Friday, September 30, 2011

Bullitt County health board will appeal judge's ruling against smoking ban, with financial help from Clark County

The Bullitt County Board of Health will appeal a local judge's ruling that it lacks the authority to impose a smoking ban, and it will get some help from the board in Clark County, one of four where bans have been enacted by health boards instead of county fiscal courts.

The $5,000 will come not from tax dollars, but from "money received from the University of Kentucky for consulting services provided by Health Department Director Scott Lockard," Rachel Parsons of The Winchester Sun reports. UK "contracted with the Clark County Health Department so Lockard could work with the university and other local public health directors on smoke-free issues."

If the Bullitt County ruling is upheld, the decision could invalidate regulations enacted by health departments in Clark, Madison, Woodford and Hopkins counties. At the Court of Appeals, “If they uphold the lower court’s ruling, then we will have an injunction against our ruling until it goes to the Supreme Court, so we will suspend the enforcement of it until we get a final determination,” Lockard said. “We fully anticipate that the ruling will be in favor of the boards of health, because this is just a very narrow interpretation.” (Read more)

Thursday, September 29, 2011

What Do You Do When You Cannot Afford Health Insurance?

I felt you would enjoy reading the appended article below which is REALLY important. I like the phrase "Do-Over", but an "Alkaline Do-Over" is not only better, it is the way to go if you are seeking health, energy, youth, vitality and fitness. :-)

After viewing over 500,000 blood samples of over 40,000 people in over 72 countries I have concluded that certain lifestyle and dietary habits have the ability to turn genes "off and on". The living intelligent indestructibility of the microzymas that make up the human or animal gene can alter its state from a healthy gene state to an unhealthy gene state or reverse. This is determined by our own personal lifestyle and dietary choices that will determine the healthy or unhealthy state of the gene.

In the article below, "eating three quarters of a cup of broccoli four times a week turns on the GSTM1 gene. That gene makes protein that kills prostate, breast and colon cancer cells." Just imagine what a scoop of organic raw alkalizing Doc Broc Power Plant Greens can do which contains a 28 to 1 concentration of broccoli sprouts!

http://www.phmiracleliving.com/p-378-doc-brocs-power-plants.aspx

And just imagine..."Avoiding saturated fat in beef, pork, poultry, butter and cream also turns off aging genes." What a gang-buster! All you need to do to change the genes from an unhealthy state to a healthy state is change your dietary, nutritional and lifestyle choices to an alkaline lifestyle and diet. I call this lifestyle and diet the pH Miracle Lifestyle and Diet. And, you can learn more about the pH Miracle Lifestyle and Diet by going to our websites at:

www.phmiracleliving.com or
www.articleofhealth.blogspot.com

I also love the reference in the article about doing it all without insurance.

That's right! You can prevent and reverse the aging process and prevent or reverse so-called disease or dis-ease by changing to an alkaline lifestyle and diet. Save your money on expensive insurance premiums and put that money to something that is proactive and protective against sickness and dis-ease - good health and fitness. Now you have a real insurance plan.

I canceled our family health insurance plan over 30 years ago. Why? Because we NEVER get sick on the alkalizing pH Miracle Diet! Just think of the thousands of dollars that I have saved! But more important just think of the pain and suffering our family has prevented and avoided. This is why I have said to millions of people around the world that we need more education NOT more medication.

ANOTHER THOUGHT.... occasionally, I have a client who seems to be doing "everything" right, yet her/his health condition is still getting worse. Why? These particular people just don't like broccoli and think "pH Balancing" will work without eating the broccoli if they just do the alkalizing Young pHorever pHour Salts. They are actively or even subconsciously avoiding broccoli. The broccoli sprouts is the key component to my anti-aging and anti-cancerous protocols. I just happen to have it in just about every Young pHorever/pH Miracle product that I have developed. The Young pHorever Doc Broc Power Plant Green Powder is loaded with broccoli sprouts and should be taken several times a day in water or mixed into foods. As Doc Broc would say, "You can't do it without ME!" Doc Broc is the Superhero of my anti-aging and anti-cancerous protocols!

In addition, of course, to "pHyllis", the pH nag! She would not let you go a day without drinking your Doc Broc Power Plant Green drink. She recommends you drink at least 4 liters of Doc Broc Power Plant Greens everyday. The amount of Doc Broc Power Plant Greens you should drink is based upon a man or woman who weighs 154 pounds or 70 kilos.

To order your Young pHorever Doc Broc Power Plant Green Powder packed with broccoli sprouts at a 28 to 1 concentration go to:

http://www.phmiracleliving.com/p-378-doc-brocs-power-plants.aspx

-----------------Referenced Article---------------------

Reported July 9, 2009

Life is a Do-Over

CLEVELAND (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Our leading killer remains what it has been every year since 1900: heart disease. It kills nearly 650,000 each year. We can only blame ourselves. Our own bad habits such as smoking, no exercise and fat-ridden diets are the main causes of heart disease. But did you know you can reverse the damage that's been done?

Pattiy Hill was a yo-yo dieter who rarely exercised. She was diagnosed with diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and joint problems. Hill was 51 years old and fading fast.

"I had been fat for so long," Hill told Ivanhoe. "I wanted to live, and I knew fat people don't grow old."

At 280 pounds, Hill wanted a do-over.

"We get a do-over," Michael Roizen, M.D., Chief Wellness Officer at the Cleveland Clinic, told Ivanhoe. "If you change your habits now, within three years, it's like you only had the healthy habit."

Put down that cigarette. In five years, a smoker's lungs can heal.

"If you quit before age 35 and before 20 pack years, which is one pack a day for 20 years, you get all of it back," Dr. Roizen explained. "The longer you wait to quit, and the more you smoke, the less you get back, but even at age 60, you get some of it back."

You can also change the way your genes function. "Just changing your habits changes whether your genes are on or off," Dr. Roizen said.

Eating three quarters of a cup of broccoli four times a week turns on the GSTM1 gene. That gene makes a protein that kills prostate, breast and colon cancer cells.

"You get to turn on a gene that helps you kill those cancers with something as simple as having broccoli," Dr. Roizen said.

About 12 walnut halves a week doubles the amount of Omega-three that most of us have.

"It decreases the risk of stroke or heart attack by 62 percent," Dr. Roizen said.

Avoiding saturated fat in beef, pork, poultry, butter and cream also turns off aging genes.

Diet and exercise are other ways to take the years off.

