Boombostic Health

Healthcare is still broken

13 min · 14 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Healthcare is still broken

Descripción

How Health Gorilla is Transforming Healthcare Data Interoperability This episode dives into the story of Health Gorilla and its founder, Bob Watson, revealing how innovative approaches are tackling one of healthcare's most persistent problems: data interoperability. With decades of experience, Bob shares strategic insights and the evolving landscape that is shaping the future of healthcare information exchange.In this episode: * Bob Watson's background at Cerner and lessons from early interoperability efforts * The evolution of data blocking strategies and shifting industry tactics * How TEFCA's implementation is creating new momentum for healthcare data sharing * The core value propositions behind Health Gorilla's platform * The importance of high-quality, AI-ready healthcare data * Challenges and opportunities in integrating medical images into electronic sharing * How legacy systems are connected through Health Gorilla's architecture * The role of government regulation and penalties in driving compliance * The vision for a future where healthcare data is seamless, actionable, and patient-centric Timestamps:00:00 - Introduction to Bob Watson and the origins of Health Gorilla 00:08 - Bob's experience at Cerner and pioneering early health IT initiatives 00:32 - Building the Connected Community and lessons from early EHR adoption 00:58 - Data blocking strategies in the 90s and their impact on interoperability 01:44 - Bob's transition to turnaround leadership and lessons from multiple engagements 02:15 - The importance of the right team and strategic focus for tech companies 02:28 - Narrowing down core customer profiles and target markets 02:43 - Focus on Epic, Cerner, and e-clinical work as key interoperable systems 03:07 - Value-based care and the role of data in Medicare Advantage programs 03:26 - Developing private lab networks and new use cases under TEFCA 03:52 - How TEFCA's implementation increases data exchange traffic 04:21 - Facilitating patient data access and reciprocity in information sharing 04:48 - Industry impact of data blocking lawsuits and regulatory changes 05:13 - The federal push for interoperability akin to the HITECH Act 05:39 - Penalties and non-compliance consequences as enforcement tools 06:01 - Delivering high-quality, actionable data for AI and clinical decision-making 06:23 - Personal story: navigating healthcare data transfer challenges as a patient 06:45 - The future of incentivizing interoperability through economic measures 07:07 - Infrastructure at the endpoints vs. legacy system dependencies 07:25 - Delivering consumable, easy-to-interpret data for busy clinicians 07:53 - Reducing care gaps through comprehensive, uniform health records 08:18 - The importance of high-certainty data for AI training and predictive care 09:02 - How Health Gorilla's curated, accurate data supports advanced AI applications 09:41 - Bob's return from retired life to address relentless interoperability challenges 10:26 - The evolving role of images and challenges in flowing medical imaging data 11:11 - Vendor issues and technical constraints in transmitting medical images 11:27 - The goal to improve data quality and flow from legacy systems like Meditech 11:51 - Connecting all legacy networks for comprehensive data sharing 12:05 - The potential for Health Gorilla to be a significant player in healthcare interoperability 12:29 - The importance of government support—sticks and carrots—in fostering industry change 12:42 - Closing thoughts: the future of seamless, actionable healthcare data

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episode Privacy vs. Progress: Can We Keep Patient Data Safe? artwork

Privacy vs. Progress: Can We Keep Patient Data Safe?

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episode Cancer Doesn't Stop at 5 PM: Rebuilding Oncology Around the Patient artwork

Cancer Doesn't Stop at 5 PM: Rebuilding Oncology Around the Patient

Cancer care has made extraordinary clinical progress, but too many patients still fall through the cracks once they leave the clinic. In this episode of Boombostic Health, Bradley Bostic sits down with Dr. Justin Bekelman, oncologist, co-founder, and CEO of Daymark Health, to discuss how value-based oncology can create a better care model for patients, providers, and health plans. After more than two decades at Penn Medicine, Dr. Bekelman left to build Daymark Health, a company that supports patients receiving active cancer treatment through in-home and virtual care. Daymark partners with health plans and works alongside each patient's oncology team to address clinical, behavioral, and social needs when and where they arise. The conversation explores why fee-for-service often fails to support the full cancer journey, why oncology is especially suited for value-based care, and why better care requires more than coordination. It requires the ability to act. As Dr. Bekelman explains, "Cancer doesn't stop at five o'clock." Timestamps 00:00 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI] Welcome and personal connection to cancer prevention 03:01 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=181s] Dr. Bekelman's background and why patients still fall through the cracks 05:30 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=330s] What value-based care means in oncology 07:28 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=448s] Why supportive cancer care is under-reimbursed in fee-for-service 09:17 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=557s] How Daymark Health partners with health plans 10:32 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=632s] Supporting patients at home, virtually, and at no additional cost 12:44 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=764s] Episodic capitation, shared savings, and oncology economics 15:18 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=918s] Why cancer care is well suited for value-based models 17:24 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=1044s] Daymark as the "connective tissue" around the oncologist 20:34 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=1234s] Why coordination alone is not enough 23:01 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=1381s] Daymark's work with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Rhode Island 24:08 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=1448s] Steven's story and why cancer does not stop at 5 PM 27:37 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=1657s] Patient experience, home visits, and measurable results 30:19 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccNxEOeqPPI&t=1819s] Why this model could become the standard for cancer care In this episode: * Why cancer patients need support beyond the clinic * How value-based care is being applied to oncology * Why Daymark works through health plan partnerships * The difference between care coordination and clinical action * How in-home care can help prevent avoidable complications * Why behavioral health and social support matter in cancer treatment * How better patient support can reduce total cost of care * Why oncology may be one of the next major frontiers for value-based care

26 de may de 202632 min
episode Diagnostics at the Center: Turning Real-World Data Into Better Care artwork

