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Electronic Medical Records Boot Camp
2025-06-30 - 2025-07-01    
10:30 am - 5:30 pm
The Electronic Medical Records Boot Camp is a two-day intensive boot camp of seminars and hands-on analytical sessions to provide an overview of electronic health [...]
AI in Healthcare Forum
2025-07-10 - 2025-07-11    
10:00 am - 5:00 pm
Jeff Thomas, Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, shares how the migration not only saved the organization millions of dollars but also led to [...]
28th World Congress on  Nursing, Pharmacology and Healthcare
2025-07-21 - 2025-07-22    
10:00 am - 5:00 pm
To Collaborate Scientific Professionals around the World Conference Date:  July 21-22, 2025
5th World Congress on  Cardiovascular Medicine Pharmacology
2025-07-24 - 2025-07-25    
10:00 am - 5:00 pm
About Conference The 5th World Congress on Cardiovascular Medicine Pharmacology, scheduled for July 24-25, 2025 in Paris, France, invites experts, researchers, and clinicians to explore [...]
Events on 2025-06-30
Events on 2025-07-10
AI in Healthcare Forum
10 Jul 25
New York
Events on 2025-07-21
Events on 2025-07-24

Events

Articles

Dec 17: Dear Santa-Something for everyone on a healthcare Christmas wish list.

healthcare christmas

Paul Keckley has taken a very generous approach to gift giving this year. He includes politicians, patients, doctors, students and executives on his healthcare Christmas wish list. He wants transparency in information, better financial decision, an education in the ACA for all, more thinking, and less complaining. He has 25 wishes on his list. These are my favorites.

  1. I wish that every member of Congress, political pundit, journalist, consultant and lobbyist engaged in the health reform debate is required to work a full day in a hospital emergency room.
  2. I wish U.S. high school and college curricula included a class on “how the U.S. health system works” that everyone must take to graduate.
  3. I wish the GOP would complete the sentence: “Repeal and replace with..?” And I wish the Dems wanting a “single payer system” would explain what they mean and how it would work.
  4. I wish private insurance company coverage and denial policies and procedures, and criteria for narrow networks were easily accessible as public information. Ditto every hospital and health system’s severity adjusted costs, prices and outcomes, and physician ownership of facilities to which they refer patients and derive income.
  5. I wish I could own my medical record and control access by anyone else.
  6. I wish U.S. trade policy would recapture the R&D investment made by U.S. taxpayers and consumers in drugs and devices that benefit the world.
  7. I wish scope of practice for advanced practice nursing was expanded nationally to allow for diagnosis and treatment of common conditions.
  8. I wish health reformers would find solutions for high-risk populations and end-of-life heroics so dollars spent for the rest can be appropriated better.
  9. I wish I could buy insurance that accommodates my needs and preferences with a modest set aside for higher risk populations necessary to managing population health.
  10. I wish we could accelerate the transition from volume to value by eliminating fee for service incentives for most health care services.
  11. I wish physicians were as passionate about adopting meaningful use of certified electronic health records that improve accuracy in diagnosing and treating medical problems as they are their financial systems that streamline and enhance payments from third party payers.
  12. I wish the physicians serving in Congress knew as much about the health system—how each sector operates — as they pretend.
  13. I wish we could connect health services and human services programs — public clinics, food stamps, mental health programs, environment and food supply — in every community to reduce redundancy and improve population health status.
  14. And I wish a grassroots rational, national discussion about the value of the U.S. health system would “break out” so every individual, employer, community leader and legislator could answer the question “what are we getting for what we’re spending? Source