,
Johns Hopkins University; Lily Chen, PhD, National Center for Health
Statistics; Manuel Figallo, SAS; Reem Ghandour, DrPH, MPA, Office of
Epidemiology and Research, Maternal and Child Health Bureau; Jennifer
King, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services; Brooklyn Lupari,
SAMHSA; Vicki Mays, PhD, University of California, Los Angeles; Rick Moser,
PhD, National Cancer Institute; Chris Powers, PharmD, Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services; Elizabeth Young, RowdMap, Inc.
More info can be found on the app
Tuesday, June 2
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Fun Run
Location: Marriott Wardman Park Hotel (Outside of 24th St. Entrance)
Pre-registration required
Sponsored By:
H E A L T H
Stretch your legs and network with the fellow event participants on threemile or five-mile runs throughout scenic Rock Creek Park.
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Yoga
Location: Washington 1-2
Pre-registration required
Awaken your mind, body, and spirit with a yoga session. Towels will be
provided; attendees are encouraged to bring their own mat.
11:00 am – 5:45 pm
Mini Golf
Orchestrators: Sujata Bhatia, MD, PhD, Harvard University; Niall Brennan,
Chief Data Officer, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Mohit Kaushal,
MD, Partner Aberdare Ventures and NCHVS Data Group; Joshua Rosenthal,
PhD, RowdMap Inc. and NACHVS Data Group; Marshall Votta, Leverage
Health Solutions
White Hats (Panelists): Christopher Boone, PhD, Chief Executive Officer,
Health Data Consortium; Jim Chase, Minnesota Community Measurement
David Portnoy; US Department of Health & Human Services IDEA Lab
– External; Arnaub Chatterjee, Data Science, Insights and Partnership,
Merck Innovation Fellow ; Lauren Choi, Senior Director, Premier
Healthcare Alliance; Michelle De Mooy, Deputy Director, Consumer
Privacy Project, Center for Democracy and Technology; Margo Edmunds,
PhD, Vice President, Evidence Generation and Knowledge Translation,
AcademyHealth; Geraldine Gueron, Founder, The Wikilife Foundation and
Data Donors.org, University of Buenos Aires; Jessica Kahn, Director, Data
and Systems Group, Medicaid Statistical Information System and Children’s
Health Insurance Program Services, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services; Elizabeth Mitchell, Co-Chair, Center for Healthcare Transparency
at Network for Regional Healthcare Improvement; Maksim Tsvetovat, CTO,
OpenHealth; Sreenivas Rangan Sukumar, PhD, Oak Ridge National Lab;
David Wennberg, MD, Director Emeritus, The Dartmouth Institute; Niam
Yaraghi, PhD, Fellow, Brookings Institution
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Think you have the skills to earn a green jacket? Test your luck at our sixhole mini links golf area! Network with sponsors, attendees, and exhibitors
as you try to sink a hole-in-one!
4:15 pm - 5:30 pm
Healthcare Entrepreneurs Boot Camp: Matching Public Health
Data with Real-World Business Models
Location: Lincoln 2-3-4
If you’ve ever considered starting something using health data–whether a
product, service, or offering in an existing business, or a start-up company
to take over the world–this is something you won’t want to miss. In
this highly-interactive, games-based brew-ha, we pack the room full of
flat-out gurus to get an understanding of what it takes to be a healthcare
entrepreneur. Your guides will come from finance and investment; clinical
research and medical management; sales and marketing; technology and
information services; operations and strategy; analytics and data science;
government and policy; business, product, and line owners from payers and
providers; and some successful entrepreneurs who have been there and
done it for good measure. We’ll take your idea from the back of a napkin
and give you the know-how to make it a reality!
Visit Health Data Consortium
at Booth #513
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 19
DETAILED AGENDA
Sunday, May 31
11:05 am – 12:30 pm
4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Registration Open
Location: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Welcome Reception
Location: Maryland & Virginia
All registered Health Datapalooza attendees are welcome!
General Session
Panel: The Power of Transparency and Data to Remake Health Care
Moderator: Sarah Kliff, Senior Editor, Vox
Panelists: Niall Brennan, Chief Data Officer, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Bernard Lo, MD, President, Greenwall Foundation; Nick Sinai, Venture Partner, Insight Venture Partners
Monday, June 1
App Demo: The Advisory Board Company
7:00 am – 7:00 pm
Exhibit Hall Open
Registration Open
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Location: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
12:00 pm – 7:00 pm
12:00 pm – 7:00 pm
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Mini Golf
Yoga
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Location: Washington 1-2
Pre-registration required
Think you have the skills to earn a green jacket? Test your luck at our six-hole
mini links golf area! Network with sponsors, attendees, and exhibitors as you
try to sink a hole-in-one!
Awaken your mind, body, and spirit with a yoga session. Towels will be
provided; attendees are encouraged to bring their own mat.
12:30 pm – 1:45 pm
9:00 am – 10:35 am
Lunch
Opening General Session
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Location: Marriott Ballroom
12:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Featuring: Christopher Boone, PhD, Chief Executive Officer, Health Data Consortium; David Knott, PhD, Chair, Health Datapalooza Steering Committee, Senior Partner, McKinsey & Company
App Demo Booth
Main Stage Emcee: Kavita Patel, MD, MS, Managing Director of Clinical Transformation, Brookings Institution
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Keynote Speaker: Esther Dyson, Founder, HICCup
Location: Lincoln 3-4
App Demo: Sensentia
See page 18 for more details
Panel: Big Changes from Big Data in Health Care
1:00 pm – 3:30 pm
Moderator: Ceci Connolly, Managing Director, Health Research Institute, PricewaterhouseCoopers
Panel: Bob Kocher, MD, Partner, Venrock; Farzad Mostashari, MD, Founder, Aledade; Ed Park, Executive Vice President & COO, Athenahealth
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #309
See page 16-17 for listing
Healthcare Transformer Showcase
DataLab
Location: Lincoln 2
See page 18 for more details
1:00 pm – 4:30 pm
Genius Bar Open
Challenge Announcement
Location: Exhibit Hall A – Booth #407
10:45 am – 11:05 am
1:00 – 6:20 pm
Location: Marriott Ballroom Foyer
Location: Washington 5-6
Break
Apps Expo Live Demos
See page 16-17 for listing
20 I Health Datapalooza 2015
More info can be found on the app
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
Location: Virginia
Location: Delaware
This session will explore how advanced data analytics can lead to change
at a clinical level. First, attendees will hear from an actual innovation center
that deals with the intersection of entrepreneurs and clinicians. Then, we will
hear about novel uses of data and clinical information to advance sepsis care.
Finally, we will understand how big data can better identify practical solutions
for payors and providers.
Panelists: Sean Benson, Wolters Kluwer; Basit Chaudhry, IBM
Clinicians and hospitals are increasingly being paid based on their measured
quality, with HHS recently announcing that it will have 85% of Medicare
payments tied to quality or value by 2016. However, quality measurement
is still largely calculated from healthcare claims data, which limits the scope
and quality of the results. New data sources, such as patient registries, mobile
devices, or repositories of clinical and claims data, can provide for new insights
and better assessments of quality. This panel will explore some of these new
data innovations, their potential benefits, and strategies for leveraging them
further.
Track: Clinical Care
Moderator: Christine Cassel, MD, National Quality Forum
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
Panelists: Tony Hussain, IBM; Aaron McKethan, RxAnte; Paul Wallace, MD, Optum Labs
Innovation in Action: From Algorithms to Clinical Change
Moderator: Nick Dawson, MHA, Johns Hopkins Sibley Innovation Hub
Transforming Local Health Data to Meaningful
National Benchmarks
Location: Washington 1-2
Leveraging Big Data for Better Quality Measurement
Track: General
Like gambling, hard liquor, and other supply-sensitive
economies, healthcare is local. Academics talk of access to care,
price, cost, and even supply driving demand — all things that
happen in a local context driven by geography. The problem is
that different communities want different things, do different
things, and keep data on different things in different ways.
But we need geographic benchmarks to make sense of the
particularities of my community’s data. As the Data Liberation
movement matures, it faces a major challenge in tying all of
these different things together to create national benchmarks.
This session explores the work; best practices; case studies;
and hits, misses, and challenges from the Center for Healthcare
Transparency, a Robert Wood Johnson recipient whose network
of regional data entities is on track to produce provider
performance information for 50% of the U.S. by 2020… dark
hollers and deep cities included.
Moderator: Scott Howell, Optum; Amy Nguyen Howell, MD, MBA, FAAFP, CAPG
Panelists: Craig Brammer, The Health Collaborative; Jim Chase, MHA, Minnesota Community Measurement; Jonathan Mathieu, PhD, Center for Improving Value in Health Care
Track: Data Science & Infrastructure
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 21
DETAILED AGENDA (CONT.)
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
Applications of Transparency: From Visibility to Action
Location: Washington 4
As transparency in health care has emerged as a crucial enabler towards
achieving the Triple Aim, myriad sources and types of information have
become available in the last few years. Join this session to learn new ways of
understanding the behaviors of patients and providers, and novel approaches
to payment and delivery already underway.
Moderator: Ben Harder, U.S. News & World Report
Panelists: Elizabeth Mitchell, NRHI; Jeanne Pinder, ClearHealthCosts; Josh Rosenthal, PhD, RowdMap, Inc.
Track: Impact
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
Personalized Medicine: When Will We Get There?
What’s the Path Forward?
Location: Maryland
This session will move past the hype of wearables. It will feature
innovators who are taking these new data sources and making
them actionable, via implementation in care settings, integration
into the medical record, and really doing something with the
data that changes healthcare outcomes.
Moderator: Jodi Daniel, JD, MPH, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Panelists: Seth Bokser, MD, MPH, UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital and Moore Women’s Hospital; Rajiv Kumar, Stanford Children’s Health; Jafar Shenasa, Proteus Digital Health
Track: Innovator
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
Patient Hackers: The #WeAreNotWaiting Movement and
the Way Forward for Open Device Data
Location: Washington 3
Diabetes patients are digital health natives. Daily life is constantly
calibrated based on streams of medical device data, but
integrating the relevant data streams is difficult. Medical device
companies have been slow to act, so patients and caregivers
have found ways to ‘hack’ their devices to access and integrate
data and create tools that enable them to better manage their
health. At the same time, diabetes patients worked with the
FDA to raise concerns and recommend changes to regulations
governing medical device data access and interoperability. In turn,
the FDA has embraced this patient input working with–rather
than against–the patient hackers. While diabetes patients may
be leading the charge, more data-generating medical devices are
22 I Health Datapalooza 2015
being developed to manage and monitor a range of chronic illnesses. This panel
will feature leaders in the patient hacker movement discussing the tools they’ve
developed, lessons they’ve learned, and how they envision this movement
developing.