Diagnostics at the Center: Turning Real-World Data Into Better Care

Diagnostics are no longer just about confirming what is wrong. They are becoming one of the most powerful tools for predicting what comes next. In this episode of Boombostic Health, Bradley Bostic leads a timely conversation with healthcare and diagnostics leaders on how real-world patient data, genomics, AI, and embedded research models are changing the way healthcare systems identify risk, close care gaps, and deliver more personalized care. The discussion moves beyond the promise of innovation and into the practical realities of adoption. How do we turn routine care into continuous learning? How do we prove the value of advanced diagnostics to payers? How do we expand access without creating new forms of bias? And how do we help patients and providers trust the data, the science, and the recommendations that follow? From home-based testing and consumer-driven care to reimbursement, incidental findings, data diversity, and health economics, this episode explores what it will take to move diagnostics from the edge of healthcare innovation into the center of everyday clinical decision-making. What You'll Learn * How diagnostics are shifting from episodic testing to continuous healthcare intelligence * Why real-world data is essential to predicting outcomes and improving care pathways * How genomics and AI can support more personalized, proactive care * What it takes to build the business case for diagnostic innovation * Why reimbursement models must evolve to keep pace with scientific progress * How embedded research can make routine care more evidence-driven * Why patient trust, education, and transparency are critical to adoption * How data diversity can help reduce bias and improve care for underserved populations Why This Conversation Matters Healthcare does not have a data shortage. It has an actionability problem. The future of diagnostics will depend on the ability to connect data to decisions, research to routine care, and innovation to measurable impact. This conversation makes the case for diagnostics as a strategic foundation for better care, smarter economics, and more equitable outcomes. Key Moments 00:00 — Why diagnostics are becoming central to healthcare innovation 02:38 — Embedding research into routine care 04:17 — Using data to predict health outcomes 06:10 — Making the case for payer coverage and cost savings 09:58 — Bringing diagnostic models into clinical workflows 11:14 — The rise of home-based and consumer-driven testing 14:23 — Managing incidental findings responsibly 17:34 — Connecting diagnostics to health economics 24:07 — Addressing disparities, access, and data bias 27:33 — Moving from research to routine clinical care 32:39 — Empowering patients through health technology Featured Topics Real-world evidence Personalized medicine Genomics and AI Diagnostic innovation At-home testing Reimbursement and payer coverage Health economics Data diversity and bias Patient engagement Clinical workflow integration Resources hc1 [https://hc1.com/] uMed [https://www.umed.io/about-us] Simple HealthKit [https://www.simplehealthkit.com/about] Closing Thought The next era of healthcare will not be defined by more testing alone. It will be defined by whether diagnostics can help turn real-world data into earlier action, better decisions, and measurable improvements in care.

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episode The Hospital Room That Watches Over Patients (Without Replacing Nurses) artwork

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12 de may de 202634 min
episode AI Is Rewriting Diagnostics - Here's What's Coming Next artwork

AI Is Rewriting Diagnostics - Here's What's Coming Next

Transforming Diagnostics: Unlocking Value in the Future of Healthcare In this episode of Boombostic Health, Bradley Bostic sits down with Robert Michel, founder of Executive War College and editor-in-chief of The Dark Report, for a wide-ranging conversation on the past, present, and future of laboratory diagnostics. From the origin story behind Executive War College to the rise of genomics, AI, remote monitoring, and personalized medicine, Robert shares why diagnostics are far more than a line item in healthcare spending. They are one of the most powerful levers for improving outcomes, reducing cost, and helping health systems act earlier. The conversation explores how lab data can move from being underused information to a strategic asset that supports better decisions across maternal health, chronic disease, medication optimization, aging in place, and preventive care. In this episode Bradley and Robert discuss: * Why the name Executive War College reflects the strategic decisions lab leaders face * How genomics has evolved from early PCR testing to affordable whole-genome sequencing * Why diagnostics are central to early detection, patient monitoring, and better outcomes * How proactive lab-driven interventions can reduce avoidable healthcare costs * Why lab services are often viewed as a cost center despite their impact on total medical spend * How labs can become strategic partners by turning data into actionable insight * The role AI may play in faster, more precise diagnostic decision-making * How wearables, remote monitoring, robotics, and personalized health data could reshape care * Why nutrition, microbiome, lifestyle, and prevention are becoming harder to separate from healthcare * What longevity research and Blue Zones can teach us about healthspan * Why early adopters and innovation communities matter in advancing healthcare transformation Key takeaways Diagnostics are no longer just about test results. They are becoming a strategic intelligence layer for healthcare. Lab data has the potential to help health systems identify risk earlier, intervene sooner, and reduce avoidable cost. The future of healthcare will be shaped by the convergence of diagnostics, AI, remote monitoring, personalized medicine, and more proactive care models. Timestamps 00:00 — Why "Executive War College" became the name and what it signals about lab leadership 02:09 — The evolution of genomics technology since 1995 04:49 — From genetic research to practical diagnostic applications 06:14 — Unlocking the value of lab data for outcomes and cost savings 09:57 — How proactive lab testing can improve maternal and neonatal health 12:56 — Addressing anemia, medication optimization, and other preventable gaps 16:54 — The future of diagnostics, AI, and rapid medical insight 17:43 — Biometric wearables, holistic health, and extending healthspan 20:08 — Nutrition, microbiome, and the shift toward preventive care 25:38 — Lessons from Blue Zones on diet, longevity, and lifestyle 27:24 — Robotics, AI, and aging-in-place care models 32:02 — The future of pharmaceuticals, longevity, and space-age innovation 33:08 — Why innovation communities and early adopters drive progress

5 de may de 202635 min