Hill lost 136 pounds the old-fashioned way. In 13 months, she cut her body fat from 60 percent to 20 percent and went from a size 24 to a slender size four.

"I looked at it as a way to help myself rather than depriving myself," Hill explained.

Hill is now free of diabetes. Her high blood pressure and high cholesterol are gone along with her joint pain.

"It's turned my life around 100 percent," Hill said. "I feel so healthy now, and I am so healthy now."

So keep Hill in mind when you do-over, and be sure to do it right.

If you're using money or insurance as an excuse, think again. Hill lost all her weight while she was uninsured. The only money she spent was on a gym membership. The savings on her medications she used to take has more than paid for that.

Reference: http://www.ivanhoe.com/channels/p_channelstory.cfm?storyid=21678

Arizona Health Information Network Chooses OptumInsight (United HealthCare Company) for Their HIE Exchange–Subsidiary Watch

It seems everywhere you turn today with Health IT investments there’s a chunk of changed headed toward United.  The company was an acquisition made by the large behemoth in August of 2010.  If they can’t buy the exchange I guess the next best thing here is to get your subsidiary in action.  We heard that a few days ago with Blue Cross buying an exchange.  In addition to the medical records that Ingenix (OptumInsight) has owned and sold for years, the acquisition of Axolotl gives them a second EHR to sell along with HIE capabilities. 

Ingenix Acquires Health Information Exchange Services/EHR Provider Axolotl-United Health Group Behemoth Continues to Grow–Subsidiary Watch

Axolotl (A Subsidiary of Ingenix) Creates Reporting and Analytics Solution for Health Information Exchanges–Algorithms for HIE–Business Intelligence -Subsidiary Watch

Optum Insight was formerly known as Ingenix and last year completed the settlement with the AMA for the 15 year lawsuit whereby their analytics underpaid doctors and patients for out of network services and other insurers are still settling various lawsuits as they all licensed the data base which is now gone and been replaced with the actions of Andrew Cuomo.  BD 

AMA Has Online Assistance and Forms For Filing Claims For UnitedHealthCare/Ingenix

The Health Information Network of Arizona (HINAz) and OptumInsight are teaming up to create a state-wide health information exchange (HIE).

HINAz will implement a HIE platform from OptumInsight, formerly Axolotl Corp., to allow the sharing and exchange of clinical data from all available sources across the state, officials from the two organizations said.

HINAz is an Arizona not-for-profit organization that grew out of the work of Southern Arizona Health Information Exchange and Arizona Medical Information Exchange. The two entities joined together to build a more comprehensive HIE for Arizona.

http://gcn.com/articles/2011/09/28/arizona-health-information-exchange.aspx

Bad Science and Bad Analytics That Misleads–TED Video Takes on Advertising on Steroids and Danger of Mis-Matched Analytics And Distortion of Clinical Trials (Video)

This is great and goes along with some of my recent posts with analytics on steroids for marketing only and also makes a point about what gets put in journals today too.   Dr. Ben Goldacre, talks fast so listen up carefully, but he gets it.  Fish Oil pills is one he takes on as well as coffee and cancer, yes it does and no it doesn’t.  On the pills they calculate and project how the children would have done without the pills..bunk.  image

I am so glad this is finally getting attention so consumers may start asking questions if posed with something you know is weird and yet it persists in the papers every day, day in and day out!  You have to laugh at some of this for goodness sakes.  Now if you want to go the next step and see how you can be deceived, read the post below and mathematical deception is the next step when steroid marketing kicks in.  Even the real scientists hate this stuff and it adds confusing for advocacy groups to untangle.  image

“Numbers Don’t Lie, But People Do”–Radio Interview from Charles Siefe–Journalists Take Note, He Addresses How Marketing And Bogus Statistics Are Sources of Problems That Mislead the Public & Government

How all this really gets a stronghold in society today is the use of math which is what it considered to be the most accurate way to prove truth, well it was until modern day algorithms kicked in, where writing the unreadable starts to be an issue.  So what is WellPoint going to load up in Watson…that needs scrutiny to work.  Again worth a mention I had to laugh when one of our lawmakers asked Google about their “secret sauce”..come on folks digital literate people call those algorithms:)









We know our beliefs do this, look at what politicians do with this and he talks about pharma distorting reports as well with stacking up the bad stuff so the good stuff looks better or the negative information goes missing in action.  He says he’s a nerdy doctor and does a lot of reading.  One drug he uses an example that 76% of the data was withheld from the doctors.  Anti-depressant data drug information has been withheld. 

Do you wonder why doctors get upset when they are graded on the drugs they prescribe?  It’s gets hard when you have Quants and health insurance companies breathing down their backs all the time doesn’t it? 

One more comment, add on this insanity with a credit agency trying to tell doctors that they have the “secret sauce” to determine if patients will take their meds and they blatantly sell this to the pharma companies doing clinical trials and insurance companies.  image

FICO Analytics Press Release Marketing Credit Scoring Algorithms to Predict Medication Adherence–Update (Opinion)

Have you been mathematically deceived of late?  It’s a good question to think about and that’s why I write such articles like this, to open eyes and hopefully get people to think before the algorithms for profits completely take over, don’t believe all the stats you see out there today and your social networks are running a gambit trying to also convince you as such with flawed profiles, etc. they collect with data scraping and it just aint so all the time.  Algorithms are only as good at the data it sits on top of.  It’s interesting to crunch numbers and get stats and nothing wrong with that but when flawed data as such is brought down to the individual level to risk asses and judge, the numbers are not right.  Be aware as this is part of the insane world of algorithms for profit distorting the good science we have out there.  BD

http://www.ted.com/talks/ben_goldacre_battling_bad_science.html

How To Prevent, Halt or Reverse Diabetes Type II and Type I

Warning: Dangerous Diabetes Drugs
Don't Work
How to Prevent, Halt or Reverse Diabetes with Methods
That Are Natural, Easy ... and Virtually Free

Diabetes Drugs Don't Work D iabetes is the number-one lifestyle disease of modern times, and tens of millions of Americans are being handed prescriptions for anti-diabetic drugs thatdon't work. A large-scale study at Duke University School of Medicine and published in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that despite serious risks and dangerous side effects, diabetes drugs offer few benefits and simply don't live up to their claims

Duke researchers found that the combination of the blood-pressure drug Diovan (valsartan) and the anti-diabetes drug Starlix (nateglinide) failed to reduce risk of heart attack at all and that Diovan was only slightly successful in slowing -- but not necessarily preventing -- development of type 2 diabetes.

