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Interesting week of interactions

It has been an interesting week for me, participating in three different events in the last seven days. With HIMSS at the beginning of the April -- it has been a real opportunity to get a snapshot of what folks are thinking, planning and worrying about in these hyper-active times of HiTech and health reform.

Thursday, I was on a panel at the Markle Foundation’s Connecting for Health event -- talking about ARRA, meaningful use and certification. I have to give a lot of credit to the Markle folks and participants for driving a very well thought out set of principles and priorities for ONC to consider in defining both meaningful use and certification, and more importantly reminding everyone of what the goals of HIT are all about -- better health outcomes. They had an impressive crowd of thought leaders at the event (which shows the interest in getting meaningful use defined right) and they have a broad and growing group who are supporting their consensus position. You can read more about it here -- and Microsoft is supporting the recommendations, along with many others.

Last Friday and Saturday, I participated in Innovation 2009, hosted by Health Evolution Partners, led by David Brailer. The participants and speakers were fabulous (and I'm not generally a fan of conferences). The discussion centered around new business ideas, how to innovate, the challenges facing large companies and the policy frameworks required to get the U.S. to the promised land of better health outcomes at the same or lower costs. I am an entrepreneur at heart (this being my 5th start up), so it was really exciting and a bit unexpected to hear from the many companies doing innovative and very focused things in the broad health ecosystem. I won't enumerate them here -- but suffice it to say the number of follow up actions I left with from this conference exceeded HIMSS -- which had a 1000 times the attendance. (Perhaps this is an indication of where innovation is happening). We had lots of discussion about the need for health reform -- that it should encourage innovation in multiple directions (care delivery, payment, new entrants). And a very real fear was raised -- that reform could actually stifle innovation. One discussion point was the 'public plan' option being floated by the administration and a prominent spokesperson said implementation of that "would be a catastrophe!"

On Monday and Tuesday, I participated in the Milken Institute Global Conference. They also do a great job of getting world class speakers, but given there are over 3k participants, it was a very different feel than Innovation 2009 with less than 200. The Milken conference is broad -- finance, credit, energy, international, education and health. What really strikes me is the number of folks that go to the conference that are really interested in the challenges and opportunities in health. I was fortunate enough to participate in a great conversation between Elias Zerhouni (former head of NIH), Jamie Heywood (founder of patientslikeme.com and super smart guy), Anne Wojcicki (founder of 23andme.com and super smart gal), and others about the critical challenges in the current paradigm of clinical trials and therapeutic discovery. Increasing the rate of discovering what works in health (precisely identifying the disease, finding targeted cures, providing feedback loops) is critical to addressing the cost crisis, the quality challenges and improving health outcomes. Here again, the system is failing (FDA, large drug companies) because the framework, institutional infrastructure and information platforms aren't flexible and adaptive enough to deal with the real needs of today. As a result, new groups are forming to find ways to innovate either around or completely alongside the existing institutions to accelerate knowledge -- like Alpha 1, patientslikeme.com, collabrx and many others. It is interesting to note the role of philanthropy and foundations in changing how the science and infrastructure is being driven -- groups like the Canary foundation and FasterCures and of course the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

The flu pandemic has been the center of the news and was certainly a topic in all of the conferences above. From helping to prevent pandemics, to accelerating knowledge and understanding, to improving health outcomes and increasing access to quality health care -- information technology and platforms -- are critical.