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iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
The recent decade in healthcare has certainly been eye-opening. It started with the healthcare reform debate that culminated in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Then followed failed mega-mergers in MCOLand: Anthem and Cigna, Aetna and Humana. These were followed by re-ignited efforts to undo the ACA following the election of Donald Trump. Now, there have been three major announcements in only three months directly related to healthcare from companies with $1.8 trillion of market value. Yes, something indeed is up. And it should be good for consumers.
Consider Larry Merlo’s statement about the combination Aetna and CVS: "With the analytics of Aetna, and CVS Health's human touch, we will create a healthcare platform built around individuals." This is the CVS guy talking. Not the health insurer. In my view, he really means it. Why else would CVS want to buy a complex, heavily regulated business for over 18x forward earnings estimates? That is not exactly cheap.
Thursday’s announcement of the Cigna-for-Express Scripts merger represents the latest example of consolidation in healthcare aimed at scale, technology, disruption, and generally trying to figure things out. Cigna has offered $67 billion in cash, stock, and assumption of debt for the largest remaining stand-alone pharmacy benefit manager. In December, CVS offered $77 billion for Aetna. A month later, Amazon, JPMorgan, and Berkshire Hathaway announced a major collaboration seemingly intended to disrupt healthcare in a way that improves access, quality, outcomes, and costs. 
Things are about to get real.
What observations should be made?
Tipping point reached. Since my career in healthcare began, a consistent theme from mentors, bosses, and customers has been “current trends cannot continue.” Yet they have for thirty years. Persistent and offensive healthcare costs, highly variable quality, less-than-effective legislators, and widening economic inequality are all factors leading healthcare constituents to demand more of the system. In my view, the collective opinion of “this can’t continue,” has been reached.
Innovative providers are reacting. The seven companies that have announced dramatic intentions over the past 90 days are certainly examples. Their sheer size and influence on how we live our lives raises the conversation to a national, if not global, level. Besides these household names, many others are charging ahead with similar goals. Since the ACA was written into law, we have observed all types of innovative healthcare efforts across a spectrum of ideas coming out of the proverbial woodwork. A small sampling:
  • Technology focused. Technology startups embracing artificial intelligence, machine learning, and big data are making great strides. For example, we would point to Cardiogram that uses consumer products like Apple Watch to monitor cardiac activity and be predictive, Everseat — a company that aligns idle provider capacity with patient demand, and emocha Mobile Health, a patient-centric medication management platform with validated results that drives adherence into the 90 percentile. These three solutions have direct application to almost every healthcare consumer, which is all of us.
  • Payer. While the payer market is quite mature, recent “tipping point pressures” have led to the creation of companies like Oscar Health in New York, a consumer-focused health plan embracing technology. We would also point to Alignment Health, a west coast company that is patient-centric from care to coverage to data. Alignment is focused on some of the most vulnerable populations, particularly Medicare.
  • Healthcare as the ultimate consumer product. In thinking about CVS’ pending acquisition of Aetna, expect store footprints to change dramatically to accommodate a new healthcare retail experience. Primary care and flu shots are just the beginning. A much wider range of services could be offered including allergy testing, blood tests and lab work, eye care, hearing, nutrition, behavioral health, imaging and even quick in-office procedures. Access will be easy – 9,700 stores with approximately 1,100 clinics. Mark Bertolini, Aetna’s visionary Chairman and CEO, made reference to this over a year ago at the company’s 2016 investor conference. Leadership at CVS and Aetna seems to be well aligned.
  • Alternative therapies? Medicinal marijuana has been both applauded and criticized in states across the country. It is quite controversial to say the least. What is not controversial? The opioid epidemic. Medicinal marijuana offers solutions to pain management along with many other use cases. And, often without side effects or negative complications (such as addiction). Organizations such as MedMen, Curio Wellness, and others are “creating” the molds, not breaking them. MedMen may be the most diversified participant in the burgeoning industry as consultant, retailer, and investor. Curio Wellness is going to painstaking lengths to produce a product that is of the highest quality possible and consistently reproduced to the tightest tolerances. This is essentially a pharmaceutical company. They may have the most sophisticated facility in the country at this point. 
New animals in the zoo? While the combination of Cigna and Express Scripts is not a completely new creation, the consummation of CVS and Aetna will result in an organization requiring a new acronym. Managed care organization? Drug store? Pharmacy? Pharmacy benefits manager? Primary care location? In reality, it will be all of these things. Moreover, what will the offspring of Amazon, JPMorgan, and Berkshire Hathaway look like? Bezos, Buffet, and Dimon? All of these will undoubtedly look to use technology in a smarter way in healthcare, and focus much more on the consumer as the end customer. The direction is only up from current levels. 
Is Amazon going to be late to this party? In my opinion, Express Scripts would and should have been a potential target of Amazon. Perhaps it was? The “Amazonification” of Express Scripts could have been a head start on building pharmaceutical capability within the current Amazon fulfillment footprint. As the last, large, stand alone PBM, Amazon may have lost a chance to establish a strong foothold via acquisition. They may also have gotten it at a lower price. In our view, it is still unclear what this trio will look to accomplish. That said, we do have high hopes and eagerly await more news. 
A more holistic approach? These new partnerships may have a more holistic approach to financing and delivering healthcare since no single service line defines their existence. PBMs are focused on driving a value proposition in prescription drugs. As such, the system is exploited to drive only so much ‘value’ to the customer to keep the process in place. Cynical? Yes. But I’m not alone in that view. In similar fashion, hospital delivery of care often times comes with a focus on higher revenue, high acuity services. In turn, lab and radiology organizations want to maximize their slice of the world. As larger healthcare companies are created with actual ownership across the medical dollar, there may very well be less of a focus on one service area. Rather, a global view of how all the pieces interact together could become the goal. That could foster a more holistic approach to care delivery across the spectrum of illness or incident. In my view, UnitedHealthcare’s Optum subsidiary is a great example of this with its provider footprint of 250 urgent care facilities, 200+ ambulatory surgery centers, and 30,000 partnered, contracted, and employed physicians. Moreover, the company’s Amil subsidiary in Brazil actually owns hospitals as well. We would not be surprised to see United reimagine the acute care hospital setting in the near future from what it is learning in South America.
So what should we make of these huge announcements in healthcare? In my view, we all as healthcare consumers should be hopeful for perhaps the first time in decades. Stuff is indeed happening and it will be for the good. Consider what all of these examples have in common: 
  • an absolute focus on the consumer;
  • the complete embracement of technology;
  • out-of-the-box thinking; and,
  • an “enough-is-enough” attitude.
A real push of technology into healthcare has finally begun in earnest, and healthcare delivery may finally shift from a focus on payments and episodic care to becoming the ultimate consumer product with the realization that everyone is a customer. That alone will drive price and quality transparency, better access, and engage the customer in an “industry” that has been one-sided for much of its modern existence.  
Image Source:HIV/AIDS Initiative