Furthermore, practically all anti-diabetic drugs result in weight gain and eventual total dependency upon insulin injections, according to researchers Krentz, Nichols, and Gomez-Caminero in 2 recent articles published in Current Medical Research Opinion and Diabetes Obesity Metabolism.

Lead researcher Robert Califf of the Duke study said, "This is a sobering confirmation of the need to continue to focus on lifestyle improvements."

Unfortunately, the medical mainstream has failed miserably to help diabetic patients reverse their diabetes naturally. This failure is inexcusable considering that anyone can reverse type 2 diabetes and stop type 1 diabetes in its tracks in less than 4 weeks with the right plan -- a plan that....

  • Gets your blood sugar under control in 4 weeks
  • Prevent or reverse type 1 diabetes
  • Prevent or reverse type 2 diabetes
  • Eliminates dependence on diabetes drugs
  • Is so inexpensive that it's almost free
  • Is simple and easy to use
  • Has already helped clients and former diabetics all over the world
  • Prevent and/or reverse diabetes, pre-diabetes, syndrome X, and blood sugar woes

Unfortunately, very few diabetics know what actually does work. And that's because most doctors simply lack the necessary training and knowledge to steer their patients in the right direction.

Too many doctors don't even discuss nutrition with their patients, and those who do often make matters worse by advising overly restrictive diets orunrealistic amounts of exercise. A recent paper published by the Society for Biomedical Diabetes Research says, "Diabetic patients encounter . . . confusing and contradictory advice from a variety of sources."

As a result, diabetic patients "exhibit restrictive eating behaviors, they express feelings of dietary deprivation, and rigid dietary control is perceived as the only way to a proper diet and weight management. Binge eating, [excessive] restraint, and body dissatisfaction frequently occur among these patients."

So if you've tried and failed to manage your diabetes naturally, it's not your fault! Doctors and the media do more to confuse than to clarify, and meanwhile the diabetes freight train leaves a staggering path of heartbreaking consequences in its path, such as the following:

  • Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney failure, nontraumatic lower-limb amputations, and new cases of blindness among adults in the United States.
  • Diabetes is a major cause of heart disease and stroke.
  • Diabetes is the 7th leading cause of death in the United States.
  • A new report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that at the rate things are going, as many as 1 in 3 U.S. adults will have diabetes by 2050.

"These are alarming numbers that show how critical it is to change the course of type 2 diabetes," said Ann Albright, Ph.D., director of the CDC's Division of Diabetes Translation. "Successful programs to improve lifestyle choices on healthy eating and physical activity must be made more widelyavailable, because the stakes are too high and the personal toll too devastating to fail."

The key phrase here is successful programs. To succeed you need to know exactly how to eat the alkaline and energizing foods you love -- and feel satisfied, while still banishing the symptoms of diabetes. And you need to know about inexpensive alkalizing supplements that help you slash your blood sugar effortlessly, such as . . .

==> The simple alkalizing minerals that lower diabetes risk. Researchers at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill conducted a 20-year study of 4,497 people and found that the risk of diabetes was 47% lower among participants with the highest intake of this mineral than among those with the lowest.

==> A well-loved spice that slashes blood sugar. Test subjects took as little as 1/4 teaspoon of this common spice daily, and nearly all subjects with diabetes showed substantial improvement. And the spice and diabetes were clearly connected because when the spice was no longer consumed, volunteers' blood sugar levels started to rise again.

Obviously, a spice and a mineral alone aren't going to single-handedly reverse your diabetes permanently, but such powerful alkalizing supplements combined with the right effective, easy, and inexpensive natural healing methods can put you on your way to ending diabetes. No drug in the world can do that, no matter what Big Pharma promises. In fact, drugs are often worse than ineffective -- they can even make your life miserable or even be more risky than diabetes itself.

Consider the drug Avandia, once the most popular diabetes drug in the world, which was found in 2008 to dramatically increase risk of heart attacksand death. It took the FDA until last month to finally pull Avandia from the U.S. market.

Another popular diabetes drug, Actos, has its own array of ugly side effects, including average weight gain of nearly 9 pounds and a higher risk of dangerous and possibly deadly fluid buildups. Furthermore, Actos's heart risks may be almost as bad as Avandia's, and some researchers have linked this drug to bladder cancer.

A handful of doctors are getting behind the push to educate patients about what really works to cure diabetes. Dr. Scott Saunders. M.D., says natural approaches are the key. "Studying natural medicine is power," he says, explaining that you can absolutely reverse your diabetes yourself with simple steps that ...


Are fast, painless, safe, and natural

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Are safe for type 1 & type 2 diabetes

Will improve your overall health and immune system

If you suffer from diabetes or pre-diabetes, you cannot afford to ignore the truth about how to stop this dangerous degenerative disease. Diabetes can kill you ... if you let it.

But the good news is you don't have to let that happen. And you don't have to fear blindness, heart disease, chronic wounds that won't heal, or even amputation. And you definitely don't have to rely on expensive, dangerous drugs that don't work! You can prevent and/or reverse your diabetes in less than a month when you watch a free, informative video, and see how to fix the real cause of your diabetes ... using natural, safe, and easy methods that are virtually free.

Now you can empower yourself with cutting edge information on healing yourself or your loved ones of diabetes. Watch these free videos and learn to prevent, halt or reverse your diabetes.

1) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LFFQawEWS4

2) http://www.youtube.com/user/pHMiracleCenter#p/u/36/7ZCCyO1jjTg

3) http://www.youtube.com/user/pHMiracleCenter#p/u/22/2sr4iDViRqU

4) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TeMrfmx5p6E&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PLDE8C1DBCC186CF47

5) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-EmCBVJXow

SEC Sues Quant–Undisclosed Error in Trading Algorithm- Miscalculating “Risk”-Healthcare Software Evaluates This Factor Too

How often do we hear “risk” assessment in healthcare?  If you are in the payable and IT side of it, all the time.  It comes back again to the algorithms.  In Health IT this is why we have the certification processes for medical records, but when it comes to the payment side and risk management done by insurance companies, there’s not checking and balancing as we are at the mercy of their algorithms for risk assessment.  With steroid marketing today in healthcare, we have some situations too where such algorithms are overstated and oversold, but nobody does anything sadly.  It’s just the same old factor of fleecing those who see numbers and believe that all numbers and reports they see are accurate, not so.  Here’s a good post to read and listen to as the professor describes how math is and can be used to deceive. 

