2017 Summit Agenda - Cleveland

Thursday, March 23, 2017

7:30 am
Registration Opens
8:30 - 8:45 am
Welcome and Opening Remarks
Summit Co-Chairs
8:45 - 9:30 am
Keynote Presentation
MACRA: The Latest Accelerant to Value-Based Care:  Are You Ready?
 
MACRA, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015, is the latest accelerant in our nation’s migration from volume-based healthcare delivery and reimbursement to a value-based environment. MACRA’s unprecedented design will forcefully push forward a transformation in the way healthcare is delivered in our nation – if CMS’ past models have been “carrots,” MACRA is a carrot that comes with a clear and meaningful stick. The implications of MACRA include new and demanding performance requirements for physicians; meaningful financial impact on physician practices; and the triggering of a new wave of consolidation, alignment and integration.
 
While the new administration calls into question the future of the 2010 Affordable Care Act, as well as many other policies enacted over the last eight years, almost all recent commentary from healthcare experts and policy analysts posits that MACRA will not be repealed and is unlikely to be changed in a meaningful way, in part because of the strong bipartisan support it has had from the start, and because it is budget-neutral. Some details embedded in MACRA may be impacted – if the Medicare Shared Savings Program is unwound, for example, qualifying criteria for Advanced APMs will have to be redefined.  In addition, to reduce the burden on clinicians, it is possible that the timing for MACRA roll-out will be lengthened with an extended “transition” period, and the qualifying threshold may be raised in order to exempt a larger number of clinicians from the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS).
 
Given the initial reporting period for MACRA started January of 2017, there is compelling urgency for physicians and their health system partners to act now. A careful assessment of current performance and underlying capabilities along with consideration of options to address deficiencies is mandatory.
 
 An effective MACRA strategy will need to include elements of clinical care transformation, advancement of IT/data management/analytics capabilities, an elevation of alignment and integration among physicians and health system partners, and strong vision and leadership. Those who procrastinate are missing an exceptional strategic opportunity and in fact taking a significant strategic risk. 
 
Keynote speaker:
Principal
Chartis Group
9:30 - 10:30 am
Reactionary Panel Session
HHS, MACRA, Mandatory Bundled Payments, and IT as a Difference Maker
 
Beware, MACRA has arrived.  As the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) continues an aggressive push to drive forward to mandatory bundled payments and capitation,  IT's evolution is now a mandated regulation in the transition to a learning healthcare system.  
 
With MACRA's deadline of January 1, 2017, the first year of provider reporting is already underway.  Beyond this, mandatory bundled payments are visible on the horizon as the "Post-EHR" era progresses forward, with the bar being set high by the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) as it relates to interoperability, reporting to present value of care, and to becoming an enterprise that is prepared for the next generation of healthcare.  
 
In this session, join our expert presenter as we explore the intricacies of these policies, with a specific focus on MACRA and bundled payments, and how HIT leadership must position themselves and their organizations to receive the highest possible reimbursement-- contributing to a higher quality of care.
 
Moderator: Mark Hagland, Editor-in-Chief, Healthcare Informatics
 
Robert Schwartz, MD, Principal, Chartis Group
Nirav Vakharia, MD, Vicechair - Population Health, Cleveland Clinic
Niam Yaraghi, Ph.D., Fellow, The Brookings Institution
10:30 - 11:15 am
Morning Networking Break
 
Take this opportunity to mingle with your peers in an intimate setting to build relationships and establish future partnerships. Make sure to stop by the vendor booths to learn which solutions can provide better care and service in 2017 and beyond.
11:15 am - 12:15 pm
Forum-Style Panel Discussion
Managing the HIE Relationship: Navigating the Data Exchange Partnership
 
Regional health information exchanges (HIEs) have seen both a significant rise and fall in adoption and partnership rates across the country, and with providers, their needs, and with new system partnerships, meaningful data exchanges are a moving target. 
 
Will FHIR and APIs help exchange collaborations?  Are operational state health information exchanges on the decline?  What should organizations know to maintain a meaningful and effective partnership?  In this guided, interactive, forum-style panel session, all of the burning questions are asked and answered as our executive panel addresses their journey and collaborations with HIEs and what to know to maintain a long-lasting and meaningful partnership. 
 