Moderator: Anna McCollister-Slipp, Galileo Analytics
Panelists: Doug Kanter, Databetes; Howard Look, Tidepool; Bakul Patel, Food & Drug Administration, Centers for Devices & Radiological Health; Ken Stack, Perceptus.org
Track: Patient/Consumer
More info can be found on the app
1:45 pm – 3:00 pm
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
Location: Lincoln 6
Moving Beyond Sensational Outliers to Meaningful Analysis,
Interpretation, and Application of Public Health Care
The Future of Health Data is on FHIR!
You have probably been hearing a lot in the news about Health Level 7’s
(HL7) most recent standard, FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources).
This session is designed to shed light on the next generation standards
framework that leverages the latest web standards and applies a tight focus
on implementation. FHIR represents a significant advance in accessing and
delivering data while offering enormous flexibility. In December 2014, in an
effort to address the recommendations of the JASON Task Force, HL7 launched
the Argonaut Project in collaboration with leading health care IT vendors and
providers to accelerate the development and adoption of FHIR. This session will
help the audience better understand the FHIR adoption trajectory as well as the
future promise of what this standard makes possible to improve patient care.
Presenter: Charles Jaffe, MD, PhD, Health Level 7
Track: Special Panels
3:00 pm – 3:20 pm
Break
Location: Outside session rooms – Various locations
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
How Do You Get Clinical Validation from Patient-Generated and
Open Health Data in Obstetric Care?
Location: Virginia
This presentation will be two pronged. First, it will include a brief overview of our
initial study at George Washington University and its results. Second will be a
panel featuring Doctors Jill Krapf, Kathyrn Marko, and Andrew Meltzer, clinicians
at the George Washington University, who were the principal investigators.
In our study, more than 150 expectant mothers were recruited for the
program and subsets of those patients were provided with the full Babyscripts
experience that included connected devices. We found that Babyscripts
enhances patient satisfaction with their prenatal care, improves patient
compliance and engagement, and could potentially decrease healthcare costs
by avoiding unnecessary visits for low-risk patients. Our goal for this session
is to demonstrate the active collaboration that is required between clinicians,
entrepreneurs, and technologists to leverage this new paradigm of health data
in clinical care and commercialize digital healthcare solutions.
Moderator: Anish Sebastian, Babyscripts
Panelists: Jill Krapf, MD, The George Washington University; Katie Marko, MD, FACOG, The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences; Andrew Meltz, MD, 1EQ
Track: Clinical Care
Location: Washington 1-2
HHS just backed up the data truck, dumping boatloads of Medicare data
after decades of Freedom of Information Act requests. When it first hit, the
media went wild and outliers from fraud, waste, and abuse made headlines.
As the Data Liberation movement matures, one of its chief challenges comes
from communicating the value of the public data beyond sounds bites and
sensational stories to meaningful inputs. This session has the best of the
journalists in the heart of this story. Charles Ornstein is a Pulitzer Prize winner.
Tom McGinty is with the Wall Street Journal, the media organization that broke
the story. Jennifer Schneider of Castlight Health is at the forefront of the next
wave of work, mining the data for meaning and application in a post-reform
world. This session will showcase some finds, share cool stories, do a bit of
reflection around the nature of reporting and the popular appetite for specific
stories, and sketch out the path forward from sound bite to sound practice.
Moderator: Joshua Rosenthal, PhD, RowdMap, Inc.
Panelists: Tom McGinty, The Wall Street Journal; Charles Ornstein, ProPublica; Jennifer Schneider, MD, MS, Castlight Health
Track: Data Science & Infrastructure
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
Copyright Issues and Customer Outcome Data
Location: Delaware
The use of data within health has grown exponentially in the past five years.
Whilst it often gives pointers to the care process, the predicted growth in
whole scale change in pathways hasn’t followed. This has been partly because
of untapped data, lack of customer feedback and triangulation with other
health systems. Three years ago the U.S. and U.K. governments came together,
initially to promote transparency of data and latterly to address this void. A
joint concordant has enabled close working of the NHS and HHS and sharing
of data items.
The session will demonstrate how copyright issues can and have been
addressed in relation to Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs),
giving access to the largest repository of ‘customer outcome data’ within
health care. The session will also demonstrate the use of simple data to turn
into knowledge with respect to the most common joint replacement surgery
performed in both countries and its relation to obesity.
Moderator: Kevin Larsen, MD, Office of the National Coordinator of Health IT
Panelists: Mo Dewji, NHS England; Emma Doyle, NHS England
Track: General
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 23
DETAILED AGENDA (CONT.)
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
Location: Washington 4
Location: Lincoln 6
As new approaches to the collection and use of data change the way we
deliver and pay for health care, they also change the business of investing in
health care. Join this session to learn how health plans fund entrepreneurs and
diversify their own businesses.
A wealth of healthcare data exists, but often this data is not widely disseminated
or used to their maximal benefit. In this workshop, we will explore how open
international health data can be repurposed to promote accountability and datadriven decision making. We will discuss policies and projects that increase access
to health data, such as the USAID-funded MEASURE Evaluation Dataverse; how
these data can be used to evaluate development projects; and challenges and
lessons learned in publicly sharing data.
Insurer Perspectives: Health Plan Strategy and Investment
Moderator: Terry Stone, MBA, Oliver Wyman
Panelists: Sander Duncan, New Ventures at North Shore Ventures; Kent Marquardt, Premera Blue Cross; Bjorn Thaler, Aetna
Track: Impact
Using Open International Health Data in Decision-Making
Moderator: Brandon Pustejovsky, USAID
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
Panelists: Eran Bendavid, MD, MS, Stanford University; Jon Crabtree, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Irum Zaidi, Tech Friends
How Businesses are Using Data to Select and Best Utilize Health
Care Centers of Excellence
Track: Special Panels
Location: Maryland
Join us to explore the next frontier of data and analytics being used to improve
healthcare quality and reduce cost. We will have a discussion with leading
industry innovators who will describe their processes for using data to select
Centers of Excellence and will discuss how they are using employee data and
Center of Excellence outcome data to drive care and cost decision making. This
is a session we don’t want any of our self-insured business partners to miss.
Moderator: E.J. Holland, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
4:35 pm – 6:30 pm
The Disruptive Social
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Featured Speaker: Todd Park, Technology Advisor, Executive Office of the President, The White House
Tuesday, June 2
7:00 am – 7:00 pm
Panelists: Mary Bourland, MD, Sisters of Mercy; Rick Chelko, EdisonHealth Network; Tom Emerick, Emerick Consulting LLC; Remy Szykier, Aegis Health Security
Registration Open
Track: Innovator
Fun Run
3:20 pm – 4:35 pm
Using Data & Technology to Enable Better Patient Health,
Support and Care
Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Location: Marriott Wardman Park Hotel (Outside of 24th St. Entrance)
Pre-registration required
Sponsored By:
Location: Washington 3
Patient, provider, and caregiver access to health data is increasingly viewed
as essential to the delivery of quality care, improving health, and enabling
innovation. This panel will share insights from ongoing initiatives to
connect patients and consumers with their health data via mobile and
other technologies to support health and wellness goals, such as treatment
adherence and diabetes management.
Moderator: Joe Greenwood, MBA, MaRS Discovery District
Panelists: Mischa Dick, Healthcare Excellence Institute, LLC; Jaffie Rajan, Merck; Jason Victor, Merck
Track: Patient/Consumer
24 I Health Datapalooza 2015
H E A L T H
Stretch your legs and network with the fellow event participants on three-mile
or five-mile runs throughout scenic Rock Creek Park.
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Yoga
Location: Washington 1-2
Pre-registration required
Awaken your mind, body, and spirit with a yoga session. Towels will be
provided; attendees are encouraged to bring their own mat.
More info can be found on the app
9:00 am – 10:35 am
12:05 pm – 1:05 pm
Location: Marriott Ballroom
Location: Lincoln 2-3-4
Main Stage Emcee: Thomas Goetz, Co-Founder, Iodine
Sponsored by:
General Session
Data, Drugs, and Diversion: HIT Tools and the Prescription Drug Epidemic
Fireside Chat: Bruce Broussard, President and Chief Executive Officer, Humana
Moderated by Kavita Patel, MD, MS, Managing Director of Clinical Transformation, Brookings Institution
App Demo: Healthy Communities Institute
Panel: Rethinking Healthcare Delivery with 21st Century Data
Moderator: Susan Dentzer, Senior Policy Advisor, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Panelists: Patrick Conway, Deputy Administrator for Innovation & Quality, CMS Chief Medical Officer, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Karen DeSalvo, Acting Assistant Secretary for Health, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services; Tim Kelsey, National Director for Patients & Information, NHS England; Todd Park, Technology Advisor, Executive Office of the President, The White House; Joe Selby,
Executive Director, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
10:35 am – 10:55 am
Break
Location: Marriott Ballroom Foyer
10:55 am – 11:50 am
A key goal of the HITECH Act was to create digital tools for solving public
health problems. This session will address HIT solutions for a public health
problem that the CDC has declared a national epidemic: abuse, overdose,
and death from prescription painkillers. As the volume of prescriptions for
opioids has exploded over the past decade, so has the incidence of overdose
and death from the misuse of these powerful drugs. Over the past five years,
pharmacy and law enforcement regulators at the federal and state levels have
collaborated to legalize electronic prescribing of controlled substances (EPCS)
so that public health, law enforcement, and the provider community can flag
suspicious patient and prescriber behavior and intervene to prevent high-risk
dispensing. Today, most pharmacies are prepared to receive digital prescription
orders for controlled substances. With EPCS now legal in nearly every state, we
are poised to deploy a technology that has the potential to reduce deaths.