“Numbers Don’t Lie, But People Do”–Radio Interview from Charles Siefe–Journalists Take Note, He Addresses How Marketing And Bogus Statistics Are Sources of Problems That Mislead the Public & Government

When the dollar amounts are high to find code that can make big bucks, code gets written and we can track that back to AIG, it was all over the news.  It’s kind of scary but even our government folks at times speak at meeting and conventions and relay the same thing to attendees, write code and get rich, which is kind of weird for government executives in my opinion but I guess they too are maybe mixed up in all the steroid marketing that is going on today too.  We also get the other side to where they want developers to work for almost nothing too, so again are you confused with government sales pitches today like me? 

Why Is Almost Everyone In Healthcare Marketing Their “Ass” Off

What are they doing?  In the contest below when the dollars rewards are so high I can’t help but think if someone is in a spot to win $3 million they want their algorithms to apply and will go to great lengths to make a case, even if they are not fulfilling 100% accuracy and relativity, they want the bucks. 

So What’s Going on Over at the Heritage Health Prize Competition to Predict Who Ends Up Being Re-Admitted to the Hospital–A Lot of Mathematical Algorithms For One…

Granted there are more accurate assessments than not, but when it comes to making a buck, coders will skew and that’s some of the problem areas today out there as the reach extends to correlate data that in essence is really not related.  This guy on Wall Street knew back in 2009 that strange results were kicking out and it did not assess risk for the clients, they lost money.  Same stuff can go wild in healthcare calculations too as insurers are all profit oriented. 

Another great article came out about marketing algorithms and it’s worth a read as well as the article states the algorithms are only as good as the data it sits on top of and he speaks of transparency, something we are not seeing enough of with some of the code written today.  He states that most of the marketing algorithms are skewed and flawed today for that exact reason, flawed data.  People want real value and of course this is forth standing in healthcare too and not “magic” formulas that disappoint and kick out flawed queries.  We have a credit agency selling that pretty much here with over extending their claims as taking meds and credit ratings may be interesting numbers to crunch but they are not grounds to determine if someone is going to take their prescriptions. 

FICO Analytics Press Release Marketing Credit Scoring Algorithms to Predict Medication Adherence–Update (Opinion)

Even the Dow Jones has done this to a degree with what they call transparency but it’s not really.  We all know how data input over the years with medical claims is riddled with flaws, people make errors with data input or doctors had bad billers, and there’s a number of reasons for this but it is what it is. The only thing I can get out of this wanting to put Medicare claim data out there is the desire to pump up a company to make a ton of money doing a ton of work for a lot of expense to try to correct all the data before showing it to the public.  Shoot consumers don’t have enough time right now as it is and this is a waste and will not accomplish much at all; however law enforcement should and does have access to detect fraud and that’s where the information should rest and be available. 

Dow Jones Files Lawsuit Against HHS To Overturn Ruling To Keep Medicare Physician Compensation Confidential In the False Name of Transparency-Distraction is More Like It

Just like the SEC found this Quant having flawed algorithms, DOJ and others are the ones to pursue this with analytics that they now have available with medical fraud.  It’s people who have never experienced medical billing and have seen the other side that get these hot shot ideas and kind of mis use transparency as their grounds for frivolous lawsuits and desires as such.  The big for profit folks out there with the rating sites don’t get it right either as all the hospital and MD rating sites have flawed data, more on that below and it’s been going on for years.  It’s find to maintain a listing and so forth, but again we have marketing over extended and over sold to the consumers. 

HealthGrades And Other MD Rating and Referral Sites List “Dead Doctors” on Their MD Information Pages And Even Include the Insurance Plans the “Dead Doctors” Honor

We are surrounded by it and here’s on case below to where WellPoint put some algos online so you could figure out how to fix yourself.  It is any wonder consumers are not biting at the bit for all of this? 

WellPoint Puts More Algorithms Online So You Can Go Fix Yourself and Understand What a Grandfather Is

Below is a good example on making sure medical record software calculates accurately but again the payable side runs hog wild with what ever a new business model cooks up. 

HHS Issues Final Rule for Health Insurers To Justify Increases–Need to Certify Insurance Algorithms For Calculation Just Like We Certify Electronic Record Algorithms

Sometimes those models get caught too with the consulting algorithms folks that insurers contract with too.  There’s more below at the links for some examples of business model algorithms that patients and doctors live with every day but nobody asks very many questions. 

Med Solutions and Blue Cross Caught On the Stress Test Denial Algorithm (video)
WellPoint Creates Reimbursement Algorithm to Cut Down Hospital Annual Payment Increases and Reward Only Those Who “Score” Well–Analytics on Steroids
SAS® Business Analytics – Algorithms Used by Blue Cross Blue Shield For Business Intelligence, Integration, and Analytics

So again, just like this Quant on Wall Street knew of his flawed algorithms, how many are out there floating around in healthcare?  It’s a good question to ask when few are actually ever held accountable and the marketing on steroids continues to flourish.  I like data and the intelligence it brings for better care, but there’s always that other side that seems to have little or no accountability and this is scary in healthcare as we are dealing with people’s lives.  Worth a mention too is the MIB that does data mining and collects claim information from insurers along with other data.  There are stories on the web where consumers spend years trying to fix erroneous data that is used to “risk” assess them that they had in involvement with the input, and MIB has turned into marketing too in the last few years with their analytic software, so consumers just can’t win sometimes with trying to correct he flawed data in their files.  The link below has a video of a woman and her battle.  You know I kind of wonder with all the analytics out there and being use to risk assess patients, why are they not doing any better on fraud prevention? 

The MIB – Health Insurance Bureau Business Intelligence Mining May Go Beyond Just Healthcare Information

When you stop and think of how complicated code is today, why do huge companies like Microsoft put out betas?  They do it to find flaws and issues they missed and that’s just the way it is with complexities today and I’m glad they do it and wish more would think in that direction as it’s all of us working together for accuracy and truth in numbers.  It still comes down to humans to use data wisely to make the best informed decisions possible and when the numbers get skewed and individuals believe that all the math presented to them is 100% accurate we have problems and people can get denied care and services in healthcare.  A while back all you have to do is look at the Arizona Governor who didn’t know how to use such formulas and could not find money in the budget to cover transplants, and it was there, others found it, but digital illiterate politicians are like walking time bombs out there for the rest of us as their mis informed decisions can impact all of us.  BD

Barr M. Rosenberg agreed to settle the charges and will pay the SEC $2.5 million for purposely hiding major errors in the computer code of Axa Rosenberg LLC's quantitative investment model.