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
One woman dies of cervical cancer every two hours in the United States. We have the power to change this STAT.
Cervical cancer is preventable,* but regular testing is key. Unfortunately, too many women skip their annual exams and aren’t tested. More than half of new cervical cancer cases occur in women who have never or rarely been tested. If all women got tested regularly for cervical cancer, more lives would be saved.
That’s why Hologic has launched We Can Change This STAT in partnership with Erin Andrews, who you may know as a Fox NFL reporter and “Dancing with the Stars” host. Erin has a powerful story to tell about how regular testing for cervical cancer saved her life! Fortunately, Erin’s cancer was found early with routine testing and was treatable. Now cancer-free, Erin is partnering with Hologic to help motivate more women to get tested regularly for cervical cancer.
We Can Change This STAT aims to educate women about the need for regular testing and testing with both Pap + HPV together, a combination that provides the best possible protection against cervical cancer. Ninety-five percent of cervical cancers are detected by testing with Pap+HPV Together.
Thanks to innovations by Hologic and others in cervical cancer screening, the number of cervical cancer cases in U.S. women has been cut in half over the last 40 years. At Hologic, we’re working to bring that number as close to zero as possible with our market-leading tests to detect cervical disease.
Together, by encouraging all women to get screened regularly, we can save more lives.
Make an appointment for your annual exam today, and tell the women you love to do it, too.
For more information on what Hologic is doing to fight cervical cancer, please visit ChangeThisStat.com.
*As many as 93 percent of cervical cancers could be prevented by screening and HPV vaccination.

References:

1. American Cancer Society. Cancer Facts & Figures 2017. Atlanta, GA: American Cancer Society; 2017.
2. CDC. Cervical Cancer is Preventable. https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/cervical-cancer/index.html. CDC website. Updated November 5, 2014. Accessed February 7, 2018.
3. Benard VB, et al. Vital signs: cervical cancer incidence, mortality, and screening – United States, 2017-2012. CDC. MMWR. 2014;63:1.
4. Blatt, et al. Comparison of cervical cancer screening results among 256,648 women in multiple clinical practices. 2015;123(5):282-8. doi:10.1002/cncy.21544. (Study included ThinPrep, SurePath, Hybrid Capture 2 Assay).

