This transcription is provided by artificial intelligence. We believe in technology but understand that even the smartest robots can sometimes get speech recognition wrong.
interview in action from the:Special thanks to our sponsors, Quantum Health, Gordian, Dr. First, CDW, Gozeo Health, Artisite, and Zscaler. You can check them out on our website, thisweekhealth. com. Now, onto our interview
, I'm drex and we're at HIMSS:Steven from Renown. Chief Analytics Officer, Chief Technology Officer, and Chief Security Officer. It's interesting that you guys are here together at the same time.
Tell me a little bit about that. Well, we've got a
lot of key initiatives this year that we're working on together moving to our multi cloud environment with AWS and Azure. So, we've really been our theme and
talking in the halls about me building the bucket
and him putting in the water. in that. So, we're really making sure that, we're building a sustainable
infrastructure and
securing it. Yeah, no, no leaking water. No spilled water, right? That's right. Tell me more about the water. Sure.
So, health systems and provider organizations are becoming more analytically mature, and we
have to speed along that evolution of analytic maturity, especially with the adoption of
artificial intelligence and machine learning. And so as we do a lot more integrations with third parties, but we're also
starting to do in house development from artificial intelligence, which is changing the course of how
we
conduct clinical medicine. and even administrative operations. And you cannot do that without having a secure and sound cybersecurity strategy. And the information technology strategy
just to be able to network and use all that data
at
volume. Yeah, one of the other things that we were talking
about earlier was governance. Say a few words about governance
Sure. So, critically important, a data and analytics governance program.
And then with that, a data literacy program. In order to start training both your clinical workforce and administrative workforce and what's to come down the road, we need to make sure that we can upskill them, but then also provide the requisite knowledge so that, they're prepared for a world that's going to
include artificial intelligence on almost a day to day
basis within the next three
to five years.
It is amazing. There's a lot of stuff that you're going
to
see on the floor year. Giant HIMSS
partner vendor. floor. What are you excited about maybe looking for while you're
out there?
We've got a lot of meetings scheduled, so we're really looking
at components and pieces that fit into that bucket.
So we're big initiative on DLP this year, of course, and then how we're going to secure these different components in the cloud as we're moving into AWS and Azure. But also just It's looking at kind of
Bad guys are using AI. as we saw, so really seeing if there's any cool new technologies We know there'll never be a silver bullet for anything, but just seeing if there's anything that could help
integrate into our, multi
year strategy. We're looking at things from, The network to our data warehouse to 5G,
to
A lot of that. So really having some of those discussions to see where it fits into what we're doing here.
Interesting. So, same
question for you. You're going to, the floor, you're walking around, you said
it's your fifth HIMSS yes. a lot of interesting stuff out there. What are you looking for?
Sure. So, I'm really going to be looking at how can we make
technology in different environments talk with each other more efficiently? So, as Stephen mentioned, we're actually in a multi cloud strategy. We have both cloud and IoT. AWS that runs our digital engagement and telephony applications, And then Microsoft
Azure, which is our enterprise data
warehouse. But then within the Azure space is where we're going to do all of our AI
development with full computational power. I need to understand how all that will talk to each other and then even talk to the EHR
from Epic. And so going out to the floor allows me to talk with executives and developers in each of those spaces to come up with a
really clean strategy of how do provider organizations run this level of infrastructure for the health system of the future.
Got it.
Hey, thanks for your time. I'm going to ask you one more
question. It's the bonus round question.
If you could have any
fictional character as a life coach,
who would it be and why?
I would probably do
Batman. Okay, why?
Being the
CISO and CTO. Keeping that day job, wearing
two hats on, how you can run a
business, operationally and Right.
Keep the bad guys out at
night, so. Oh, I love
that. Batman.
Justin. For me, it's going to be Tony Stark and Iron Man. Since I'm an analytics guy and I'm also an AI developer,
he created Jarvis and Iron Man, which he can talk to
as an assistant that actually helps him in a day to day basis. That's exactly what I would like in
my day to day. That's what you're trying to build for yourself. That's right. It's what you're trying to build for the whole organization. What a great life coach. Yeah, and secure a little. definitely. Tony Stark and
Batman.
I love it. Thanks for your time today. I appreciate it. Thanks. Thank you. All right.
(Transition) β π π π β
(Interview 2) βhere
we are from HIMSS:and we are set up in the Carasoft booth and I'm talking with Perry Welch with Airwaves.
I'm looking forward to the conversation. So, tell me a little bit about Airwaves and what you
guys do in healthcare. What's the problem
you're solving?
Yeah, so we primarily solve for in building connectivity. Okay. And that can mean a lot of things for us and for our clients. We're solving for cell phone coverage, indoors. So we're AT&
AT&
T, Verizon, T Mobile.