The SEC's lawsuit says that Rosenberg detected the errors in 2009, but kept them quiet, and instructed other members at his company to do the same.

Investors in the fund lost $217 million because of the error in his algo.

The material error in the model's computer code disabled one of its key components for managing risk and affected the model's ability to perform as expected. Clients raised concerns about this underperformance, and Rosenberg knew about and discussed these concerns with others at AXA Rosenberg...

The Model consisted of three components: the Alpha Model, Risk Model, and Optimizer. The Alpha Model evaluates public companies based on their earnings and valuation. The Risk Model identifies risk on two primary bases – specific stock risk and common factor risks. Common factor risks include, among other things: (i) specific industry risks, which are risks associated with certain industries (such as oil, automobiles, or airlines); (ii) country risks, which are risks associated with particular countries; and (iii) stock fundamental risks, which capture price to earnings ratios and similar metrics. The Optimizer takes the output from the Alpha and Risk Models, balances them against each other, and recommends an optimal portfolio for the client based on a benchmark chosen by the client, such as the S&P 500.

Then in 2007, Rosenberg commissioned a new model of the risk model. Computer programmers finished designing the program in 2009, and noticed that it was spitting out weird ("unexpected") results.

Some Risk Model components sent information to the Optimizer in decimals while other components reported information in percentages; therefore the Optimizer had to convert the decimal information to
percentages in order to effectively consider all the information on an equal footing. Because proper scaling did not occur, certain decimal information was not converted to percentages and the Optimizer did not give the intended weight to common factor risks.

http://www.businessinsider.com/quant-charged-with-hiding-flaws-in-his-algo-from-investors-2011-9

Now is the time to get flu vaccine, state health officials warn

State public health officials are encouraging Kentuckians to be vaccinated for flu now to reduce the spread of the illness. Steve Davis, M.D., acting commissioner of the Department for Public Health, said in a news release, “Getting the flu vaccine each year is the best way to protect against the flu’s spread and severity.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends flu vaccine for anyone older than 6 months. People who should especially receive the flu vaccine, because they may be at higher risk for complications or negative consequences, include:
• Children age 6 months to 19 years;
• Pregnant women;
• People 50 years old or older;
• People of any age with chronic health problems;
• People who live in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities;
• Health care workers;
• Caregivers of or people who live with a person at high risk for complications from the flu; and
• Out-of-home caregivers of or people who live with children less than 6 months old.

Healthy, non-pregnant people age 2-49 years can get either the flu shot or the nasal vaccine spray. Children younger than 9 who are being vaccinated against flu for the first time should receive a second dose four or more weeks after their first vaccination.

Flu is a very contagious disease caused by a virus. About 23,000 Americans die from seasonal flu and its complications in an average year, but actual numbers vary from year to year.

In addition to the flu vaccine, officials encourage all adults 65 or older and others in high-risk groups to ask their health care provider about the pneumococcal vaccine. This vaccine can help prevent a type of pneumonia, one of the flu’s most serious and potentially deadly complications.

For more information on influenza or the availability of flu vaccine, please contact your local health department or visit www.healthalerts.ky.gov.

New survey shows dramatic increase in employer-sponsored health insurance rates

The average cost of employer-sponsored health insurance has increased 9 percent for family coverage and 8 percent for individual coverage since last year, a new study by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Education Trust shows. "Both increases are the largest since 2005," Tony Pugh of McClatchy Newspapers writes, surpassing the national 2 percent increase in wages and 3.2 percent increase in inflation.

Since 2001, family coverage premiums have escalated 113 percent while workers' wages have only risen 34 percent and inflation – 27 percent, Pugh reports. Researchers are unclear if the increase in premiums is temporary or whether higher increases will continue. "We really don't know, and we won't know until next year," Drew Altman, president and CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation told Pugh.

Employers pay on average about 72 percent toward family coverage and 82 percent for single coverage, Pugh reports, leaving workers paying 28 percent for family and 18 percent for single coverage. Of those surveyed, about 31 percent of covered workers were in high-deductible plans, a 10 percent increase from 2006.

Increasing costs in medical care is "the main culprit behind the rate increases," Karen Ignagni, president of America's Health Insurance Plans told Pugh. "Insurers' expectation of stronger economic recovery" and insurers' fears of increased costs from the 2010 Affordable Care Act may be driving higher premiums, Pugh reports.

Despite insurers' fears, an analysis by Kaiser and the federal government suggest that the 2010 Affordable Care Act accounts for only 1 to 2 percentage points of the increase. Only two measures, coverage of adult children to age 26 and no patient cost-sharing coverage on certain preventive medical services, were implemented thus far with the remaining provisions taking effect in 2014, Pugh reports. This month, insurers will be required to publicly disclose information about rate increases of 10 percent or more for review by state or federal officials to determine if the increase is warranted. (Read more)

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Oracle Announces Insurance Exchange Platform - Purchasing Health Insurance Platform–Available for State Governments

Not too long ago Microsoft announced their platform availability for state governments as well.  The Oracle suite will connect with Siebel for CRM imagecapabilities.  With both big company offerings this leaves a couple options besides have to buddy with an insurance company offering.  Actually this is better I think with actual technology companies as it will defer any conflicts of interest and keep things cleaner as subsidiaries with insurers today have all types of business models out there and with technology provided by companies who don’t sell insurance I think it’s a cleaner operation for sure. 

In other Oracle news, they have opened a a Translational Research Center Platform to support transitioning to personalized medicine.  The full press release can be read here. Oracle offers platform as a service for the enterprise in private clouds. 

T”o ensure that the new platform meets the needs of health sciences organizations, Oracle worked closely with numerous development partners, including Merck, Roche, Erasmus University Medical Center, Inova Health System, Moffitt Cancer Center, and Oregon Health &Science University (OHSU) Knight Cancer Institute. The solution has been benchmarked on millions of patient records demonstrating scalability for large-scale applications.”

“Oracle Health Sciences Translational Research Center enables pharmaceutical and biotech companies, contract research organizations,as well as academic research organizations to normalize, aggregate andanalyze data from numerous internal and external sources to identifynew predictive biomarkers, best practices for diagnosis and treatment and more effective and safe therapies for individuals.”

image

In addition Larry Ellison received some nice recognition this week over at the friends of the NIH.  If you go to the link below, see his classic explanation of “this is a box” video.  BD 

Larry Ellison Announced As Distinguished Medical Informatics Awardee for His Contributions to Health IT and the Ellison Foundation From the Friends of the National Library of Medicine (NIH)

Oracle has announced a health insurance exchange (HIX) platform that aligns several of its existing applications to allow states to create a marketplace for purchasing health insurance.

