The Digital Healthcare Innovation Summit (DHIS) is back in full force, and its participants have a lot to share after two years of Covid-forced changes in healthcare and the ever-flowing investment into this field. The pandemic has accelerated various aspects of healthcare, including virtual/hybrid primary and specialty care, but it has also further exposed health inequity and the need for further change. These lingering issues are the essence of DHIS and the reason our audience wants to gather again. Join other leading innovators, investors, payers, providers and policymakers as we continue to help revolutionize healthcare by creating an intimate atmosphere for sharing insights and networking that helps drive innovation!
Tuesday, June 7
Wednesday, June 8
HealthTech & Digital Health by the Numbers
This overview presentation will share quantitative and qualitative perspectives on the Digital Health market landscape – private capital raising, IPOs & public market performance, and M&A activity.
KEYNOTE FIRESIDE CHAT: The Role of Healthcare in Equity
The disparities that the COVID pandemic revealed and worsened in our patient population, as well as our nation’s overdue reckoning on race, led Boston Medical Center to look at the role of healthcare in equity. In November 2021, BMC launched the Health Equity Accelerator to focus on closing the most pervasive health care gaps among people of different races and ethnicities.
Innovation in Medicaid with a Focus on Reducing Health Inequity
As the safety net covering healthcare for more than 80 million of the most vulnerable Americans, including 42% of all births nationwide, Medicaid has a unique responsibility for understanding the drivers of health inequity and exploring unique and innovative solutions to address them. Hear entrepreneurs and investors on the front lines of innovation talk about where they’re focusing to develop new strategies and technologies that will improve health equity for all.
Industry executives will share key insights into building high growth digital health companies aimed at improving patient experience and outcomes and human performance, including the importance of managing rapid growth, appropriate and effective use of data, and aligning mission, brand and culture, and more.
Leveraging Data & Digitization to Modernize Clinical Trials
2021 was a record funding year for digital health and specifically for digital health companies selling into the biopharma industry. The 21st Century Cures Act and the COVID-19 pandemic have fundamentally altered how industry participants utilize electronic data to conduct clinical trials. The prior paper-based processes that defined the industry are rapidly being modernized and our panelists, covering various viewpoints (including regulatory/government, start-up, investors/strategics), will discuss the present and future state of clinical trials.
KEYNOTE FIRESIDE CHAT: Interview with Digital Healthcare Innovator Award Recipient
Almost 20 years ago, before digital health was even a term, Rushika Fernandopulle started a small innovative practice called Renaissance Health outside Boston that was letting patients see their entire medical record, self schedule visits, and communicate. He will discuss the evolution of this work over the subsequent years into Iora Health and now One Medical, and where the field may be going.
Opportunities for Improvements in Behavioral Health during the Endemic
Further Addressing Underserved Healthcare Areas
America has long been known as the "Land of Plenty," filled with bountiful opportunities, wealth, and success...all within arm's reach. However, too many individuals within our communities nationwide lack a very basic need: access to quality healthcare that is convenient and affordable. Join us to hear from today’s healthcare leaders who recognize that need and feel the responsibility to change the trajectory of health for underserved communities. (e.g. Rural Medicine, Pediatrics)
Navigating the Huge Demand for Hiring Clinicians/Clinical Talent
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the strain on the clinical workforce, while the widespread use of telehealth and new venture-backed care delivery models offer clinicians more options than ever before. This panel will discuss the complex dynamics around clinician staffing and provide perspectives from both the demand and supply side of the staffing equation to inform a discussion about the future of healthcare’s most critical assets.
Successes and Limitations of Value-Based Care – Are We Really Moving the Needle?