Moderator: Susan Dentzer, Senior Policy Advisor, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Panelists: Tricia Lee Wilkins, PharmD, MS, PhD, Office of Clinical Quality and Safety Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT; Miya R. Gray, Surescripts
General Session
Track: Special Panel
Location: Marriott Ballroom
12:25 pm – 4:45 pm
Keynote Speaker: Andy Slavitt, Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Apps Expo Live Demos
Fireside Chat: Aaron Levie, Co-Founder, Box
See page 16-17 for listing
12:30 pm – 5:00 pm
Moderated by Aneesh Chopra, Co-Founder and Executive Vice President, Hunch Analytics
App Demo: HealthLabs
Location: Washington 5-6
Apps Demo Booth
Location: Exhibit Hall A - Booth #309
11:00 am – 5:45 pm
See page 16-17 for listing
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Genius Bar Open
Exhibit Hall Open
11:00 am – 5:45 pm
1:00 pm – 4:15 pm
Location: Exhibit Hall A – Booth #407
Mini Golf
Location: Exhibit Hall A
Think you have the skills to earn a green jacket? Test your luck at our six-hole
mini links golf area! Network with sponsors, attendees, and exhibitors as you
try to sink a hole-in-one!
11:50 am – 1:05 pm
Lunch
Location: Exhibit Hall A & Lincoln 2-3-4
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 25
DETAILED AGENDA (CONT.)
1:05 pm – 2:20 pm
Role of Data in a Time of Massive Healthcare Transformation
Location: Virginia
This session will introduce concepts of big data but will help attendees drill
down on priorities for venture investments, innovative health systems, and
other researchers.
Moderator: Sandeep Pulim, MD, @Point of Care
Panelists: Mayank Sharma, PhD, IBM Research; Anand Veeravagu, MD, Stanford University School of Medicine
Track: Clinical Care
1:05 pm – 2:20 pm
No, You Can’t Always Get What You Want: Getting
What You Need from HHS
Location: Washington 1-2
While more data is better than less, pushing out any ol’ data isn’t good enough.
As the Data Liberation movement matures, the folks releasing the data face a
major challenge in determining what’s the most valuable stuff to put out. How do
they move from smorgasbord to intentionally curated data releases prioritizing
the highest-value data? Folks at HHS are wrestling with this, going out of their
way to make sure they understand what you want and ensure you get the yummy
data goodies you’re craving. Learn how HHS is using your requests and feedback
to share data differently. This session explores the HHS new initiative, the
Demand-Driven Open Data (DDOD): the lean startup approach to public-private
collaboration. A new initiative out of HHS IDEA Lab, DDOD is bold and ambitious,
intending to change the fundamental data sharing mindset throughout HHS
agencies - from quantity of datasets published to actual value delivered.
Moderator: Damon Davis, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Panelists: Phil Bourne, National Institute of Health; Niall Brennan, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Jim Craver, MMA, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention; Chris Dymek, EdD, U.S. Department
of Health & Human Services; Taha Kass-Hout, Food & Drug Administration; Brian Lee, MPH, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention; David Portnoy, MBA, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Track: Data Science & Infrastructure
1:05 pm – 2:20 pm
A Delicate Balance: A Town Hall on Healthcare Data Privacy
and Security Issues
Location: Delaware
Improving how our healthcare system uses data holds great promise to
advance research and patient care. Many across the healthcare community
are working hard to find ways to achieve this potential. But the sensitive
and personal nature of these data demands careful, thoughtful, inclusive
deliberations about ownership, stewardship, and “terms of use” in pursuing
26 I Health Datapalooza 2015
laudable goals. This Town Hall, organized by the Patient-Centered Outcomes
Research Institute (PCORI), presents one such opportunity. Representatives of
patients, researchers, clinicians, and experts in ethical, legal, and social issues
in data use, a number of whom are working with PCORI on developing a new
patient-centered clinical research network, will discuss the considerations
that must be addressed if we are to realize our hopes for a patient-centered,
learning healthcare system.
Moderator: Deven McGraw, JD, Manatt, Phelps & Phillips
Panelists: Michael Kappelman, MD, MPH, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill; Sally Okun, RN, MMHS, PatientsLikeMe; Sharon Terry, Genetic Alliance
Track: General
1:05 pm – 2:20 pm
Public Program Changes, Private Sector Benefits
Location: Washington 4
Many government agencies have recently implemented significant changes
or launched new programs in response to budget pressures and regulatory
reforms. Join this session to learn how these have led to new services and
information sources that reduce government cost and improve opportunities
for private sector collaboration.
Moderator: Shawn Bishop, MPP, SB Health Policy Consulting
Panelists: Barbara Gage, Brookings Institution; Kitt Winter, CPA, MBA, Social Security Administration
Track: Impact
1:05 pm – 2:20 pm
Open Data for Social Determinants of Health
Location: Maryland
This session will focus on combining different datasets to reach vulnerable and
low-income patients. We will bring a different perspective to the conversation
about open health data by focusing on organizations and companies working
to ensure that everyone has the chance to benefit from health technology and
open data, including those in underserved populations. We’ll also highlight the
many ways in which creative uses of open data can empower physicians and
social workers to do their jobs more efficiently and in partnership.
Moderator: Farzad Mostashari, Aledade, Inc
Panelists: Rebecca Coelius, MD, Code for America; Joseph Flesh, Purple Binder; Stacy Lindau, MD, MAPP, University of Chicago; Rishi Manchanda, MD, MPH, HealthBegins
Track: Innovator
More info can be found on the app
1:05 pm – 2:20 pm
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Location: Washington 3
Location: Virginia
Patients, from the worried well to those with chronic conditions, are tracking
their health more and more as devices and tools appear on GooglePlay and
the AppStore, or are crowd-built on sites like Github. Sharing that data – from
symptom trackers, activity monitors, blood pressure cuffs, WiFi-enabled scales –
with medical providers is problematic, making much of that data invisible to the
patient’s clinical team. Moderated by a healthcare journalist and blogger who is
also an e-patient, the panel will talk about the gaps and opportunities presented
by patient generated data – how it might be incorporated into patient medical
records, how it could inform care in and out of the medical office or hospital,
where it might disrupt standard testing and diagnostic models, and how it might
empower patients as primary stakeholders in their health outcomes.
Quality improvement is the cornerstone of the health system. It empowers health
enterprises to report and monitor against targets, compare each other, and
continually improve. In the health industry today, there are a dazzling array of
measures and data sets. Unfortunately, measures are all too often implemented
in silos, locked into back-office systems, with little standardization or ability to
be shared. They can take years to implement and months of effort to update and
maintain. In this presentation we propose and discuss a revolutionary approach
that connects quality improvement to the heart of the new generation health
organization. This approach is being piloted at the Mayo Clinic. It empowers
a large community of leading quality and safety improvement executives to
author, publish, and share standardized quality measure with unparalleled ease.
Professionals everywhere can then connect their data and use them in practice,
where they have greatest impact on patient outcomes.
Patient-Generated Health Data in the Real World
Moderator: Casey Quinlan, Mighty Casey Media
Panelists: Mandi Bishop, Dell; Greg Meyer, Cerner Corp.; Danny Sands, MD, MPH, Society for Participatory Medicine; Scott Strange, Scott Strange, LLC
Track: Patient/Consumer
1:05 pm- 2:20 pm
Using Open Data to Promote Entrepreneurship
and Innovation in India
Democratizing Health Quality Improvement
Presenters: Paul Magelli, Apervita, Inc.; Craig Stancl, Mayo Clinic
Track: Clinical Care
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Old School Data Sets, Rebooted, Repurposed,
and Creating Killer New Value
Location: Lincoln 6
Location: Washington 1-2
Access to data is a barrier to health innovation globally. With 800 million
mobile phone users and a growing community of technology entrepreneurs,
India is poised for major growth in health IT innovation. This panel, which
includes representatives from the Office of the Registrar General in India
(which oversees the collection of vital statistics) and U.S. experts, will explore
how increasing access to open data can encourage entrepreneurship and
support the development of low cost applications and services to promote
health in India and the U.S. Possible opportunities for U.S.-India collaboration
will also be discussed.
As the Data Liberation movement matures, one of the challenges it faces is
using current data sets in new and creative ways, applying decades of research
to create new value propositions in both Fee-for-Service and Pay-for-Value
arenas. This session explores the limits of current data systems and statistical
models by using alternative traditional gold-standard data sets, either as-is
or rebooted. David Wennberg uses social determinants and health behaviors
to lay out the framework for a population-health approach to reform, while
Jessica Kahn showcases the new Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information
System. Ramon Martinez puts our national benchmarks in global perspective
using data from World Health Organization and the Institute of Health Metrics
and Evaluation, showing you easy ways to access and understand tried-andtrue data sets. We walk through a couple of case studies and ensure the
audience has access to the old dogs and knows how to teach them new tricks.
Chair: Indu Subaiya, Co-Chairman and CEO, Health 2.0
Speakers from the Government of India: Rohit Bhardwaj, Deputy Registrar
General, Office of the Registrar General of India, Ministry of Home Affairs,
Central Government of India; Rajeev Kumar, Deputy Director, Office of the
Registrar General of India, Ministry of Home Affairs, Central Government of India
Moderator: Michael Painter, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Reaction from U.S. experts: Rushika Fernandopulle, CEO, Iora Health; Ramesh
Kolluru, Vice President of Research at University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Panelists: Jessica Kahn, MPH, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Ramon Martinez, Pan American Health Organization; David Wennberg, MD, MPH, NNEACC
Track: Special Panels
Track: Data Science & Infrastructure
2:20 pm – 2:40 pm
Break
Location: Outside sessions rooms - Various Locations
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 27
DETAILED AGENDA (CONT.)
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Government Insights on Privacy Rules in the Health IT Tech Era
Location: Delaware
Join us for this discussion between HHS’ Office of Civil Rights and Office of the
National Coordinator on how a regulatory agency can best do its job, ensure
appropriate guidance to the rapidly developing business of mHealth and
consumer-generated health tools, and promote compliance with the Privacy and
Security Rules. Topics covered will include OCR’s role as the regulator responsible
for HIPAA policy, including guidance and enforcement and how the health
data developer community can provide information to OCR and ONC to inform
relevant and appropriate guidance and support an emerging economic sector.
Moderator: Gus Mutscher, PricewaterhouseCoopers
Panelists: Jocelyn Samuels, JD, HHS Office for Civil Rights; Lucia Savage, JD, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Track: General
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Health Plans Collaborating with Providers
Location: Washington 4
Health plans are changing the way they collaborate with providers to manage
the quality and cost of health care delivered to beneficiaries sponsored by
employers and the government. Join this session to learn about how payment
and delivery models are changing, the challenges ahead, and the role
information technology is playing in facilitating the transition.