Under the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), states must establish health insurance exchanges by 2014.

"The impending rollout of health insurance exchanges will require state governments to establish state-regulated and standardized health care plans, from which individuals may purchase health insurance that is eligible for federal subsidies," Mark Johnson, senior vice president for Oracle's public sector, said in a statement.

Oracle designed the platform to support multiple programs to allow states to deploy HIXs quickly and cost-efficiently, the company reports. Oracle will phase in additional applications as legislation changes dictate.

"To help address the challenges state governments will face related to these requirements, Oracle offers a robust solution which consists of proven technologies that are architected to work together and include the necessary capabilities needed to deliver a successful program," Johnson said.

The foundation of the HIX platform includes Fusion Middleware, particularly the Oracle SOA Suite. Fusion is a leading application infrastructure platform.

Siebel customer relationship applications provide states with the infrastructure to operate multichannel customer service and include analytics tools for evaluating calls. Siebel also handles case management for the exchange, Curry said.

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Health-Care-IT/Oracle-Platform-Helps-States-Support-Health-Insurance-Exchanges-689376/

Blue Cross and AllScripts Going to Pick Up the Tab for Doctors Electronic Medical Records In North Carolina

This is interesting as Blue Cross doesn’t have a medical record program and I have said in the past the next move will be insurers buying up the EHR folks.  NCPath is imagethe name of the program and 85% of the tab will be picked up, except the free clinics will not have to pay at all.  So it sounds like with the certified records system in place they will all be able to attest for stimulus money too.  Right on websites it seems like we used to see more about better patient outcomes but like most on healthcare anymore, well you can see the image below to where profitability is the focus. 

image

Some carriers, such as United have sold their medical records programs for a number of years under the Optima name, formerly known as Ingenix so it makes one wonder how long and what companies the insurers will be buying next. We have already seen a big rush in this area with both United and Aetna in the last couple years with load of acquisitions.  In imaging company purchased by a United subsidiary put the VA right into business with United, Picis was the company purchased.  Everywhere you turn today with Health IT, it’s not hard to find some dollars going right to United’s pockets today. 

VA Awards Contract to Picis, Subsidiary of Ingenix for Anesthesia Record Keeping Software

Presently Blue Cross in California bought a huge Medicare HMO called CareMore and United is doing the same so when you look at the race to consume and build monopolies, the health insurance business sure looks that way as the daily chains of subsidiaries gets longer and more complex all the time, so I just wonder if Blue Cross going to buy an EHR company soon?  If you follow the partnerships they sometimes offer some clues in that area, not all the time, but it certainly is becoming much more frequent as data systems get connected, as it’s all about the data.  Let’s see by the time this gets rolling I might guess Blue Cross might be out there shopping around for an HIE company or two so that could also be tied into the entire configuration too.  Wellpoint just bought a private insurance company exchange a couple weeks ago from their own Blue Cross VC company, Sandbox. 

WellPoint & Partners Buy Bloom Private Health Insurance Exchange From Their Own Venture Capital Company (Sandbox) –Subsidiary Watch

As a side note I have not been able to figure out why the government REC center in Orange County California never got off the ground and the fact that the state Medicaid contractor, Cal-Optima got the contract might have something to do with it as they are buried but I still do wonder where the $7 million in grants went?  If insurers are coming in to provide medical records, and the REC offices were only supposed to be temporary, maybe that’s the deal coming in the OC and why the REC office never got off the ground, but still who got the $7 million?  BD 

Chapel Hill, N.C. — North Carolina's largest health insurer is part of a $23 million effort to get hundreds of physicians statewide to produce patient records electronically instead of using paper files.

Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina and Chicago-based Allscripts, which creates and markets electronic health records, announced a partnership Wednesday to offer software, training and support to more than 750 physicians, including those who work in 39 free clinics across the state.

"It's meaningful when a family receives vital, faster, better care because vital records are available when doctors need them most wherever a patient might be," Blue Cross President and Chief Executive Brad Wilson said.

Blue Cross is investing $15 million and Allscripts is kicking in $8 million for the initiative.

Under the federal health care reform law, the government is offering subsidies of up to $44,000 over several years to physician practices that convert to electronic medical records.

http://www.wral.com/lifestyles/healthteam/story/10194566/

FDA Approval Given for Face Mask Designed for Children and Awards Pediatric R and D Device Grants

The mask is to be used in hospitals to reduce the spread of airborne bacteria and imageviruses and is designed for ages 5 to 12.  In other FDA pediatric news the agency has given out grants for Orphan Product Development.  We are starting to hear a lot about orphan diseases and the need for more research and many Children’s hospitals are a deep dive into it with R and D efforts.  The full story can be read here.  BD

WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared a face mask designed for children that is made by Kimberly-Clark Corp. (KMB), the agency announced Wednesday.

The FDA said the mask is the first pediatric single-use mask meant for use in hospitals and health care facilities to help reduce the spread of airborne respiratory tract bacteria and viruses.

The mask is designed to fit children ages 5 years to 12 years, and is designed with material to accommodate children, who do not breathe as forcefully as adults

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20110928-709134.html

MelaFind Device Finally Given FDA Approval For Detecting Melanoma –It Took 7 Years

This has been a long haul for Melafind as back in November of 2010 the FDA panel imageapproved the device, and here we are in September of 2011 with now jut getting approval.  Below is a video from the Wall Street Journal that depicts some of the history on Melafind. 

New Melanoma Identification Device Gets FDA Panel Approval–Questions About How Human Intervention Works with Melafind Algorithm Arise From Discussion

In August 27, 2009 I reported that the device company was waiting approval so here with even my blog you have a bit of history. 

MelaFind Medical Device for Detecting Melanoma Skin Cancer Awaiting FDA Decision

We all know early detection with melanoma is key.  The FDA letter of approval from the FDA indicates that labeling and use is still being worked on before the product is out on the market, but it’s coming.  The device recently received the European CE mark of approval as well.  BD 

IRVINGTON, NY, Sep 26, 2011 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- MELA Sciences MELA -0.81% today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued an Approvable Letter for the MelaFind(R) Pre-Market Approval (PMA) application. The company intends to work with the agency to finalize the physician and patient labeling, package insert, user's guide, training program and clinical imageprotocol for a post-approval study in order to obtain final approval.