Moderator:
Mark Hagland, Editor-in-Chief, Healthcare Informatics
 
Sallie Arnett, Vice President, Information Technology, Chief Information Officer, Licking Memorial Health Systems
David Kaelber, MD, PhD, MPH, Internist and Pediatrician, Chief Medical Informatics Officer and Vice-President of Health Informatics, MetroHealth System
Dan Paoletti, Chief Executive Officer, CliniSync / Ohio Health Information Partnership
Jason Buckner, Senior Vice President, Informatics, The Health Collaborative
12:15 - 12:40 pm
T2 Talk
Applying Healthcare Analytics to Change Provider Behavior​
 
Healthcare institutions obtain a large amount of data on care provided to patients.  Many times this data is used for process improvement and rarely to change provider behavior. However, connecting good data to a bonus plan can be a motivating force to change behavior.
 
Join Dr. Leslie Zun of Mount Sinai Hospital, for a discussion focusing not only on the means to correlate the data to patient care, but also the means to change and impact behaviors. Data can be linked to develop a successful provider bonus program, and data needs to be monitored to ensure changes and accountability. A model of the development and successful use of data as part of a provider bonus program will be illustrate the points made in the presentation.  This session will highlight a real world example of the success of increasing physician compliance with order set utilization by connecting it to a bonus plan-- ultimately influencing outcomes for a better quality of care.
 
Leslie Zun, MD, MBA, System Chair - Emergency Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital
12:40 - 2:20 pm
Session sponsored by:
Networking Lunch and Panel Discussion
A Deeper Dive: Understanding the Next Generation of Cybersecurity Threats
 
Recent developments, including the ransomware-based hijacking of the entire clinical information system architecture of a major health system based in Phoenix, are throwing a spotlight on the emerging, intensifying threat of direct hacks of EHR and HIS systems in hospitals and health systems. In this deeper-dive session, healthcare IT leaders will look at where the core threats are coming from and what CIOs, CISOs, and other healthcare IT senior leaders in patient care organizations need to do to protect their organizations, their patients, and the data of both.
 
From ransomware variants like Locky and CryptoLocker to polymorphic trojan viruses like the Shifu Trojan, attendees will leave the session with a clearer understanding of the next generation of hacker threats impacting the current healthcare environment, and those lurking on the horizon.  Discover the issues that CIOs, CISOs, and other healthcare IT leaders need to address and tackle to build a risk management and emergency protocol to quickly address these advanced threats and minimize downtime.  
 
Moderator:
Matthew Junod, JD, CISM, CISSP, Chief Information Security Officer, University of Toledo
 
Kevin Mooney, Esq., Sr. Director of Enterprise Data Governance, Cleveland Clinic
Pamela Banchy, RN-BC, PMP, CHCIO, CIO and VP of Clinical Informatics, Western Reserve Hospital - Western Reserve Health System
Bryan P. Smith, Supervisory Special Agent, FBI - Cleveland Division
Karen Martinko, IT Security Manager, MetroHealth Systems
Jim Rice, DM/IST, Research Fellow, University of Phoenix, Head of Security Consulting Services, Sirius Computer Solutions
2:20 - 2:40 pm
Sponsored by:
T2 Talk
Avoiding the Five Pain Points of Data Protection in Healthcare
 
The healthcare industry’s demand for cost efficiency, proliferation of healthcare data and concerns about security and ransomware paint a bleak picture for healthcare IT departments. How can they protect patient data, comply with regulations and keep costs down? It starts with IT Resilience. This session will address the five pain points of the healthcare IT department, and present how a resilient IT infrastructure can help avoid some of the most common pain points.
 
Justin Paul, Solutions Engineer, Zerto
2:40 - 3:25 pm
Presentation
Changing the Enterprise from the Data Up: Exploring Data Governance and Business Intelligence Initiatives at the Cleveland Clinic
 
The quality of data delivered to make decisions at a business and clinical level is of the utmost importance for today's providers-- at the Cleveland Clinic, the story has been ever-evolving. 
 
Originally, business intelligence and analytics group at the Cleveland Clinic relied heavily upon hospital management dashboards, created to paint a picture of efficiency, efficacy of programs, and cost.  But as key stakeholders in IT know, this was just the beginning, and the evolution-- years in the making.
 