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Digital Healthcare, continued: Where do we go from here?

Digital Healthcare, continued: Where do we go from here?

My previous post offered an overview of the different strands digital healthcare, including three elements that I characterized as foundational to the digitization of healthcare — electronic health records (EHR), data analysis, and artificial intelligence (AI)) — and four clinical uses: telehealth, telemonitoring, therapeutic virtual reality, and health robotics. Since then, a few people have asked whether personalized, genomic-driven healthcare also belongs on this list, as perhaps the most significant therapeutic outgrowth of the data revolution. It would be reasonable to include it on the list, but I will explain in a future post why I consider it a related but distinct transformation.
As a follow up to the digital health overview, I wanted to offer some thoughts for healthcare organizations that are not sure how relevant digital healthcare is to their businesses, let alone how to get ready for the transformation. Many organizations that I work with already “get it” and are actively involved in telehealth or other parts of the digital health marketplace.  I have concerns for everyone else—the healthcare providers and organizations that are not actively thinking about how digital healthcare may disrupt their businesses in the not-too-distant future.  If you fall into this category, this post is for you.
In the current environment, keeping up with technology trends, products, and services relevant to your part of the healthcare world is not optional. I worry, for example, for the countless healthcare providers out there who are ignoring the information security threats to their systems and data. More broadly, I worry for the providers and organizations that aren’t addressing the question of whether and how new technologies might sustain or marginalize current providers. By aligning with and adapting new technologies, providers have the potential to generate new clients and develop new products and service.
Healthcare providers need to ask themselves some basic questions: What threats are emerging that are going to weaken my current patient base in the future? And, more importantly, what can my organization do to address those threats?
In my previous post, I noted the demand for digital healthcare solutions as a manifestation of the “Starbucksized” consumer-patient. The same patient who has been trained by Starbucks, Amazon, Uber, and a host of other web-based tools that he or she can have exactly what he or she wants, as soon as possible, is inevitably looking for a new experience of healthcare. Every week brings a new article speculating about when there will be an Uber for healthcare.
We are still early in the process. Many patients have not yet gotten familiar with the convenience of digital-service provision. But that’s changing quickly. In the process, a market is steadily growing for more and more services for more and more patients. Rather than a single “killer app,” I believe we are heading into an era of dozens and potentially hundreds of “Ubers” for healthcare.
“Healthcare” encapsulates an enormously broad range of consumer needs and conditions that are likely to be met in a multiplicity of solutions that compartmentalize and simplify particular problems: parents wanting help with their baby, teenagers needing medication for acne, busy professionals looking for a virtual appointment for travel medicine, and so on. While certain conditions (e.g. abdominal pain) may need a hands-on examination and some kinds of care call for a personal relationship, the vast majority of non-life-threatening conditions are likely to be addressed with convenience-driven, online solutions.
Recognizing this trend, smart healthcare organizations are asking how they can leverage digital health tools to meet patient needs and ensure their future. Starbucks, Amazon, and all of the other legendary disruptive companies began by asking a simple question: what do customers really want? They then built out offerings that met those identified needs, and in the process challenged how things had been done by competitors.  They dug deeper into the need, and in the process reenvisioned the solution.
Many existing healthcare providers and organizations are still stuck in the way that things have been done for a long time, and failing to ask: What services and products do patients want? What will they pay for? Most providers are not spending enough time asking patients what they really want, and they are not doing enough creative thinking about how to deliver just that.
The time to undertake this process is while business is still healthy: when the existing patient base is intact, and the focus is on retention and expansion. Don’t wait until the signs of competitive erosion are evident. It is a safe bet that the list of services patients will want once they learn what’s possible will only grow, and the question is whether patients will get them from their current providers or migrate to new resources to find them.
To use a personal example, I never gave much thought to the inconvenience of going to gas stations to refuel.  It wasn’t an optional activity — at least not until my wife turned me on to the possibility of someone coming to my car fill my gas tank via the application, Purple. Even though I hadn’t ever thought about this as a “need,” I quickly realized that going to the gas station is an activity I don’t miss and that, even if it only saves me five minutes every few weeks, it feels good to take stopping at the gas station off my to-do list by using my smart phone to order gas and have it brought to me. Healthcare companies like Lemonaid Health are tapping into this same appeal, creating super-convenient offerings that offer a level of convenience patients never imagined they needed.