"The FDA's Approvable Letter for MelaFind represents a monumental milestone for MELA Sciences and the millions of Americans who are at risk of developing melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer," said Joseph V. Gulfo, MD, President and CEO, MELA Sciences. "The company has worked tirelessly to develop an objective tool to help dermatologists detect melanoma at its earliest, most curable stages. Although melanoma is virtually 100% curable if detected at its earliest stage, one American dies from the disease every hour. We firmly believe that MelaFind has the potential to lower those tragic numbers. We are extremely pleased with the FDA's decision and will work diligently to answer all open questions and finalize the post-market study protocol in the coming weeks."

The Approvable Letter from the FDA comes on the heels of the CE Mark for MelaFind issued earlier this month. CE Mark approval allows MelaFind to be sold across the 27 nations of the European Union.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/mela-sciences-receives-approvable-letter-from-fda-for-melafindr-2011-09-26

Caregivers of wounded soldiers find their lives are also changed; getting compensation

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan disproportionately affect rural areas, which provide more than the average number of recruits. The soldiers who make it home alive come back changed, with traumatic brain damage, post-traumatic stress syndrome or other injuries that require full-time care. Mostly wives and older parents are left bearing the burden.

Catrin Einhorn of The New York Times reports that many caregivers have to quit their jobs and are forced to spend their savings and retirement funds to pay for treatment. A growing number of caregivers suffer from anxiety, depression and exhaustion as a result of their new routines. Rosie Babin, 51-year-old mother of a severely wounded 22-year-old son, was managing an accounting office before her son's injury. Though she's happy to have her son home alive, she now has to take blood-pressure medicine and sleeping pills. "I felt like I went from this high-energy, force-to-be-reckoned-with businesswoman to a casualty of war," Babin told Einhorn. "And I was working furiously at not feeling like a victim of war."

According to research by Joan Griffin, a research investigator with the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System, most of the injured are in their 20s and 30s, making this the first time since Vietnam the V.A. has seen such an influx of youth, which extending the length of care to years and sometimes decades. On average, Griffin found that family members spend more than 40 hours a week providing care, making it nearly impossible for them to keep a job.

Organizations like the Wounded Warrior Project have tried to ease the financial burden on these families by lobbying Congress to provide direct compensation and other benefits to caregivers and their families. In 2010, the veteran's agency approved 1,222 applications and awarded monthly stipends of $1,600 to $1,800 to caregivers. Along with the money, they can receive health insurance and counseling, Einhorn reports. This law only applies to caregivers of service members injured after Sept. 11, 2001, and it's uncertain who will qualify and how compensation will be determined.
(Read more)

Larry Ellison Announced As Distinguished Medical Informatics Awardee for His Contributions to Health IT and the Ellison Foundation From the Friends of the National Library of Medicine (NIH)

There are some other known recipients but this is Larry’s day in my book:)

Dr. Oz is also in here for an award as well as other research and development  individuals at the Howard Hughes Institute.  Dr. Oz gets enough publicity and most of the time is on key.  Larry Ellison is always in the press with nobody imageunderstanding him at times, but he’s brilliant and started out writing code.  For all his life he has had to live with being upstaged less than 24 hours of having the largest IPO by Microsoft so it was short ordeal.  Oracle does quite a bit in healthcare and has grown with several acquisitions.  When Windows 95 was out it connected to Oracle data bases via ODBC, so Oracle and Microsoft worked together going way back.  He’s also part of the Gates Foundation Giving Pledge, one of the first members.

The Giving Pledge Call for Philanthropy Continues to Grow–40 Billionaires Committed

When President Obama goes to the Silicon Valley, Larry’s in the group for dinner.

President Obama Meeting with Tech Industry Leaders–CEOs and Some of the Smartest CEOs (Algo Men) Who Write Code

He’s always known for being a little different but the folks with brains and code know how are, but it makes them special people by all means.  One of my favorite Larry Ellison videos, “this is box”.  Congrats to Larry for all his contributions.  BD

Press Release:

Bethesda, MD – Today, Friends of the National Library of Medicine (FNLM) announced its 2011 Award Recipients, which will be presented at an Awards Gala and celebration of the National Library of Medicine’s 175th Anniversary at the Library of Congress on November 3, 2011.

Mehmet Oz, MD, and Michael Roizen, MD, are recipients of the Paul G. Rogers Award for their combined and individual efforts to deliver health information to the public, through their book, YOU: The Owner’s Manual, The Dr. Oz Show, and the Real Age program.  The award honors individuals who have provided significant services to improve the public’s health, and is in honor of Representative Paul Rogers, the former chair of the House of Representatives’ Subcommittee on Health and the Environment, and longtime advocate for medical advancement and accessible healthcare in the United States.

Larry Ellison, founder and CEO of Oracle, is the recipient of Distinguished Medical Informatics Award for his contributions to healthcare through information technology and the Ellison Foundation.  The Distinguished Medical Informatics Award is given to an individual who has made a significant contribution in technology, allowing healthcare professionals and individuals to use technology to communicate more effectively and efficiently. Mr. Ellison is the first recipient of the award.

Purrell Choppin, MD, is the recipient of the Medical Research Award for his extraordinary leadership of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.  The award is given to a medical researcher who has made significant contributions  During his tenure, the annual budget grew from $76 million to more than $500 million, and significant contributions to AIDS, cancer, cystic fibrosis, diabetes, and heart disease research were made.

Ms. Ann Duesing is the recipient of the Michael E. DeBakey Library Services Outreach Award for her work to provide healthcare information to rural and underinsured communities.  Ms. Duesing is the Outreach Librarian at the University of Virginia’s Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, and was the first outreach librarian in southwest Virginia.

The Friends of the National Library of Medicine is a non-profit organization that supports and promotes the National Library of Medicine (NLM), the world’s largest medical library and a vital part of the National Institute of Health.  It was founded in 1986 to increase public awareness about NLM, as well as to support its many programs in research, education and public service.

For more information about the National Library of Medicine,

please visit www.nlm.nih.gov.