Join two top minds from the Cleveland Clinic, as they describe the data governance, strategy and approach to providing high quality data quickly in the fast-paced environment of the Cleveland Clinic.  Listen in as we delve into the business case that was made, how this data was monitored over time, how context was provided around this data to show value, and how information is being delivered beyond the walls of the IT or Analytics department to progress operations at the Cleveland Clinic forward.
 
Andrew Proctor, Senior Director- Business Intelligence, Cleveland Clinic
Christopher Donovan, Executive Director of Enterprise Information Management & Analytics, Cleveland Clinic
3:25 - 3:55 pm
Afternoon Networking Break
 
Take this opportunity to mingle with your peers in an intimate setting to build relationships and establish future partnerships. Make sure to stop by the vendor booths to learn which solutions can provide better care and service in 2017 and beyond.
3:55 - 4:15 pm
Sponsored by:
T2 Talk
Keys to Repelling Ransomware
 
Your screen freezes. A dialogue box pops up. It says that your computer is locked, and your files will all be gone forever … unless you pay up.
 
Since many victims are willing to pay the ransom, this type of cryptomalware continues to rise, netting millions of dollars for cybercriminals looking for a substantial return on their minimal investment.
 
During this session, Kaspersky Lab’s Brent Graham will take you behind the front lines of cybersecurity to provide insights into this growing area of focus for vendors and cybercriminals alike.  
 
Areas of focus:
  • Awareness of common ransomware scenarios and delivery mechanisms
  • Ransomware trends you need to know—before it’s too late
  • Ways you can avoid becoming ransomware’s next victim
Brent Graham, Manager, Field Marketing, Kaspersky Lab North America 
4:15 - 5:15 pm
Panel sponsored by:
Forum-Style Panel Session
Automating and Stratifying Risk Through Effective Population Health Registries
 
In an era focused upon value, the term "population health registry" is certainly a vision providers are building upon.  As wellness initiatives and the need for data surrounding at-risk patients on the rise, registries provide visibility into potential risk factors in patients with chronic conditions (heart disease, diabetes, etc.) and can create a priority for care management teams to emphasize follow up with these patients.  However, for the maturing PHM program, the cost to maintain accuracy, reliability of data for physicians, and frustrations with workflow have all become key issues.
 
In this session, join our expert panel as we examine the current state of the population health registry, and the best practices to turn these registries into a powerful and meaningful PHM tool.  Find out how organizations are introducing action automations, leveraging risk stratification, and grooming data for in-depth analytics to produce viable insights.
 
Moderator: Greg Rosencrance, MD FACP, Chairman, Medicine Institute, Cleveland Clinic

Nabil Chehade, MD, Senior Vice President of Population Health, MetroHealth System

Justin Pestrue, MA, Administrative Director of Quality Analytics, University of Michigan Health

Amber Gregg, MS, Director of Analytics and Innovation, CHAMPS Oncology

Eric Widen, President and CEO, HBI Solutions, Inc.

Friday, March 24, 2017

8:15 - 8:35 am
T2 Talk
2017 Cyber Threat Forecast and Sharing Strategies to Defend Your Networks
 
This session will feature insights on the current threat landscape from our nation's top healthcare focused threat data sharing organization. The NH-ISAC is the official healthcare information sharing and analysis center, offering non-profit and for-profit healthcare stakeholders a community and forum for sharing cyber and physical security threat indicators, best practices and mitigation strategies. 
 
Josh Singletary, Chief Information Officer, National Health Information Sharing and Analysis Center (NH-ISAC)​
8:35 - 9:20 am
Presentation
Health IT's Role in Combating the Zika and Ebola Menaces: What Providers Can Take Away from Public Health Emergencies
 
The reality of today's healthcare environment: The biggest tool in fighting the outbreak of deadly superviruses like Zika and Ebola, is data.  
 
In a joint collaboration with the CDC, ONC is actively working to combat these public health emergencies by leveraging patient and population health trends data.  By building an infrastructure, leveraging ever-changing and diverse vocabulary sets, and bringing together automated functionality for these initiatives, ONC is assembling a data set to study, detect, and respond to emerging public health threats.  Yet, how is ONC addressing the challenges of interoperability, application of analytics tools, and perhaps most critically-- adapting these changes into the clinical workflow for partnering organizations?
 
In this engaging session, join James Daniel, Public Health Coordinator with the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC), as he outlines the lessons learned and best practices that CIOs and their teams should consider from this government program.  Hear about the interoperability practices, workflows, and strategic oversight that providers can leverage to improve their own population health initiatives, and participate in the war against the supervirus. 
 