Moderator: Jack Lewin, MD, Cardiovascular Research Foundation
Panelists: Sachin Jain, CareMore; Charles Kennedy, Aetna
Track: Impact
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Value-Based Care: Going All In
Location: Maryland
Primary care providers are embracing new models of payment that focus on value
rather than volume. As we focus on better care for individuals and populations,
we need to leverage data to better understand both where we are and where
we need to go next. The speakers will review their organization’s success in
aggregating data and using analytics to improve the health of communities.
Presenters: Aneesh Chopra, Hunch Analytics; Rushika Fernandopulle, MD, MPP, Iora Health
Track: Innovator
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Leveraging the Potential of Patient-Generated Data:
Progress and Opportunities
data available to drive improvements in health and care, and foster a learning
health system. Despite the proliferation of such data through these new
sources, it is highly fragmented and often not fully leveraged for important
uses, such as quality improvement and research. In this session, panelists
will share examples of how patient generated health data are informing and
improving care, democratizing and accelerating the research process, and
generating new insights about the impact of genetic variants on health.
Moderator: Alison Rein, MS, AcademyHealth
Panelists: Kathy Hudson, PhD, National Institutes of Health; Joshua Mann, SHARE For Cures; Drew Schiller, Validic
Track: Patient/Consumer
2:40 pm – 3:55 pm
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Data: Policies,
Programs & Plans
Location: Lincoln 6
CMS will present information on new and updated data and information
products of interest to health researchers, policymakers, and data innovators.
Panelists will present on: new policies and mechanisms for access to CMS
data; public release of provider utilization and payment data; new/updated
information visualization tools; and other publicly available data files.
Moderator: Niall Brennan, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Panelists: Christine Cox, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Allison Oelschlaeger, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Chris Powers, PharmD, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Debbie Pusateri, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; Andrew Shatto, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Track: Special Panels
3:55 pm – 4:15 pm
Break
Location: Outside sessions rooms - Various Locations
4:15 pm – 5:30 pm
Clinical Transformation to Address Care Gaps and Improve Quality:
Reflections on a Unique Platform
Location: Virginia
The MedConcert Fracture Liaison Service (FLS) platform provides a unique
opportunity to address the nearly 80% post-fracture care gap means for
practices and hospitals to automate, benchmark, and improve their performance
around selected osteoporosis/post-fracture quality measures and patient care,
and create a registry that can collect and report on each site.
Moderator: Mitesh Rao, MD, MHS, Northwestern Medicine
Location: Washington 3
Panelists: Debbie Zeldow, MBA, Ostonics; Simone Karp, RPh, CECity
Consumer-facing technologies and new initiatives to collect and sequence
genetic information are dramatically expanding the variety and volume of
Track: Clinical Care
28 I Health Datapalooza 2015
More info can be found on the app
4:15 pm – 5:30 pm
Direct-to-Consumer Data Structures and Scientists for your
Government-Sponsored DTC Business
Location: Washington 1-2
The Harvard Business Review just named data scientist as the “Sexiest Job for the
21st Century.” Data science is even making its way into historically un-Silicon
Valley healthcare, but it looks different – more Direct-to-Consumer (DTC). As the
Data Liberation movement matures, one of the challenges it faces is recognizing,
embracing, and even mastering DTC data structures and data science and
cultivating next-gen open health data scientists. In this session, we look at
what happens when you take something like Facebook’s social graph structures
and then apply it to healthcare data. In this case, Bam!, you’ve got DocGraph.
This session explores some classic hypothesis-led, hypothesis-generating
visualization and how undergrads take to these DTC structures in healthcare.
Then we cap it off by taking high-end data scientists and turning them loose in
an effort to apply classic healthcare data to the DTC of healthcare reform.
4:15 pm – 5:30 pm
Providers Operating Health Plans
Location: Washington 4
Health systems across the country are moving beyond collaborating with health
plans... and offering their own insurance products. Join this session to hear
how providers are applying clinical data sources and best practices to manage
customers both as patients and plan members.
Moderator: Ryan Stewart, TripleTree
Panelists: Alan Murray, North Shore LIJ-CareConnect Insurance Company; Pamela Peele, PhD, UPMC Health Plan
Track: Impact
Moderator: Fred Trotter, DocGraph/CareSet
Panelists: Ben Coleman, Moravian College; Andres Colubri, PhD, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard; Sreenivas Rangan Sukumar, PhD, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Track: Data Science & Infrastructure
4:15 pm – 5:30 pm
Turning Health Data into Investigative Journalism
Location: Delaware
Data analysis is a key element of investigative journalism. In
reforming the health care system, journalists play key roles in
identifying inequities and fraud, as well as documenting what
works and what doesn’t work. Data has made this job easier. The
release of large healthcare data sets within the past two years has
allowed reporters to compare variation at the doctor level and
create tools that translate this information for consumers. This
session will be a roundtable discussion on techniques, insights, and
the importance of open data in journalism.
Moderator: Charles Ornstein, ProPublica
Panelists: Ben Harder, U.S. News & World Report; Meghan Hoyer, USA Today; Dan Keating, The Washington Post; Tom McGinty, The Wall Street Journal
Track: General
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 29
DETAILED AGENDA (CONT.)
4:15 pm – 5:30 pm
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Location: Maryland
Location: Marriott Ballroom Salon 1
Navigating the FDA Review Process for Health Innovators
Understanding how to approach the FDA 510k process is a daunting prospect
for many early stage companies developing products for health and health
care. Confusion still exists around which class a device or application falls under,
and how to best structure the application before the 90-day review period. In
this panel, speakers will discuss the 510k process, the new MMS guidance, and
valuable lessons learned from companies that have successfully gone through
the process.
Moderator: Robert Jarrin, JD, Qualcomm Incorporated
Panelists: Anand Iyer, PhD, MBA, WellDoc, Inc.; Corinna Lathan, PhD, PE, AnthroTronix; Jennifer Leib, ScM, CGC, CRD Associates; Bakul Patel, Food & Drug Administration, Centers for Devices & Radiological Health
MGE (Meet, Greet & Eat) Reception
Sponsored by:
Socialize and recap the day’s event. Eat, drink, and be merry at our evening
networking reception.
Wednesday, June 3
7:00 am – 12:00 pm
Registration Open
Location: Lobby Level of Marriott Wardman Park
Track: Innovator
8:30 am – 10:15 am
4:15 pm – 5:30 pm
Location: Marriott Ballroom Salons 2 & 3
iConquerMS™ Patient-Powered Research: Kicking Butt and Taking
No Names in the Fight Against Disease
Location: Washington 3
Engaged consumers are no longer satisfied with traditional models of research
that place patients in the passive role of guinea pig. Patients are eager to
share information and contribute their health data to solve medical mysteries.
Driven by increasing consumer demand for knowledge, an innovative new
model for the collection, integration, aggregation, and analysis of data has
emerged in which the patient is both participant and research collaborator.
With an award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
(PCORI), the Accelerated Cure Project for Multiple Sclerosis, in collaboration
with its members and partners, has launched iConquerMS™, a patient-driven,
patient-governed national initiative to facilitate the use of health data from
20,000 enrolled participants to speed and enhance research that matters most
to MS patients. As it evolves, iConquerMS™ can be the model by which other
communities of patients conquer disease utilizing Big Data.
Moderator: Lisa Emrich, MM, BME, iConquerMS™ Initiative of Accelerated Cure Project
General Session
Main Stage Emcee: Bryan Sivak, Former Chief Technology Officer, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Fireside Chat: Dhanurjay ”DJ” Patil, PhD, Chief Data Scientist & Deputy Chief Technology Officer for Data Policy, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Moderated by Alyssa Bereznak, National Corespondent, Yahoo News
Keynote Speaker: Glyn Elwyn, BA, MD, MSc, PhD, Physician-Researcher, The Dartmouth Institute for Health & Clinical Practice
Panel: How Leading Healthcare Companies Are Powering Their Businesses with Big Data
Moderator: David Knott, Senior Partner, McKinsey & Company
Panelists: Tim Ferris, MD, Senior Vice President, Massachusetts General Hospital and Partners HealthCare; Eric Perakslis, Executive Director, Center for Biomedical Informatics Harvard; David Watson, CEO, Cal INDEX
Panelists: Kenneth Buetow, PhD, Arizona State University; Marcia Kean, Feinstein Kean Healthcare; Robert McBurney, PhD, Accelerated Cure Project for MS
App Demo: Kuveda, Inc.
Track: Patient/Consumer
Location: Marriott Ballroom Foyer & Washington Foyer
4:15 pm - 5:30 pm
Healthcare Entrepreneurs Boot Camp: Matching Public Health Data
with Real-World Business Models
Location: Lincoln 2-3-4
See page 19 for more details
30 I Health Datapalooza 2015
10:15 am – 10:35 am
Break
More info can be found on the app
10:35 am – 11:50 am
10:35 am – 11:50 am
Myths vs. Reality: The Current State of Consumer Access and Use of
Their Digital Health Data
Challenges Facing Public Access to VA Health Data
Location: Lincoln 3
Location: Lincoln 2
The VA provides health care to 8.7 million veterans on an annual basis and
collects data through its electronic health record system. Most of the data
collected during health care is available throughout the VA for operations and
for research. Open access to health data poses challenges from ensuring patient
privacy to implementing solutions that provide data without the need for manual
preparation. The VA, a federal partner with the Federal Health Architecture,
recognizes how these challenges impact the effective collection, use, and sharing
of key data and is working to improve public access to specific data sets. In this
presentation, the VA will discuss the current methods being used to share data
with requestors, the challenges of these methods, and how the agency is working
to improve open access to VA data.
Join the Office of Consumer eHealth from the Office of the National Coordinator
for Health IT (ONC), for a first look at results from its 2014 Consumer Survey. This
annual survey reveals key insights around consumer attitudes, experiences, and
expectations accessing their health data online and using health IT. Find out
the myths vs. reality about how consumers are using their health data, trends
in consumer engagement with their health data, and health IT and consumer
expectations for engaging with their providers. We’ll also discuss the federal
strategy for increasing patient engagement with their health data and how you
can get involved in the Blue Button Initiative. Attendees will leave with resources
to guide consumers in finding and using their health data and what else is needed.