Oh, so you're agnostic, independent. Bring any of the carriers
together. Yeah, the carriers of need, these are neutral host, networks, cellular networks. and not every hospital has the need to enhance them. Some have a need
for some carriers and not others. We solve all that
there about.
This was a pretty gnarly problem for
us. And as anyone knows, these hospitals have sort of grown over the years. This building, and then you have these areas that have because of. Imaging and other things. We've built these walls in there that
signal itself.
They are large
structures that have been added on to over the years. That
That signal has a difficult
difficult time penetrating just in general, and then once you're inside,
It's bouncing off of other things, So a lot of noise in the network is what we call it. our designs obviously solve for that.
make sure everybody can communicate.
each client, each building, it's a
little different. So do you come in and map those out and make each one a little, customized? Yeah, they're all
custom networks designed specifically for that venue or
asset or hospital. We come in and do RF testing
and show the data to the, healthcare team. And then we design for that. And the carriers approve that design. so it meets their needs.
in building cellular
feeds, and then the hospital. obviously.
hospital.
So are we saying cellular?
I was told to
say mobile.
Yeah, we say cellular.
It gets a little confusing. there's really large, several Wi Fi networks within these facilities that are really important to the care that they provide and the business that they
do. We try to separate and delineate and say these are cellular networks. Okay.
It used to be a
nice to have. Hey, we provide that
reception within there. But now so many of the physicians
need access for the various things they're doing remotely. And not only
that we now have some mission critical applications that are running
across the mobile networks. Yeah,
you're right. I mean,
we're
in 84 hospitals today and the number one reason for us to go in and solve cellular connectivity. is clinician or physician satisfaction.
They're starting to do more with their individual devices. I just talked to their office. but look at files and patient files, and imaging. So, if it doesn't work, it's debilitating.
and They're unable to,
work. work. at the speed they want, and so it's becoming a really big need.
problem. How
How did the conversation start
with you? Like, when a, I mean, do you get the phone call from, you're probably not getting a phone call from the CIO, you're getting a phone call from somebody who's been told, you need to fix this
problem.
Yeah,
someone owns it, but they really don't want to
own it, that's I'm being honest. And that's where we come in, because we actually do want to
own it. for them. So, they call us and say, we're getting a lot of complaints.
We've got some experience of this, or we have
a partial system or an old end of life system. There's a lot of different variances. But we come in and assess what's going on. We do the testing. And then, this is a
managed service, so it's completely turnkey, we de risk it.
it's OPEX. They don't have to throw a bunch of capital at it to
solve for it overnight. And we do all the work, and we actually own it. so
we de risk it. for them. Which makes that person a hero, because they get to
find the magic
solution.
But these things take time.
They don't happen overnight.
I'm more curious. I'm going to ask a question I don't know the answer to.
Some of these health systems try to solve it themselves by like attaching something here and attaching something
there.
They do,
For the longest time honestly in this space that was the way to do it they would put their dollars at work and they would try to
Solve for it and design it and build it and someone in house would be responsible for the health of that
network
They just don't have the bandwidth today.
They're outsourcing a lot as you know
because of costs and these networks have gotten more and more difficult to
kind of design and manage. Dealing with the carriers is, not an easy task. so there's a lot that goes into this. So we're really looking for ways to
offload it. So
if somebody's sitting out there going, we have that
problem.
first of all, let's give them the URL. Because we're saying Airwaves and people might not know how that's spelled. Yeah, so,
Great question. Airwaves, A I R
W A V Z, as in zebra. Airwaves Solutions, based out of Charlotte. And
So how do They get into contact with you or someone?
from you? They can go to our website, airwaves. com. They can. Look us up there, they
can call us we'll get in touch with them really quickly.
So you guys don't have a booth?
We don't this is a really massive event.
easy to get
lost. You can get lost in here, your booth can get lost. There's a lot of great,
opportunity
here. But, we usually come here and meet with
clients, or prospective clients. I had a great dinner last night, and
They were talking about how debilitating it is when positions can't
connect. Great solution. Appreciate it. Thank you, Perry. Thank you,
Bill. Really appreciate
β π π Thanks
for listening to this Interview in Action episode. If you found value in this, share it with a peer. It's a great chance to discuss and in some cases start a mentoring relationship. One way you can support the show is to subscribe and leave us a rating. If you could do that, that would be great, and we want to give a big thanks to our partners who make this possible.
π Quantum Health, Gordian, Dr. First, CDW, Gozio Health, Artisite, and Zscaler. You can learn more about them by visiting thisweekhealth. com slash partners. Thanks for listening. That's all for now.