Floyd Eisenberg, MD, MPH, Transitional Vocabulary Task Force, Co-Chair, Health IT Standards Committee, Member, Public Health Task Force, Member
9:20 - 10:05 am
Keynote Session
Beating the MSSP Expectations: How Innovation Care Partners' ACO Has Thrived
 
In an era where accountable care organizations (ACOs) participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) are struggling mightily to meet expectations, only a choice few have thrived-- and Innovation Care Partners has been at the center of this, through innovation.

Innovation Care Partners (formerly Scottsdale Health Partners) started their MSSP in 2014, their first performance year.  Since then, they've saved $9.5 million against a total of 18,000 Medicare beneficiaries in 2015.  For this 2015 performance year, Innovation Care Partners will receive a $4.5 million check.

How have they done it?  Find out first hand, as nationally renowned speaker and Chief Medical Officer of Innovation Care Partners, Dr. Jim Whitfill, takes you behind the scenes with just how this feat was accomplished through significant IT innovations.  Learn tools and strategies for pushing the envelope and positioning your organization for top-notch performance year.
 
Keynote Speaker:
Jim Whitfill, MD,
Chief Medical Officer
Innovation Care Partners
10:05 - 10:35 am
Morning Networking Break
Take this opportunity to mingle with your peers in an intimate setting to build relationships and establish future partnerships. Make sure to stop by the vendor booths to learn which solutions can provide better care and service in 2016 and beyond.
10:35 - 11:00 am
T2 Talk
Effectively Using Sociodemographic Data in Healthcare Analytics
 
Individual patient factors such as race, gender, age, income and employment along with a host of other sociodemographic indicators are known to play a large role in healthcare utilization and outcomes.  These factors are used in patient mix adjustment methods, risk profiling algorithms and population health strategies across the country.   While there is broad understanding at a public health level about how these influences impact communities and larger populations there is less thought or strategy around how to effectively employ this information at a health system or provider level.  In this presentation we will discuss the opportunities and challenges to use sociodemographic indicators more effectively in a health system’s analytic efforts. 
 
We will present both use cases and future directions for this critical dataspace.  From data model design to advanced analytic methods and interpretation there exists tremendous value inherent in these factors if organizations can effectively navigate the associated risks.  
 
Justin Pestrue, MA, Administrative Director of Quality Analytics, University of Michigan Health
11:00 - 11:25 am
T2 Talk
Automating Quality: The Advanced Metrics, Data, and Strategy Behind the Paperless ED
 
Automating healthcare delivery can be challenging in any setting, but especially in the Emergency Department. Having a single electronic medical record is critical to the care of patients at Western Reserve Hospital as over 50% of our inpatient admissions start in the emergency department.
 
Through technology, a dedicated clinical leadership team and a collaborative relationship with Information Technology & Services team, Western Reserve Hospital has been able to successfully implement all aspects of care delivery while maintaining and improving quality measures for our patients.
 
Attend this session and learn how people, process and technology contributed to improving the patient experience at Western Reserve Health System.
 
Pamela Banchy, RN-BC, PMP, CHCIO, CIO and VP of Clinical Informatics, Western Reserve Hospital - Western Reserve Health System
 
11:25 - 12:10 pm
Presentation
Building Integrated Clinical Dashboards Using FHIR
 
FHIR is a rapidly evolving, dynamic standard for access to data in electronic health records (EHR). FHIR is typically associated with specific value-added functionality that individual EHRs do not provide. However, it also offers the opportunity to connect data for the same patient from different sources. As such, it can be a valuable "on-demand" form of health information exchange, provided the right infrastructure exists.
 
Recently, the Regenstrief Institute piloted FHIR to connect data from the Indiana Network for Patient Care (INPC) with those in an Epic installation. In one use case, we retrieved medication lists for patients from both information sources and designed a patient-centric medication reconciliation application. Importantly, a pre-existing, INPC-specific universal patient identifier obviated the need to perform patient matching.
 
This use case highlights the potential for FHIR to aggregate information from different sources into a patient-centric electronic health record.
 