Presenters: Erin Siminerio, MPH, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services; Vaishali Patel, Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT
Presenter: Rachel Harrison-Gordon, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Track: Clinical Care
10:35 am – 11:50 am
10:35 am – 11:50 pm
But What if I Want to Share? Contributing Your Own
Data to Foster Public Good
Location: Washington 1-2
If you want your own health data, you can hit the Blue Button and it’s yours to
do with as you see fit. The Blue Button project is a stunning success story with
about 8 gajillion people (give or take) downloading their personal medical
histories. But what if you want to share your data? As the Data Liberation
movement matures, it faces a number of challenges around developing open
data. How can folks participate in open data if they don’t have six Masters
degrees in data science, but simply want to share and help others? How can
we protect and secure individuals’ privacy by creating data that meets research
needs — by allowing people to opt in or otherwise? Finally, how do we best
collect and analyze new sources of data from personal life streams and connect
this unstructured data to the health care system?
Moderator: Niall Brennan, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Panelists: Geraldine Gueron, PhD, The Wikilife Foundation; Aaron Seib, National Association for Trusted Exchange; Maksim Tsvetovat, OpenHealth
Track: Data Science & Infrastructure
Track: General
The Role of Retailers in the U.S. Healthcare System
Location: Washington 4
Retailers are developing and expanding healthcare products and services, some as
a new core focus, and others to complement their traditional businesses. Join this
session to learn what industry leaders understand about their customers and how
that informs their strategies to help people live healthier lives.
Moderator: Maureen O’Connor, Mosaic Health Solutions
Panelists: Brian Bobby, Rite-Aid; Brad Fluegel, Walgreens; Alex Hurd, Walmart; Will Shrank, CVS
Track: Impact
10:35 am – 11:50 am
Innovative Value-Based Uses of Open Data
Location: Lincoln 6
This session will feature unique uses of government and private sector open
data sources that are contributing to better consumer decision making and
value based care. These exciting initiatives include unique, community-sourced
guides to health care costs, revealing patterns of purchasing by consumers and
creating deeper community engagement around cost transparency and the only
free data set and API for information about individual medications, pill images,
and drug identification.
Moderator: Bryan Sivak, Former Chief Technology Officer, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Panelists: Charles Gellman, MSHI, Qwalcare; Dale Hale, National Institutes of Health; Jeanne Pinder, clearhealthcosts.com
Track: Innovator
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 31
DETAILED AGENDA (CONT.)
10:35 am – 11:50 am
Engaging Patients in Generating and Using Big Data
Location: Washington 3
Clinical research requires patients to share their data, which makes it critical to
engage them about privacy, security, and evidence-based care. Moreover, patients
can be important for identifying what data is important about their life and their
health, as well as what research questions they want answered. This session
will highlight examples where patients have been engaged in generating big
data resources and how big data has been applied to generate new healthcare
knowledge.
Moderator: Kym Martin, MBA, CNC, CFT, Cancer Catharsis, LLC
Panelists: David Muntz, CHCIO, FCHIME, LCHIME, FHIMSS, GetWellNetwork; Sally Okun, RN, MMHS, PatientsLikeMe; Doris Peter, PhD, Consumer Reports; Lygeia Ricciardi, EdM, Clear Voice Consulting, LLC
Track: Patient/Consumer
11:50 am – 2:30 pm
Closing Luncheon
Location: Marriott Ballroom Salons 2 & 3
Health Data Consortium Overview
Health Data Liberators Award
Keynote Speaker: Steven Brill, Founder, Court TV and The American Lawyer, Author
Panel: How State and Local Governments are Using Big Data to Transform Their Healthcare Systems
Moderator: Karen DeSalvo, MD, MPH, MSc, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Panelists: Greg Moody, Director, Ohio Office of Healthcare Transformation; Michael Nutter, Mayor, City of Philadelphia
Announcements
Keynote Speaker: Sylvia Mathews Burwell, Secretary, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
32 I Health Datapalooza 2015
More info can be found on the app
POST-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS
Join us for these hands-on trainings from 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm on
Wednesday, June 3. Workshops are an additional fee, and you must
be pre-registered to participate. If interested in attending, please
visit the Registration Desk to have these added to your registration.
Privacy Bootcamp: Helping Entrepreneurs Navigate
Federal and State Privacy Laws
Location: Washington 5 - 6
Organizer: Healthcare Leadership Council
Instructors: Kim Gray, Chief Privacy Officer, IMS Health; Mary Grealy, President,
Healthcare Leadership Council; Cora Han, Senior Attorney, Division of
Privacy and Identity Protection, Federal Trade Commission; Christina Heide,
Senior Health Information Privacy Policy Specialist, Office of Civil Rights, U.S.
Department of Health & Human Services; Sara Juster, Associate Counsel and
Privacy Officer, Surescripts
No matter what type of health data your business uses, one of the most commonly
asked questions entrepreneurs and innovators face is: “Do I have to comply with
HIPAA?” If not, “what laws must I comply with?” The purpose of this workshop is to
help entrepreneurs and start-ups understand the Privacy and Security Rules under
HIPAA including breach notification. Attendees will also gain insight into other
laws that they may have to comply with, even if HIPAA does not apply, including
the Federal Trade Commission Act and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).
The Role of Social Media Data in Health Care: Driving
Innovation, Education and Healthcare Improvement
Location: Lincoln 3
Organizers: WCG Group and Health Data Consortium
Instructors: Jay Bhatt, Chief Health Officer, Illinois Hospital Association; Garry
Choy, Assistant Chief Medical Information Officer for Advanced Technologies,
Massachusetts General Physicians Organization, Massachusetts General Hospital;
Jared Hawkins, National Library of Medicine Fellow, Harvard Medical School
Did you know that it was a physician, not a reporter, who broke the story about
the Measles outbreak at Disneyland via Twitter earlier this year? There’s no
denying it—social media plays an increasingly integral part in the healthcare
space. Attend this workshop to learn how social and digital data are driving
healthcare innovation and providing unmatched opportunities for education
and healthcare improvement. Learn how organizations are applying social data
in innovative ways across the healthcare landscape directly from those who are
already reaping the benefits.
"A fantastic opportunity to meet and
share knowledge with people in
varying fields within health care. It
is only through sharing of ideas that
progress is made." *
*Testimonials taken from Health
Datapalooza 2014 attendee evaluations.
Blue Button Workshop
Location: Washington 1 - 2
Organizer: U.S. Department of Health & Human Services,
Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC)
Instructors: Lana Moriarty, Director, Office of Consumer eHealth, ONC;
Steve Posnack, Director, Office of Science and Technology, ONC; Erica Galvez,
Interoperability and Exchange Portfolio Manager, ONC; Josh Mandel, MD,
Software Engineer, Boston Children’s Hospital; Vaishali Patel, Senior Advisor,
Office of Planning, Evaluation and Analysis, ONC; Theresa Hancock, Director
of MyHealtheVet, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; Gajen Sunthara,
Presidential Innovation Fellow, ONC
While provider adoption of EHRs has hit a tipping point, consumer access to
the information maintained in those systems remains low – yet steadily rising.
ONC has completed national trend surveys to gain a better pulse on consumer
access to their health information and ways in which they use or want to use
their information. Learn how these findings are connected to consumer centric
priorities outlined in the Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap and Standards
Advisory. The workshop will also highlight exciting developments to improve
usability of Blue Button and details for developers on how to leverage Blue
Button information from federal agencies.
Using ArcGIS to Create an Open Data Portal for Health
Location: Washington 4
Organizer: Esri
Instructor: Jared Shoultz, Health Technology Specialist, Esri
An ArcGIS Open Data Portal can efficiently unlock authoritative data in your
organization to increase transparency, address reporting requirements, and spur
innovation. This workshop will demonstrate how to create an ArcGIS Open Data
Portal for a typical health organization using ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Desktop.
Attendees will learn standard workflows to create, document, and publish data
from desktop or ArcGIS Online; tips to ensure data is properly formatted; and
best practices and processes for configuring ArcGIS Open Data sites.
Understanding Different Health Data User Types
and Serving Them Extremely Well
Location: Washington 3
Organizer: Socrata and Forum One Communications
Instructors: Joe Pringle, Director of Health, Socrata; Brian Pagels, Chief Impact
Officer, Forum One
Researchers, industry, developers, policy makers and influencers, the media,
and consumers all use data very differently. Understanding how they think
about data, find it, access it, and use it will help data publishers and other
organizations using data be more effective. The session will explore questions
such as: How can we engage our users to understand what they really want?
How can we make our data easier to find and understand? How can we serve
sophisticated data users without overwhelming casual users? How can we
work with internal data owners and decision makers to help them think more
about these audiences’ needs? How can we maximize the reach of our data to
secondary and tertiary audiences?
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 33
MAIN STAGE PANELS
Monday, June 1
Tuesday, June 2
Big Changes from Big Data in Health Care
Rethinking Healthcare Delivery with 21st Century Data
Moderator:
Ceci Connolly, Managing Director, Health Research Institute,
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Panelists:
Bob Kocher, Partner, Venrock
Farzad Mostashari, Chief Executive Officer, Aledade
Ed Park, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer,
Athenahealth
Moderator:
Susan Dentzer, Senior Policy Advisor, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Panelists:
Patrick Conway, Deputy Administrator for Innovation & Quality, CMS
Chief Medical Officer, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Karen DeSalvo, Acting Assistant Secretary for Health, National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology, U.S. Department of
Health & Human Services
Tim Kelsey, National Director for Patients & Information, NHS England
Todd Park, Technology Advisor, Executive Office of the President,
The White House
Joe Selby, Executive Director, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research
Institute
Big data has drastically transformed the financial, manufacturing, and retail
industries. Now it is beginning to transform the healthcare industry. Join
us in exploring how insights from big data are changing what clinicians
do, how patient behave, how health plans function, and how hospitals
work. This panel will feature discussions of ground-breaking technologies
utilizing big data to save money, improve care, and disrupt the status quo.
The Power of Transparency and Data to Remake Health Care
Moderator:
Sarah Kliff, Senior Editor, Vox
Panelists:
Niall Brennan, Chief Data Officer, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services
Bernard Lo, President and CEO, Greenwall Foundation
Nick Sinai, Venture Partner, Insight Venture Partners
Join us for this enlightening discussion that brings together perspectives from
private industry, government, and academia to talk about how data transparency
is transforming the healthcare space. The panel will examine data transparency’s
role in the improvement of patient outcomes, challenges to obtaining greater
transparency, and how further transparency can be promoted and adopted.
In addition, hear how data transparency has advanced the progress of other
industries and what healthcare can learn from those experiences.