The bad news for “conventional” healthcare providers is that the sources of competition from remote providers are growing rapidly and getting better and better. It’s critical to be paying attention to risk points of losing patients to online conveniences. At the same time, the good news is that healthcare remains a universe of unmet needs, and that if patients experience you as a healthcare provider who is working to meet those needs, there is no shortage of opportunities to engage existing patients and find new ones.  In fact, being a provider who is an early adopter of new technologies is a good way to engage curious patients open to something new.
The first step for providers who are still running traditional practices is to identify every aspect of care that patients may experience as inconvenient. A safe place to start is with the onboarding and scheduling processes. Can new patients find information and complete forms online? Can they schedule appointments without speaking to a human being? I recently experienced a painfully drawn-out scheduling process where it took over a week to get an appointment. I suggested to the provider that he consider an online appointment scheduling tool, such asSchedulista and DocMeIn, which would have gotten rid of the hassle of back-and-forth options to schedule an appointment. I know a number of physicians who use ZocDoc for the same reason—an unmet need for simple scheduling. The key to the new world of digital healthcare is maximizing convenience and meaningful, personalized services for patients every step of the way.
Many small and solo healthcare professionals see telehealth and digital health as more of a threat than a promise. This pessimism overlooks the value of the relationship of trust that providers have with patients who know them and have an off-line, real-world relationship with them. While patients are clamoring for more digital convenience, there is still, and in some ways, even more of a hunger for meaningful human connection.  Just as the general erosion of privacy in the information age has made patients more, not less, protective of their medical privacy, the shift to an economy of anonymous transactions for small convenient tasks heightens the demand for meaningful, real relationships for important decisions. This translates into a big opportunity for doctors who can engage online with patients who know them offline. The key for healthcare providers is to recognize that the marketplace and consumer expectations are evolving more quickly than in the past. The most successful providers and organizations will be those that identify a “change need” and are able to offer new services that improve on some aspect of healthcare delivery.
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
There are many e-books, webinars and seminars on creating your ‘brand’, and that is all great, but in healthcare, should you create a brand around your business, or should you concentrate on YOU first? 
This is a question that comes up quite a bit when meeting with healthcare practitioners, we ask them what makes you unique, and the answer is usually “we give the best care”.  But if we emphasize what makes YOU unique, would that answer be different?  In most cases it is – the practitioner says “I am great at treating spine patients” or “I have great outcomes with my shoulder surgery” or “I spend a lot of time with my patients and listen to their issues”.  
These are great things to capitalize on as a consultant or strategist – the things they do, that others may not do as well.  This doesn’t mean to leave out the brand of their business, it just means to put focus on the uniqueness of the practitioner, and continue to build a culture around what they do well, and what the patients value most.  This will help the patient and consumer identify why they need your expertise.  Once a person has referred a friend or family member to you, that potential patient will probably go straight to the internet and do a search for information and reviews about you. Make sure that you put time into keeping your reputation updated.
A couple of tips to help your professional brand reputation follow you anywhere:
  • Claim and update your listings on Healthgrades, Vitals and RateMD’s, and any other pertinent sites. This listing will follow you wherever you go, or if you own your own business.
  • Update your LinkedIn profile. If you have your profile updated, other professionals can always find you, and continue any professional relationship you have created. Your profile is your online CV, so make it good, and keep it updated.
Referrals will always be a key factor in your business, especially word of mouth. Make sure you play an important role in keeping your online and offline reputation updated and clean, this may determine if a patient or provider decides to utilize your services!
Have you found it difficult to keep up with your online profiles or wonder which ones are the most important?  I’d love to know what you think.  Comment below or email me at veronica@connectionshealthcarestrategies.com
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Thank you!