Titus K. Schleyer, DMD, Ph.D., Research Scientist, Clem McDonald Professor of Biomedical Informatics, Regenstrief Institute, Inc. , Indiana University School of Medicine
12:10 - 1:30 pm
Lunch Presentation
Making the Stars Align When Time Matters: Leveraging Actionable Data to Combat Sepsis
 
Sepsis is a potentially life-threatening complication that arises when the body’s response to infection injures its own tissues and organs.  Time matters when dealing with this medical emergency.  Sepsis requires urgent attention and rapid treatment for survival to occur.  Studies show that for every one hour of delay in treating sepsis, the patient’s risk of death increases by 8%.  A single 12-hour shift of a patient going untreated due to a lack of recognition increases a patient’s mortality risk by 96%.  However, early recognition and treatment have been shown to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with this dangerous condition.
 
Recognizing and diagnosing sepsis is challenging as there is no single sign or symptom of sepsis.  Sepsis is a combination of factors that often occur over a period of time.  Doctors diagnose sepsis using a number of physical findings as well as lab tests that check for signs of infection and organ damage.  Many of the signs and symptoms of sepsis are the same as in other conditions, making sepsis difficult to diagnose in its early stages.  Recognizing and diagnosing sepsis is unquestionably a serious matter.  In many cases, an early or expedited response from the clinical team can prevent severe sepsis and, subsequently, septic shock from occurring.
 
One of the most efficient and effective methods to assist physicians in identifying sepsis is through a data driven approach.  By aggregating and trending key data elements collected from a single patient over a period of hours, key clinical team members can act quickly and make informed decisions in the best interest of each patient to identify and treat sepsis.
 
In this engaging lunch presentation, hear from Sallie Arnett of Licking Memorial Health Systems, as she describes in depth how their clinical systems interact, monitor, and alert physicians to patients identified as a high-risk for sepsis.  Through collaboration and interdisciplinary efforts, Licking Memorial has improved outcomes and mortality rates at their hospital--stemming the tide and risk of sepsis across their organization. 
 
Sallie Arnett, Vice President, Information Technology, Chief Information Officer, Licking Memorial Health Systems
1:30 - 2:00 pm
T2 Talk
Imaging IT and Healthcare IT Interoperability
 
In this ever-changing world of healthcare IT, imaging has historically not been much of a factor.  For various reasons, imaging IT has grown separately, largely through the advent and growth of PACS (Picture Archive and Communications Systems), and driven by the digitization of various imaging modalities, such as CT, MRI, and Digital Radiography. 
 
As more imaging service lines throughout the service provider have gone digital, imaging IT has been forced to address commonality in the areas of image management and visualization.  Now, with the advent of Population Health Management and Value-Based Care, the importance of imaging is once again under scrutiny.  This discussion will focus on why imaging is important, why providers need to take it into account when strategizing healthcare IT strategies, and how imaging can become an integral part of healthcare IT.
 
Users will learn:
  • The driving forces behind PACS and imaging IT
  • The importance of emerging Enterprise imaging needs, and emerging technologies
  • The value of including imaging in Population Health Management-driven initiatives
  • Scenarios for implementation of imaging IT
  • The benefits of imaging IT and healthcare IT interoperability
Joseph Marion, Principal, Healthcare Integration Strategies, LLC
2:00 - 3:00 pm
Panel Session
The Analytics Behind Understanding Clinical Decision Making
 
When a physician makes a decision to deviate from a suggested care path for the ER patient presenting with multiple chronic conditions, and limited data available, what information pushes they to that decision?  When a clinician makes a decision against the recommended care plan, how effective are they, and what was the outcome?
 
Data analytics have now become the bedrock of the healthcare IT foundation, but applying analytics to generate true insight into care decision making trees, courses of action, and ultimately outcomes is a new a budding field that is ripe for extracting value.  In this panel session, we visit with a group of clinical experts as they discuss the role of analytics at the patient bedside, presenting data in insightful ways to clinical team members, and the ever-present goal of drilling down into patient outcomes.
 
Moderator: Mark Hagland, Editor-in-Chief, Healthcare Informatics
 
Greg Rosencrance, MD FACP, Chairman, Medicine Institute, Cleveland Clinic
David Kaelber, MD, PhD, MPH, Internist and Pediatrician, Chief Medical Informatics Officer and Vice-President of Health Informatics, MetroHealth System
Jim Whitfill, MD, Chief Medical Officer, Innovation Care Partners
3:00 pm
Closing Remarks