34 I Health Datapalooza 2015
As a result of advances in health IT, we are experiencing a sea of change in
the healthcare delivery system – from how we receive care as patients to the
knowledge providers have at their fingertips to test, diagnose, and administer
care. This panel will examine how we currently harness and use data in U.S.
healthcare delivery, what changes are in store for the system, and where we
should ultimately head to achieve optimal care for all Americans. Moreover,
the panel will contrast developments in U.S. healthcare delivery with those
occurring in the United Kingdom and what the U.S. can learn from innovative
healthcare delivery practices abroad.
More info can be found on the app
Wednesday, June 3
How Leading Healthcare Companies are Powering
Their Businesses with Big Data
Moderator:
David Knott, Senior Partner, McKinsey & Company
Panelists:
Tim Ferris, MD, Senior Vice President, Massachusetts General Hospital
and Partners Healthcare
Eric Perakslis, Executive Director, Center for Biomedical Informatics,
Harvard
David Watson, CEO, Cal INDEX (California Integrated Data Exchange)
Leading healthcare stakeholders (e.g., payors, providers, manufacturers) are
rapidly embracing big data as a key enabler as they transform themselves to
respond to the changes in the healthcare industry. Join us in discussing how
they are using data to drive impact, what they see as the next frontier in data and
analytics, and their perspectives on the future of data sharing in the industry.
This panel will feature perspectives from CIOs and senior leaders from across the
healthcare system.
How State and Local Governments are Using Big Data to Transform
Their Healthcare Systems
Moderator:
Karen DeSalvo, Acting Assistant Secretary for Health, National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology, U.S. Department of
Health & Human Services
Panelists:
Greg Moody, Director, Ohio Office of Healthcare Transformation
Michael Nutter, Mayor, City of Philadelphia
State and local governments are at the forefront of healthcare transformation,
migrating entire health economies from fee-for-service to outcomes-based
payment and care delivery models. And data is at the core of state and local
efforts. Governments are increasingly maximizing the data available today
and accelerating efforts to unlock data across their states (e.g., through Health
Information Exchanges, All-Payor Claims Databases). Join us for a conversation with
the state and local healthcare leaders heading this revolution.
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 35
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Steven Brill
Founder, Court TV and The American
Lawyer
Twitter: @StevenBrill
Steven Brill is a longtime journalist
and is the founder of Court TV and in 1979
launched the monthly magazine The American
Lawyer, which is still in publication. A graduate
of Yale College and Yale Law School, Steven has
written for The New Yorker, The New York Times
Magazine, Esquire and TIME.
Bruce Broussard
President and Chief Executive Officer,
Humana
Twitter: @BruceDBroussard
Bruce Broussard became Humana’s
President and Chief Executive Officer in January
2013. Prior to joining Humana, Bruce was CEO
of McKesson Specialty/US Oncology, Inc. He is
a member of the Business Roundtable and a
member of the Board of Directors of America’s
Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), also serving on
AHIP’s Executive Committee.
Sylvia Mathews Burwell
Secretary, U.S. Department of
Health & Human Services
Twitter: @SecBurwell
Sylvia Mathews Burwell was
sworn in as the 22nd Secretary of Health &
Human Services (HHS) on June 9, 2014. A resultsdriven manager, Secretary Burwell has led large
and complex organizations across the public
and private sectors. As the Secretary of HHS,
Burwell oversees more than 77,000 employees.
Prior to serving in the Administration, Burwell
served as President of the Walmart Foundation
in Bentonville, Arkansas.
36 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Esther Dyson
Founder, HICCup
Twitter: @edyson
Esther Dyson is founder of
HICCup.co, for Health Initiative
Coordinating Council. She is an investor in
multiple health and wellness businesses, and she
sits on the boards of the Sunlight Foundation
and the Personal Genome Foundation.
Glyn Elwyn
Physician-Researcher,
The Dartmouth Institute for Health &
Clinical Practice
Twitter: @glynelwyn
Glyn Elwyn, BA, MD, MSc, PhD, is a physicianresearcher at The Dartmouth Institute for Health
Policy and Clinical Practice. His current focus is on
the development and impact of Option Grids, tools
to stimulate better conversations based on best
evidence. He co-chairs the International Patient
Decision Aids Standards Collaboration, and is the
lead editor of Shared Decision-Making in Health
Care: Achieving Evidence-Based Patient Choice
(Oxford University Press, 2016).
Aaron Levie
Co-Founder, Box
Twitter: @Levie
Aaron Levie co-founded Box with
friend and Box CFO Dylan Smith
in 2005. Aaron is the visionary behind Box’s
product and platform strategy, which is focused
on incorporating the best of traditional content
management with an elegant, easy-to-use user
experience suited to the way people collaborate
and work today. Box supports HIPAA compliant
file sharing and sells to providers, payors, and life
science companies around the world.
Dr. DJ Patil
Chief Data Scientist and Deputy
Chief Technology Officer for Data
Policy, White House Office of Science
and Technology Policy
Twitter: @dpatil
DJ Patil joined the White House Office of Science
and Technology Policy (OSTP) in February 2015,
where he advises on policies and practices to
maintain U.S. leadership in technology and
innovation; fosters partnerships to maximize
the nation’s return on its investment in data; and
helps to attract and retain the best minds in data
science to serve the public.
Andy Slavitt
Acting Administrator, Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services
Twitter: @ASlavitt
Andy Slavitt is the Acting
Administrator for the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services. As Acting Administrator,
Slavitt is responsible for cross cutting policy and
operational coordination for the agency’s Medicare,
Medicaid, CHIP, and Marketplace programs.
Most recently he served as Group Executive Vice
President for Optum, where he was the top day-today executive leading the systems integration work
and tech surge to fix HealthCare.gov.
More info can be found on the app
MAIN STAGE EMCEES AND MODERATORS
Main Stage Emcees
Thomas Goetz, MPH
Thomas Goetz is co-founder of
Iodine, which Time called “the Yelp
of medicine.” He was previously
executive editor at WIRED, and
served as the first Entrepreneur-inResidence for Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
where he created Flip The Clinic, a project to
transform the doctor-patient visit. His book, The
Remedy, was chosen by Amazon as a Best Book
of 2014. His previous book, The Decision Tree, was
chosen by the Wall Street Journal as a Best Health
book of 2010. Thomas also writes the LaunchPad
column for Inc.
Kavita Patel, MD, MS
Kavita Patel is a Fellow and
Managing Director at the Center
for Health Policy at the Brookings
Institution, where she leads
research on delivery system
reforms, physician payment, and healthcare
workforce productivity. She is also a practicing
primary care physician at Johns Hopkins Medicine
and a clinical instructor at UCLA’s Geffen School of
Medicine. Previously, she was a Director of Policy
for The White House under President Obama and a
senior advisor to the late Senator Edward Kennedy.
Also Keynote Moderator for Bruce Broussard,
President and Chief Executive Officer, Humana
Bryan Sivak
Bryan Sivak was most recently
Chief Technology Officer for the
U.S. Department of Health &
Human Services. In this role, he
was responsible for helping HHS
leadership harness the power of data, technology,
and innovation to improve the health and welfare
of the nation. Previously, Bryan served as the Chief
Innovation Officer to Maryland Governor Martin
O’Malley, as Chief Technology Officer for the
District of Columbia, and co-founded InQuira, Inc.
and Electric Knowledge LLC, of which the latter
which provided one of the world’s first Natural
Language Search engines available on the web
in 1998.
Apps Expo Live Demo Moderators
Keynote Moderators
Steve Agular
Alyssa Bereznak
Monday, June 1
Moderator for DJ Patil, Chief
Data Scientist and Deputy Chief
Technology Officer for Data Policy,
White House Office of Science and
Technology Policy
Steve Agular is a Managing Director
of Zaffre Investments, Blue Cross
Blue Shield of Massachusetts’
strategic investing arm. He focuses on investments
in the Healthcare IT sector. Before joining Zaffre,
Steve operated his own consultancy, providing
management and advisory services to earlystage healthcare companies. Prior to that, he
was co-founder and President of Soltazza, an
environmentally-friendly coffee brewer company.
Steve has extensive healthcare investment
experience and his previous roles include serving
as a Venture Partner at Mansa Capital, Director of
M&A at Schaller Anderson (purchased by Aetna),
and Investment Banker at SG Cowen.
Shefa Gordon, PhD
Monday, June 1, Tuesday, June 2
Shefa Gordon is Acting Director
of the Office of Program Planning
and Analysis at the National Eye
Institute, NIH, where he coordinates NEI reporting,
planning, and portfolio analysis activities, as well as
serving as the legislative liaison. As a Presidential
Management Fellow, he spent two years at the NIH
evaluating a collaborative research program on
Type 1 diabetes. He was also a Fellow on the House
Ways and Means Health Subcommittee working on
mental health and end-stage renal disease.
Alyssa Bereznak is a New York-based National
Correspondent at Yahoo News covering the
intersection of politics, culture, and technology.
Aneesh Chopra
Moderator for Aaron Levie,
Co-Founder, Box
Aneesh Chopra is the former (and
first) U.S. Chief Technology Officer.
As an Assistant to the President, he designed the
National Wireless Initiative, helped launch Startup
America, and executed an “open innovation”
strategy across the government built on private
sector collaboration -- opening up data, convening
on standards, and staffing “lean government
startups.”
Aneesh is currently the co-founder and executive
vice president of Hunch Analytics, a technology
firm focused on improving the productivity of
public and regulated sectors of the economy
through data analytics.
Mark Tomaino
Tuesday, June 2
Mark Tomaino joined Walsh,
Carson, Anderson & Stowe (WCAS)
as a Senior Industry Executive in
2010. He focuses on investments in the healthcare
information technology industry. Mark was
previously Senior Vice President, Corporate
Development at The TriZetto Group. Prior to joining
The TriZetto Group, Mark worked at Bausch & Lomb
Incorporated in a variety of legal, strategy, and
business development roles.
