Events Calendar

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63rd ACOG ANNUAL MEETING - Annual Clinical and Scientific Meeting
2015-05-02 - 2015-05-06    
All Day
The 2015 Annual Meeting: Something for Every Ob-Gyn The New Year is a time for change! ACOG’s 2015 Annual Clinical and Scientific Meeting, May 2–6, [...]
Third Annual Medical Informatics World Conference 2015
2015-05-04 - 2015-05-05    
All Day
About the Conference Held each year in Boston, Medical Informatics World connects more than 400 healthcare, biomedical science, health informatics, and IT leaders to navigate [...]
Health IT Marketing &PR Conference
2015-05-07 - 2015-05-08    
All Day
The Health IT Marketing and PR Conference (HITMC) is organized by HealthcareScene.com and InfluentialNetworks.com. Healthcare Scene is a network of influential Healthcare IT blogs and health IT career [...]
Becker's Hospital Review 6th Annual Meeting
2015-05-07 - 2015-05-09    
All Day
This ​exclusive ​conference ​brings ​together ​hospital ​business ​and ​strategy ​leaders ​to ​discuss ​how ​to ​improve ​your ​hospital ​and ​its ​bottom ​line ​in ​these ​challenging ​but ​opportunity-filled ​times. The ​best ​minds ​in ​the ​hospital ​field ​will ​discuss ​opportunities ​for ​hospitals ​plus ​provide ​practical ​and ​immediately ​useful ​guidance ​on ​ACOs, ​physician-hospital ​integration, ​improving ​profitability ​and ​key ​specialties. Cancellation ​Policy: ​Written ​cancellation ​requests ​must ​be ​received ​within ​120 ​days ​of ​transaction ​or ​by ​March ​1, ​2015, ​whichever ​is ​first. ​ ​Refunds ​are ​subject ​to ​a ​$100 ​processing ​fee. ​Refunds ​will ​not ​be ​made ​after ​this ​date. Click Here to Register
Big Data & Analytics in Healthcare Summit
2015-05-13 - 2015-05-14    
All Day
Big Data & Analytics in Healthcare Summit "Improve Outcomes with Big Data" May 13–14 Philadelphia, 2015 Why Attend This Summit will bring together healthcare executives [...]
iHT2 Health IT Summit in Boston
2015-05-19 - 2015-05-20    
All Day
iHT2 [eye-h-tee-squared]: 1. an awe-inspiring summit featuring some of the world.s best and brightest. 2. great food for thought that will leave you begging for more. 3. [...]
2015 Convergence Summit
2015-05-26 - 2015-05-28    
All Day
The Convergence Summit is WLSA’s annual flagship event where healthcare, technology and wireless health communication leaders tackle key issues facing the connected health community. WLSA designs [...]
eHealth 2015: Making Connections
2015-05-31    
All Day
e-Health 2015: Making Connections Canada's ONLY National e-Health Conference and Tradeshow WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU IN TORONTO! Hotel accommodation The e-Health 2015 Organizing [...]
Events on 2015-05-04
Events on 2015-05-07
Events on 2015-05-13
Events on 2015-05-19
Events on 2015-05-26
2015 Convergence Summit
26 May 15
San Diego
Events on 2015-05-31
Articles

Nov 02: Troubleshooter Reports Progress & Barriers in Bid to Repair Health Portal

repair health portal

Federal officials said Friday that they had spent $630 million on information technology for the repair health portal insurance website, and they expressed growing frustration with hardware and software problems that continued to thwart millions of people trying to buy insurance in the online market.

“We made progress and also ran into some roadblocks that slowed us down,” said Jeffrey D. Zients, the troubleshooter appointed by President Obama to fix the website and bail the administration out of a political crisis caused by its disastrous debut.

Mr. Zients’s progress report, delivered during a conference call with reporters on Friday, was less upbeat than one he delivered on Oct. 25, just before the crash of a Verizon data center that hosts the website, HealthCare.gov. “Make no mistake,” Mr. Zients said. “The hardware failure was a setback and was extremely frustrating.”

 On the other hand, Mr. Zients said, the team working to address the website’s technical issues had made some progress, decreasing the load time so users can see pages after an average wait of one second, down from eight seconds in the first few weeks after the site opened on Oct. 1.

The briefing was notable for its emphasis on computer metrics and software bugs, rather than Mr. Obama’s overarching vision of affordable health insurance for all Americans.

 Mr. Zients said he was focused on measuring and analyzing system performance, but he was unable to say how many hours the website had been down because of failures at the data center run by the Terremark unit of Verizon.

 The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which has responsibility for the website, said earlier in the week that the shutdowns, on Sunday and again at midweek, appeared to have lasted more than 36 hours, or one-fourth of the time from Sunday through Friday.

 The administration provided no estimate of the number of people who filed applications for insurance in the last week. The latest official figures indicate that 700,000 people filed applications through Oct. 25, about half in the federal marketplace and half in the 14 state-run exchanges.

 During the conference call, administration officials were asked if they still had confidence in Henry Chao, the chief digital architect for the online insurance marketplace, who works at C.M.S.

Julie Bataille, a spokeswoman for the agency, declined to answer directly. “We have confidence in the team that is in place working 24/7 to make improvements week by week,” she said.

Top administration officials said this week that the lead contractor on the project, CGI Federal, a unit of the CGI Group, had not met their expectations. But they said they would not remove the company.

“CGI is an important part of the team to make sure that we fix the website, get rid of the glitches and work through our punch list,” said Mr. Zients, who is in line to take over as Mr. Obama’s chief economic adviser on Jan. 1. Mr. Zients said he was methodically working through a list of tasks, which he refused to enumerate. “We’ve fixed the failed hardware, and we will be making further hardware upgrades” over the weekend, he said, so the White House can keep its latest promise: “By the end of November, HealthCare.gov will work smoothly for the vast majority of users.”

Republicans in Congress say taxpayers should not have to pay more to fix a website riddled with flaws.

Cheryl R. Campbell, a senior vice president of CGI Federal, told Congress on Oct. 24 that its work on the website had been performed under “a cost-plus contract.” Ms. Bataille, asked how much the fixes would cost, gave a different account on Friday. “All of that is covered with our contractual obligations that already exist, that $630 million number,” she said.

The Obama administration assigned new responsibilities last week to Quality Software Services, a unit of the UnitedHealth Group, saying it would be the general contractor, coordinating work on the project.

Quality Software Services, which built parts of the current system, is apparently negotiating with the government over how it will be compensated.

Millions of people tried to use the website on its first day of operation, but few successfully enrolled in health plans, according to newly disclosed records of internal government meetings. The records indicate that only six people enrolled on the first day. One document, from the afternoon of Oct. 2, says, “Approximately 100 enrollments have happened.” A day later the tally climbed to 248. The numbers come from notes taken during meetings in a “war room” established by the Medicare agency. The meetings included administration officials and federal contractors trying to determine what had gone wrong with the federal exchange. Ms. Bataille said the notes were “not official documents.”

The White House has predicted that seven million people will sign up for coverage through the exchanges by the end of the six-month open-enrollment period on March 31. source