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HMB2010

09/30/14 1:25 PM

#4598 RE: wilma6311 #4586

"Many routes" as in last paragraph. IMO, KEYO will be a part of the solution by Dr Soon Shiong.


Big business CEOs issue call to action for fixing US healthcare
September 30, 2014 | Government Health IT Staff
POSTED IN: Population Health
Chief executives of several major U.S. corporations came together under the auspice of the Bipartisan Policy Center to work toward the betterment of health and wellness of individual and communities, as well as the overall U.S. healthcare system itself.

“Improving the health of the nation, and the quality and cost of health care, is imperative if the United States is to compete in the global marketplace,” the CEO Council wrote in BPC’s report from the meeting.
“The history of U.S. business is steeped in innovation, ingenuity, insight, and leadership.”

To that end, the resulting report, "Building Better Health: Innovative Strategies from America’s Business Leaders," outlined ways companies are trying to improve health and well-being as well as the quality, cost, and patient experience of care.

Within the report, the BPC’s CEO Council issued a three-pronged call to action for America’s employers focusing on improving different areas:

Health and wellness of individuals: The CEOs contend that companies should institute programs that advance nutrition and physical activity, encourage tobacco cessation, promote emotional and behavioral health, as well as condition management, including chorionic diseases.
The health of communities: Employers should start by reviewing any and all available metrics, collaborating with public- and private-sector leaders to improve health behaviors including nutrition and physical activity, clinical care with a focus on access to care and prevention, as well as addressing the socio-economic factors known to improve communities’ health, such as education, housing, access to nutritional foods and childhood poverty.
U.S. healthcare system: To fix the broader healthcare system, the CEOs explained, companies should embrace value-based purchasing to promote delivery system innovations, report meaningful performance data, support strong patient-doctor relationships and drive patient engagement to ultimately fuel more informed decision making.
The CEO Council hopes that “hundreds of companies” will take up its call to arms to institute similar programs, measure their progress and even publicly share what works and what does not.

BPC CEO Council members include Aetna head Mark Bertolini, Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, Blue Cross and Blue Shield CEO Scott Serota, Coca-Cola chief Muhtar Kent, Johnson & Johnson CEO Alex Gorsky, McKinsey & Company managing director Dominic Barton, NantHealth CEO Patrick Soon-Shiong, MD, Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam and Walgreeen chief Gregory Wasson.

"Many of us plan to engage in pilots that will enable us to gauge the scalability of strategies shown to be effective in our individual companies," the BPC report explained. "From the range and variety of initiatives, it is clear there is no single, one-size-fits-all solution. Rather, our efforts show that there are many routes to our destination.”







govhealthit.com
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Chachagirl

09/30/14 1:26 PM

#4599 RE: wilma6311 #4586

Operation Shell Expel started in 2012 and culminated in suspensions in February 2014. After a two year investigative process for all shells, KEYO made it through no problem. The SEC and FBI were involved in this operation. Operations are conducted with a goal in mind. They reached their goal in February 2014.

Here is the link:

http://www.sec.gov/News/PressRelease/Detail/PressRelease/1370540714936#.VCrkZaZHbCQ

I think I'll go with the SEC and FBI's conclusions on this one.

$KEYO