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 37
EXHIBITOR LISTING
ALPHABETICAL ORDER
NAME
BOOTH ORDER
BOOTH
ABILITY Network...................................................................................................................................... 500
AcademyHealth ...................................................................................................................................... 401
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality....................................................................... 701
AHIMA............................................................................................................................................................ 403
Bureau of Economic Analysis.......................................................................................................... 801
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Qualified Entity Medicare
Data Sharing Program................................................................................................................. 808
CSC.................................................................................................................................................................. 307
Emdeon........................................................................................................................................................ 611
Esri................................................................................................................................................................... 207
Evariant......................................................................................................................................................... 209
General Biologic Investments (GBI)............................................................................................. 313
General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT).......................................................... 705
GeoHealth US........................................................................................................................................... 702
Health 2.0...................................................................................................................................................1103
Health Affairs............................................................................................................................................. 800
IEEE.................................................................................................................................................................. 602
IMPAQ International.............................................................................................................................. 806
IMS Government Solutions.............................................................................................................. 201
Inovalon........................................................................................................................................................ 308
Innovation@HHS..................................................................................................................................... 809
Iodine............................................................................................................................................................. 803
JEN Associates, Inc. ............................................................................................................................... 406
MarkLogic.................................................................................................................................................... 802
Midas+, A Xerox Company............................................................................................................... 302
National Center for Health Statistics........................................................................................... 706
NextGen Healthcare............................................................................................................................. 412
NORC.............................................................................................................................................................. 807
PCORI............................................................................................................................................................. 503
PricewaterhouseCoopers.................................................................................................................. 300
RelevantHealth......................................................................................................................................... 805
ResDAC......................................................................................................................................................... 707
RowdMap, Inc.........................................................................................................................................1101
RxAnte........................................................................................................................................................... 708
Self Care Catalysts Inc. ........................................................................................................................ 303
Socrata.......................................................................................................................................................... 400
Surescripts................................................................................................................................................... 203
Tableau Software.................................................................................................................................... 700
Truven Health Analytics...................................................................................................................... 301
U.S. News & World Report................................................................................................................. 501
UK Trade & Investment........................................................................................................................ 413
Verizon........................................................................................................................................................... 402
38 I Health Datapalooza 2015
NAME
BOOTH
IMS Government Solutions.............................................................................................................. 201
Surescripts................................................................................................................................................... 203
Esri................................................................................................................................................................... 207
Evariant......................................................................................................................................................... 209
PricewaterhouseCoopers.................................................................................................................. 300
Truven Health Analytics...................................................................................................................... 301
Midas+, A Xerox Company............................................................................................................... 302
Self Care Catalysts Inc. ........................................................................................................................ 303
CSC.................................................................................................................................................................. 307
Inovalon........................................................................................................................................................ 308
General Biologic Investments (GBI)............................................................................................. 313
Socrata.......................................................................................................................................................... 400
AcademyHealth ...................................................................................................................................... 401
Verizon........................................................................................................................................................... 402
AHIMA............................................................................................................................................................ 403
JEN Associates, Inc. ............................................................................................................................... 406
NextGen Healthcare............................................................................................................................. 412
UK Trade & Investment........................................................................................................................ 413
ABILITY Network...................................................................................................................................... 500
U.S. News & World Report................................................................................................................. 501
PCORI............................................................................................................................................................. 503
IEEE.................................................................................................................................................................. 602
Emdeon........................................................................................................................................................ 611
Tableau Software.................................................................................................................................... 700
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality....................................................................... 701
GeoHealth US........................................................................................................................................... 702
General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT).......................................................... 705
National Center for Health Statistics........................................................................................... 706
ResDAC......................................................................................................................................................... 707
RxAnte........................................................................................................................................................... 708
Health Affairs............................................................................................................................................. 800
Bureau of Economic Analysis.......................................................................................................... 801
MarkLogic.................................................................................................................................................... 802
Iodine............................................................................................................................................................. 803
RelevantHealth......................................................................................................................................... 805
IMPAQ International.............................................................................................................................. 806
NORC.............................................................................................................................................................. 807
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Qualified Entity Medicare
Data Sharing Program................................................................................................................. 808
Innovation@HHS..................................................................................................................................... 809
RowdMap, Inc.........................................................................................................................................1101
Health 2.0...................................................................................................................................................1103
More info can be found on the app
EXHIBITOR MAP
809
108
103
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 39
HEALTH DATAPALOOZA 2015 EXHIBITORS*
ABILITY Network
Booth 500
AHIMA
Booth 403
CSC
Booth 307
ABILITY Network is a
leading healthcare
technology company
trusted by thousands of payers and providers
across the continuum of care. Through the use of
the ABILITY Network comprehensive suite of care
coordination and workflow services, our customers
are able to improve efficiency, reduce costs,
increase cash flow, and more effectively manage
the financial and clinical complexities of
healthcare. Visit www.abilitynetwork.com.
The premier resource for
health information
governance, AHIMA
represents more than
71,000 health information management
professionals across the globe, who are the stewards
of healthcare data and information. AHIMA offers
the only health data analysis credential in the
industry, supporting healthcare professionals
through education, training, certification, advocacy,
and more. Visit www.ahima.org.
Computer Sciences Corporation
(CSC) is a global leader of next
generation information
technology services and solutions. CSC’s North
American Public Sector leverages commercial best
practices and proven technologies to bring scalable,
more cost-effective IT solutions to government
agencies seeking efficiency through innovation. For
more information, visit the company’s website at
www.csc.com/government.
AcademyHealth
Booth 401
Bureau of Economic Analysis
Booth 801
AcademyHealth is a
leading national
organization serving the
fields of health services
and policy research and
the professionals who produce and use this
important work. Together with its members,
AcademyHealth works to improve health and the
performance of the health system by supporting
the production and use of evidence to inform
policy and practice. As part of these efforts,
AcademyHealth is working to build an
infrastructure of training, methods, and
governance to support evolving and emerging
data streams and to address relevant research
questions in rigorous and novel ways. Visit
www.academyhealth.org.
The Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) is one of the
world’s leading statistical
agencies, recognized as a
key source for the best and most comprehensive
economic statistics. Visit www.bea.gov.
Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality
Booth 701
The Agency for
Healthcare
Research and
Quality’s (AHRQ)
mission is to produce evidence to make health care
safer, higher quality, more accessible, equitable,
and affordable, and to work with the U.S.
Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) and
other partners to make sure that the evidence is
understood and used. Visit www.ahrq.gov.
40 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’
Qualified Entity Medicare Data Sharing
Program
Booth 808
The Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services’
Qualified Entity Medicare
Data Sharing Program
makes Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) claims data
and Part D prescription drug event data available
to “qualified entities” (QEs) to produce publicly
available provider performance reports. Visit
www.qemedicaredata.org and @QEMedicareData
for more information.
Emdeon
Booth 611
Emdeon is a leading
provider of revenue and
payment cycle
management and clinical information exchange
solutions, connecting payers, providers, and patients
in the U.S. healthcare system. Emdeon’s offerings
integrate and automate key business and
administrative functions of its payer and provider
customers throughout the patient encounter. Visit
www.emdeon.com
Esri
Booth 207
Esri is the world leader in
Geographic Information
Systems (GIS). Its
innovative software
platform helps users to discover, use, make, and
share data across their organization and out to
the community. A modern location strategy for
planning, monitoring, predicting, managing
systems, and collaboration. Everything in health
has location. Place Matters. Visit www.esri.com.
More info can be found on the app
Evariant
Booth 209
GeoHealth US
Booth 702
Health 2.0
Booth 1103
Evariant sees a future
where healthcare
organizations deliver
efficient care solutions. We continuously innovate
our healthcare CRM platform, based on a centralized
communications engine capable of identifying,
executing, and measuring all types of engagement
initiatives. Results include greater visibility, richer
engagement, and continuous improvement. Learn
more at www.evariant.com. You can also connect
with us on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook.
Our goal is to increase
wellness by providing
patients current and
historical data based on where they live and work.
GeoHealth US combines sensor and complex
historical data on the environment and over 100
diseases. Using advanced analytics, GeoHealth
provides valuable insights on toxic exposures and
our health. Learn more at GeoHealth.us.
Health 2.0 is the
premiere showcase
and catalyst for the advancement of new health
technologies. Through a global series of
conferences, thought leadership roundtables,
developer competitions, pilot programs, and
leading market intelligence, Health 2.0 drives the
innovation and collaboration necessary to transform
health and health care. Visit www.health2con.com.
General Biologic Investment, Ltd. (GBI)
Booth 313
GBI is an information,
applications, and services
company focused on the
healthcare industry.
Leveraging data from across the healthcare value
chain, GBI creates web and mobile systems that
enable individuals and organizations to make better
decisions and communicate more effectively. Visit
www.gbihealth.com.
General Dynamics Information Technology
(GDIT)
Booth 705
General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT)
provides information technology (IT), systems
engineering, analytic services, and training to
customers in the defense, federal civilian
government, health, state and local government,
and commercial sectors. With approximately
28,000 professionals worldwide, GDIT delivers IT
enterprise solutions and manages large-scale IT
programs and services. Visit www.gdit.com.
THE THOUGHT LEADER
that thought leaders turn to
We are an industry leader in health IT research and communications,
giving our clients the edge they need to succeed in today’s competitive
marketplace. We deliver timely market intelligence and research giving
companies the tools and know-how to stay ahead of the market.
Industry essentials
Our C-level weekly market intelligence report covers healthcare
IT/digital health, including both practice and consumer-focused
technologies from health information management, clinical decision
support, data analytics and electronic health records to mobile health
apps, social health, telehealth and more.
Funding and M&A reports
We publish a comprehensive overview of market trends and analysis
that includes easy-to-digest charts, graphs and tables, with data-driven
analysis of the healthcare IT sector each quarter. Mercom is the go-to
resource for VC, corporate and M&A activity.
www.mercomcapital.com
1.512.215.4452
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 41
HEALTH DATAPALOOZA 2015 EXHIBITORS* (CONT.)
Health Affairs
Booth 800
IMS Government Solutions
Booth 201
Iodine
Booth 803
Health Affairs is the
leading journal of
health policy thought and research. The
peer-reviewed journal is published monthly in
print and online, as well as weekly web-exclusive
articles at www.healthaffairs.org. The journal
consistently ranks as one of the top-cited journals
in health policy and health sciences.
IMS Health is a leading
global information,
services and technology
company providing the
healthcare industry with comprehensive
solutions to improve performance. Applying
sophisticated analytics and applications, we
connect more than 10 petabytes of data on
diseases, treatments, costs, and outcomes to
customers in pharmaceutical, consumer health,
and medical device manufacturing, and in
payers, providers, government, and the financial
community. Additional information is available at
www.imshealth.com.
At Iodine, our mission is to
turn people’s experience
into better medicine. On our website and mobile
app, we make it easy to learn from other people’s
experience - and simple for people to share theirs
in turn. Our growing database of more than
100,000 reports gives new insights into what
medical treatments might work best for which
persons, so that individuals can better decide what
is right for them. We combine this data with
information from clinical research and the FDA to
create a new resource for finding what works. Visit
www.iodine.com.