For more information about the Friends of the National Library of Medicine,

please visit www.fnlm.org.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Miami-Dade County Fires Deloitte Consulting–Couldn’t Get A Straight Answer, Those Algorithms and Complicated Legal Text Once Again Making It Tough For Mere Humans

This goes to an item the County needed clarification on and the Deloitte and their attorneys just couldn’t give them a straight answer, so they got fired.  In reading this Deloitte asked the County if they had been properly following federal tax rules while making a 5 percent pre-tax deduction.  Deloitte had to subcontract with a law firm and they declined to comment, don’t you just love this, that kettle is too hot for me to jump into.  Sometimes its even damn hard to get a judge who’s up to date with all their investments as they don’t seem to pay enough attention sometimes and find themselves in a conflict of interest and wonder how did that happen until someone else who maybe discovered it explains, it’s transparency today.  image

3 Judges in Health-Care Lawsuits Caught Up In Potential Conflict of Interest-It’s Called Subsidiary Watch-Be Aware of Your Investments With Mergers and Acquisitions


It’s all about providing employee health insurance benefits too, what else.  It sounds like the two tried to reconcile and I would hate to the be sales rep for Deloitte right about now tooThis is becoming more common place in the US too as the algorithmic worlds, largely built by insurance companies for healthcare are a bitch, let’s face it and nobody and I mean nobody likes it as our bodies “hurt” from being shoved into so many data bases and then being “sequelled” (SQL) to death and out of that we get some score that tells us our risk assessment.  The only folks that like all of this are those who make a buck off it.  Granted there’s a lot of good health IT services out there, but this one of them that is known to be deceitful and they get their algorithms wrong all the time too.  When the public complains, insurers adjust the algorithm up to let a few more claims through with adjusting the parameters set and when the public attention dies down, they go adjust it back up again.  It’s been that way for years. 
Let’s take a look at a post I made back in August of 2009, we need a department of algorithms as we certify and go over medical records systems with a fine tooth comb but the insurers get to do what ever they want with their algorithms whenever they want and nobody audits.  I read today even the SEC has no audit trails for transactions either. I don’t know who’s software Deloitte uses but many insurers own a lot of those folks too so who knows maybe software from an insurer subsidiary complicated matters here too when questioning the County to check their procedures? 

“Department of Algorithms – Do We Need One of These to Regulate Upcoming Laws?

So this case to me from what I read here looks like both parties got fed up with the complicated algorithms and this is what we got and even the attorneys didn’t want to be in here.  A lot of the time, companies who write analytical software never use it themselves, but I do give Microsoft credit here as they do “eat their own dog food”.  All we hear of late is write code and get rich so somebody got rich here and they are long gone and we have 2 focuses here that just got sick and tired of the complications and algorithms some programmer wrote along the way.  BD
Miami-Dade County, frustrated over what it asserts is an inability to get a straight answer, fired Deloitte Consulting LLP as its employee-benefits consultant Monday, alleging breach of contract.
The spiraling dispute stems from Miami-Dade’s request — amid heated labor contract negotiations — for a legal opinion from Deloitte on whether the county can, under federal tax law, offer to deduct 10 percent of employees’ pay for health-care premiums.
The county needs clarification on the pretax health care deductions quickly, since it is pushing to have labor agreements with 10 unions by Nov. 1. The mayor has pledged to begin layoffs if agreements aren’t in place by that deadline in order to ensure the county stays within budget.
The county, which currently makes 5 percent pretax deductions from salaries for health-care coverage, wanted to offer unions the 10-percent pretax deduction as an alternative to pay cuts.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/09/26/2426580/miami-dade-county-fires-deloitte.html

Massachusetts Governor and Israel Chief Scientist Form Massachusetts-Israel Innovation Partnership (MIP)–Applications Being Taken For Funding Biotech, Pharma, Medical Devices And More In Life Sciences

Full information on the project is at the link at the bottom of the post.  This is an interesting relationship as Israel is known for their technology both in high tech and in life sciences.  When you think of that Intel processor in your computer, think Israel because that’s where a lot of the silicon technology for chips is developed, big R and D. 

“The projects must aim to develop a new or significantly improved product or imageprocess for commercialization in global markets but also be beneficial to Massachusetts in terms of additional jobs and income.”

Israel is also going through some stressful times and some of it is kind of like what we have here with doctors and the shrinking middle class.  Officials as you can read below blame themselves for bringing in private insurance and didn’t realize years back what would happen and how it would evolve. 

Officials In Israel Blame Themselves for Allowing Private Care and the Selling Supplementary Insurance For Degrading Their Public Healthcare System

A few months ago I attended the Israel Convention here in Los Angeles and what a learning experience I had, it was all good and unlike any conference I had attended before.  What I found was really wild was that when I mentioned I used to write code the conversations immediately accelerated at least 10 levels, in other words let’s talk intelligent geek if you will.  I spent time talking with many companies and a doctor from Israel with her device she created for neck disorders. 

Physical Virtue Solution To Assess and Train Neck Disorders, Microsoft Kinect And More As Shown This Week at the Israel Conference

Israel already has a big Microsoft R and D presence there and has for years and that’s where Kinect came from and I chatted with Ilan Spillinger from Microsoft and was able to hear the whole story on how it all came about.  It was funny to hear many talk about their “tough” work ethics too and take a few shots at themselves, again in good humor.  Scott Eisenstein from PowerMat was also very interesting and you see their products now in Best Buy and they were in the news with a recent new partnership too of late with Duracell, so the partnering makes sense to bring jobs and better economic conditions to both countries with the MIP association.  You can read further as there are a few other organizations involved in the project to include MIT. 

Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, Israel’s Chief Scientist Avi Hasson, the U.S. Israel Science and Technology Foundation (USISTF), and three Massachusetts economic development agencies are now accepting applications for projects under the “Massachusetts-Israel Innovation Partnership” (MIIP).

Today there are nearly 100 companies with Israeli founders or Israeli-licensed technologies in Massachusetts. Local firms exported over $180 million worth of goods to Israel in 2009 where 377 hospitals and 37,000 practicing physicians are located.

The partnership is a formal collaboration between Israel and the commonwealth to encourage and support innovation and entrepreneurship between Massachusetts and Israel’s life sciences, clean energy, and technology sectors. Massachusetts is the first U.S. state to establish such a program with the State of Israel.

The three Massachusetts economic development agencies participating, the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, and the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center are committing nearly $1 million in collective funding for companies in Massachusetts engaged in cooperative industrial research and development projects with an identified Israeli partner company. The Israeli Office of the Chief Scientist will provide up to $1 million in matching dollars for corresponding Israeli partner companies.

Applications are due February 6, 2012. For more information, go to www.masslifesciences.com or email Angus McQuilken at amcquilken@masslifesciences.com or Bridget Scrimenti at scrimenti@masstech.org.

http://telemedicinenews.blogspot.com/2011/09/massachusetts-israel-partnership.html

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