Thank you!

When we do an insurance review we always ask if they are looking to buy in the next 6 months. This provokes an specific answer of when or if they are looking to buy. It is an essential question to ask to make sure we are serving them the best way possible.
We know the basics of coverage, possible under-insured or over-insured areas and we want to be sure that they understand what is to come so they know what to expect. It helps them understand we are here and available to answer any concerns that come up. 
While that is valuable in itself to take away worry and concern, it doesn't help them get into the home they are looking for. That is why are building a team of trusted, authentic and professional resources for them to tap into. 
"A referral is sending someone you care about to someone you trust"
We don't want to send them to just anyone, so we do the screening for them. It is wonderful knowing that who we send them to will give them the service and the attention that they not only deserve but they expect.
We love sending the right prospect to the right resource. Connecting like-minded people who not only want a home, but they want an experience. They want to connect with the person that is walking with them on finding their dream home. Overall... they want to trust! 
Not only do I want to say Thank You for those partners! I appreciate your support and knowing that these people we care for are being served in the same way with your help. I also want to say, we are here for you as well. We understand the value and we know how important that person is to you! 
Keep working, keep growing & keep building those teams! I appreciate you!
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Changes to Tax Planning for Same-Sex Couples

Changes to Tax Planning for Same-Sex Couples

As you know, there have been substantial changes to the laws regarding same-sex marriage. Specifically, there have been two recent Supreme Court rulings that provide more information on tax issues. Those two cases, referred to as Windsor and Obergefell, are discussed below.
  • On June 26, 2013, the Windsor case stated that federal recognition of marriage wasn’t limited to marriage between a man and a woman, but that states were free to recognize marriage as they chose.
  • On June 26, 2015, the Obergefell case stated that same-sex marriage was to be legally recognized in all states and that it was unlawful for a state not to recognize a same-sex marriage performed in another state.
Although these cases didn’t deal with tax issues specifically, certain aspects of the cases do impact taxes for same-sex couples. For instance:
  • The law allows for consistent filing status between the federal and state income tax returns. In the past, if your state didn’t recognize same-sex marriage, you could file as a married couple with IRS, but you had to file as two single individuals in your state. The ruling in Obergefell made tax filings much less complicated for same-sex couples.
  • Obergefell also stated that same-sex couples are eligible for spousal and survivor social security benefits, regardless of the state in which they reside. This is huge. The potential for a retroactive effect to prior years has not yet been decided, so please stay tuned for more developments in this area.
Our firm doesn’t do much work in the areas of health plans, employee benefits, trusts, estates, and advising on retirement (other than the tax consequences of such). However, in light of these recent changes, we strongly advise our same-sex clients to consult with their HR departments, attorneys and financial planners immediately to ensure that all beneficiary designations, withholding exemptions, and end of life documents such as wills, powers of attorney, and medical requests/emergency situation requests are updated and allowed to accomplish their intended purpose. With more benefits available, it would be a shame to lose them due to improper or short-sighted planning.
Jonathan Godwin
Written by

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
What if you build a great online mDetailing portal and then nobody shows up?  That is the quagmire awaiting most drug companies as they shift money into digital marketing.  At the heart of this shift could be the mistaken belief that physicians want to engage drug companies and here about their products.  Of course this is not true for all drugs but physicians just don’t have the time to engage any site that doesn’t add value to their patients and practice.
In a Booz & Company survey in 2011 many pharma executives believe that physicians will have less time for their marketing efforts and that HCP marketing could shift from physicians to toward key accounts, payors, and hospitals/GPOs.  In fact 68% of respondents believed that the current pharmaceutical model is broken and needs significant repair.  The shift to digital is not the remedy for this problem.
According to a Press Release Last Year for PR Web:
  • Physicians expressed a strong desire for more websites designed specifically for healthcare professionals.
  • 86% wanted more disease-state websites designed specifically for healthcare professionals.
  • 77% wanted more product/branded websites designed for healthcare professionals.
  • eSampling continues to have high demand, with 85% of respondents wanting more availability of eSampling.
  • Despite all the sales force cuts the US Pharma industry implemented over the last three to four years, physicians are still receiving a significant number of sales calls. Some specialties seem to be almost overwhelmed with pharmaceutical company attention.
So how can pharma connect with physicians online ?
(1) Make each interaction relevant and meaningful – Drug companies have to stop relaying on “canned” detail pieces and customize online engagement for each physician’s needs.
(2) Provide real value – Today it’s more than about how your drug works it’s about how YOUR drug provides better outcomes in patients.
 (3) Talk about patients more – Do patients on your therapy stay on it?  What do they think about living with chronic conditions ? Believe it or not physicians want to hear about these subjects and you are the expert.  The more they understand patient behavior the more they can be successful in practice.
(4) Provide links to patient tools to stay on therapy or show how your marketing is driving consumers to physicians – Less people going to the doctor means that they are either waiting too long for health problems or not following up with existing conditions which could make matters worse.
(5) Develop a model where you continually optimize your online marketing to make it more efficient and impactful – Shared learnings and follow up with doctors to ask what they liked and did not like.

AJIt SHIRODKAr: Mobi moPharma: Mobile Apps, HTML5
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