IEEE
Booth 602
IEEE Engineering in
Medicine and Biology
Society (EMBS) is the
world’s largest international society of biomedical
engineers and provides access to the people,
practices, information, ideas, and opinions shaping
one of the fastest growing fields focusing on the
development and application of engineering
concepts and methods to provide new solutions
to biological, medical, and healthcare problems.
Visit www.ieee.org.
IMPAQ International
Booth 806
IMPAQ International is a
public policy research
firm that drives value by
utilizing innovative thinking and rigorous
approaches to improve our clients’ policies and
programs. IMPAQ provides exemplary research
and consulting services through the use of impact
evaluation studies, applied research, policy
analysis, quantitative and qualitative data analysis,
and technical assistance. Visit www.impaqint.com.
LLC
42 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Inovalon
Booth 308
Inovalon is a leading
technology company that
combines advanced
cloud-based data analytics
and data-driven intervention platforms to
achieve meaningful insight and impact in clinical
and quality outcomes, utilization, and financial
performance across the healthcare landscape.
Visit www.inovalon.com.
Innovation@HHS
Booth 809
The U.S.
Department
The Office of Business Management and Transformation
of Health &
Human Services is empowering ideas and
innovation to better deliver on its mission. The
HHS Idea Lab and Office of Business Management
& Transformation offer unique initiatives and
services to spur creative problem solving and
greater efficiency.
HHS IDEA LAB
JEN Associates, Inc.
Booth 406
JEN
JEN Associates is a small
business celebrating its
a s s o c i a t e s 30th year working with
health data. The company is a pioneer in
importing, standardizing, validating, enhancing
and analyzing Medicare, Medicaid, and
commercial health claims, assessment, disease
registry, and electronic health data. JEN links these
diverse data sets and creates person-level,
longitudinal records for analysis. JEN hosts the
data through a secure, web-accessible platform
that enables users to visualize results on demand.
For more information, go to www.jen.com.
MarkLogic
Booth 802
For more than a
decade,
MarkLogic has delivered a powerful, agile and
trusted Enterprise NoSQL database platform that
enables organizations to turn all data into
valuable and actionable information.
Organizations around the world rely on
MarkLogic’s enterprise-grade technology to
power the new generation of information
applications. MarkLogic is headquartered in
Silicon Valley with offices in Washington D.C., New
York, London, Frankfurt, Utrecht, and Tokyo. Visit
www.marklogic.com.
More info can be found on the app
Midas+, A Xerox Company
Booth 302
NORC
Booth 807
PCORI
Booth 503
With approximately 1,900
clients, Midas+ Solutions is
the preferred healthcare
quality outcomes improvement and strategic
performance management partner. By leveraging
our twenty-four years of market domain expertise,
Midas+ clients outperform the median national
hospital quality scores for value-based purchasing
and other pay-for-performance programs. Visit
www.midasplus.com.
NORC at the
University of
Chicago is an
independent research organization with more
than 70 years of leadership and experience in data
collection, analysis, and dissemination. NORC’s
U.S. and international operations provide data and
analysis that support informed decision-making in
health, education, economics, crime, justice, and
energy. Visit www.norc.org.
The Patient-Centered Outcomes
Research Institute (PCORI) is an
independent, non-profit
organization authorized by
Congress to fund research that
provides patients and those who care for them
with the evidence-based information needed to
make better-informed healthcare decisions. PCORI
continuously seeks input from a broad range of
stakeholders to guide its work. Visit www.pcori.org.
National Center for Health Statistics
Booth 706
The National
Center for
Health Statistics (NCHS) provides statistical
information that guides actions and policies to
improve the health of the American people. As the
Nation’s principal health statistics agency, NCHS
leads the way with accurate, relevant, and timely
data. The NCHS exhibit will feature the latest
publication and data releases. Visit www.cdc.gov/
nchs.
NextGen Healthcare
Booth 412
NextGen Healthcare
simplifies practice
operations so providers can focus on care,
improve population health, and optimize
value-based payments. Its integrated solutions
streamline work, improve clinical and financial
results, drive compliance, and enable accountable,
collaborative care. Its interoperability solutions
empower data exchange while its integrated
billings and claims services maximize revenue.
Visit www.nextgen.com.
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 43
HEALTH DATAPALOOZA 2015 EXHIBITORS* (CONT.)
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Booth 300
PwC’s Public Sector Practice
helps federal agencies solve
complex business issues,
manage risk, and add value
through our comprehensive
service offerings in financial management;
program management; human capital; enterprise
effectiveness; governance, risk, and compliance;
and technology–all of which are delivered
seamlessly throughout the world. To find out
more, visit www.pwc.com/publicsector.
RelevantHealth
Booth 805
RelevantHealth is a
new startup
accelerator based in Rockville, Maryland.
Announced in April 2015, RelevantHealth will be
cohort-based, offering accepted founders of
health tech companies $50,000, a productfocused curriculum, mentorship, dedicated
coworking space, and even access to software
developers. Applications open in May 2015. Find
out more at www.RelevantHealth.md.
ResDAC
Booth 707
Risk-Readiness Platform helps payers and providers
identify unwarranted variation and ideal provider
arrangements based on provider practice patterns
and population characteristics. RowdMap’s
platform comes preloaded with government
benchmarks—no IT integration required. Visit
www.rowdmap.com
RxAnte
Booth 708
RxAnte is the leading
platform for improving
medication use and drug
therapy outcomes through
predictive analytics and targeted clinical programs.
Its innovative analytics platform is transforming
how organizations work with healthcare
professionals, care management intervention
providers, and patients to improve the use of safe
and effective prescription medications. Created by
subject matter experts in medication adherence,
health IT, and advanced analytics, the “RxAnte
Platform” is a patent-pending set of solutions that
includes predictive and decision analytics,
advanced evaluation methods, and an innovative
platform for provider engagement. Learn more at
www.rxante.com.
Self Care Catalysts Inc.
Booth 303
ResDAC, a CMS
contractor located
at the University of Minnesota, provides free
assistance to academic, government, and
non-profit researchers interested in using
Medicare and/or Medicaid data. ResDAC provides
information about the strengths, weaknesses, and
applications of Medicare and Medicaid data.
ResDAC conducts workshops and webinars on
using the Medicare (including Part D), Medicaid,
and MCBS data. Visit www.resdac.org.
Self Care Catalysts is a
patient informatics,
intelligence, and solutions
company. Health
Storylines™ and Patient Storylines™ is an innovative
tandem solution that personalizes self care and at
the same time aggregates de-identified real world,
real time data that is transformed into enterprise
analytics for pharmaceutical companies, healthcare
systems, and payers. Visit www.selfcarecatalysts.com.
RowdMap, Inc.
Booth 1101
Socrata
Booth 400
RowdMap helps payers and
providers develop RiskReadiness strategies as they
transition from fee-for-service
to pay-for-value. RowdMap’s
44 I Health Datapalooza 2015
Socrata helps public
sector organizations
improve transparency, citizen service, and
data-driven decision making. Our user-friendly
solutions deliver data to governments trying to
reduce costs, to citizens who want to understand
how their tax dollars are used, and to civic hackers
dedicated to creating new apps and improving
services. Vist www.socrata.com.
Surescripts
Booth 203
The Surescripts network
supports the most
comprehensive
ecosystem of healthcare organizations nationwide.
Pharmacies, payers, pharmacy benefit managers,
physicians, hospitals, health information
exchanges, and health technology firms rely on
Surescripts to more easily and securely share health
information. Surescripts is guided by the principles
of neutrality, transparency, physician and patient
choice, open standards, collaboration, and privacy.
Surescripts operates the nation’s largest health
information network. Visit www.surescripts.com.
Tableau Software
Booth 700
Tableau empowers
healthcare
organizations to see and understand the data
driving patient outcomes and cost. Tableau
features a simple drag-and-drop interface that
gives anyone the ability to quickly create and
share interactive visualizations of their data.
Tableau’s visualizations are easy to interact with
from anywhere, including on a mobile device.
Visit www.tableau.com.
Truven Health Analytics
Booth 301
Truven Health
Analytics delivers
unbiased
information, analytic tools, benchmarks, and
services to the healthcare industry. Truven Health
Analytics combines deep clinical, financial, and
healthcare management expertise with innovative
technology platforms and information assets to
make healthcare better, collaborating with
customers to uncover and realize opportunities for
improving quality, efficiency, and outcomes. For
more, visit www.truvenhealth.com.
More info can be found on the app
U.S. News & World Report
Booth 501
For 25 years, the
industry-leading U.S.
News & World Report’s Best Hospitals platform has
guided patients looking for complex, high acuity
care. U.S. News has expanded our health advice
over the last decade with data-driven rankings for
Children’s Hospitals, Nursing Homes, Health Plans,
and Diets. More than 5MM consumers interact
with our health rankings, analysis, and content
each month, helping them to make informed
choices regarding their health. In addition, U.S.
News now offers high-level performance
assessment and peer benchmarking tools for
hospital and healthcare professionals. Visit
www.usnews.com.
UK Trade & Investment
Booth 413
UK Trade & Investment and
NHS England have partnered to
support a delegation of U.K.
companies at 2014 Health
Datapalooza. UKTI offers free support and
independent advice to foreign companies looking
to invest or locate in the U.K. Similarly, UKTI works
with U.K. businesses to ensure success in
international markets. NHS England works with staff,
patients, stakeholders, and the public to improve
the health outcomes for people in England. Visit
www.gov.uk/government/organisations/uk-tradeinvestment.
Verizon
Booth 402
Verizon designs, builds, and
operates the networks and
mobile technologies that help
government agencies expand
reach, increase agility, and
maintain longevity. Powered by investments in
security, data centers, 4G LTE, and global IP
networking, our portfolio of solutions meets the
demands and challenges shaping technology and
government operations today. Visit
www.verizonenterprise.com/federal.
*As of May 8, 2015
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 45
HOTEL FLOOR PLAN
LOBBY LEVEL
Keynote/Plenary
46 I Health Datapalooza 2015
More info can be found on the app
EXHIBITION LEVEL
App Expo
Live Demos
Health Datapalooza
Exhibit Hall
Join the conversation at #hdpalooza I 47
www.healthdataconsortium.org
@hdconsortium