The Beat

HLTH

The Beat, powered by HLTH, is a weekly interview series dedicated to paving a better path forward for the future of health. Each week a variety of hosts bring you authentic conversations with prominent thought leaders. Through these interviews with people at the forefront of change in healthcare, we hope to spark new ideas and encourage new collaborations among listeners.

  1. How Limina Is Making Sensitive Health Data Safe for AI

    5 GG FA

    How Limina Is Making Sensitive Health Data Safe for AI

    In this episode, host Sandy Vance sits down with Patricia Thaine, co-founder and chair of Limina (formerly known as Private AI), for a fascinating conversation about one of the most underappreciated bottlenecks in healthcare AI adoption: the privacy of unstructured data.  With a background in natural language processing and privacy research, Patricia built the company from the ground up to solve a problem most organizations did not even know they had. Today, her platform helps health systems, research organizations, and payers de-identify everything from clinical notes to ambient listening data so they can train models, share data for research, and move their AI initiatives forward without putting patient privacy at risk.  If your AI initiative is stalled because of privacy concerns, this episode is exactly what you need to hear. In this episode, they talk about: 80 to 90% of healthcare data is unstructured, and most organizations have no idea what sensitive information is hiding in it Cloud providers require you to send your data outside your environment, and that alone is a dealbreaker for many health systems De-identification is not just about removing names; quasi-identifiers like age ranges, locations, and diagnoses all factor into re-identification risk The goal is to keep re-identification risk below 0.04%, not just strip out obvious fields Training AI models on real PHI creates a memorization problem where the model can regurgitate patient information in production Providence Health has used Limina since the early days to train patient and physician-facing chatbots safely A mature privacy-to-AI operating model requires statisticians, product teams, IT, governance, and legal all at the table LIMINA rebranded from Private AI because the old name kept attracting requests for on-premise LLMs, which is not what they do A Little About Patricia: Patricia Thaine is the Co-Founder & Chairwoman of Private AI, a Microsoft-backed startup that raised their Series A led by the BDC. Private AI won the Privacy Innovation Award at PICCASO 2024, was named a 2023 Technology Pioneer by the World Economic Forum, and was a Gartner Cool Vendor. Patricia is also the host of The Data Frontier podcast and was on Maclean’s magazine Power List 2024 for being one of the top 100 Canadians shaping the country.

    18 min
  2. How Vital Is Using AI to Keep Patients Informed, Safe, and Loyal

    23 APR

    How Vital Is Using AI to Keep Patients Informed, Safe, and Loyal

    In this episode, host Sandy Vance sits down with Aaron Patzer, the founder & CEO of Vital.io, for one of the most energizing and candid conversations in the series. Aaron built Mint.com, saved consumers $9 billion in bank fees, and then turned his attention to one of the most anxiety-inducing experiences a person can have: sitting in an emergency room not knowing what is happening.  Vital now guides 7 million patients through ER, inpatient, and urgent care visits in real time at hundreds of health systems, including Ascension, CommonSpirit, Emory, and MedStar. Aaron also shares his work on the AI Care Standard, a growing coalition of health systems and patient advocates building a framework to evaluate AI tools before they go anywhere near a patient. This one is packed with insight, sharp opinions, and genuinely important ideas. In this episode, they talk about: Vital sits on top of the EHR and guides patients through their ER or inpatient visit in real time, in plain language 65 to 70% of patients actively use Vital during their visit, one of the highest adoption rates in health tech Vital reduces leave without being seen rates by 35 to 50%, and those walkouts are worth $2,000 each, plus readmission penalties Health systems using Vital have seen up to 48 million dollars in additional top-line revenue across two hospitals Vital improves Press Ganey and HCAHPS scores by about 10 points and increases system retention by 30% Before showing any patient their doctor's notes, Vital runs 14 separate safety checks, including flags for new cancer diagnoses, pregnancy loss, and self-harm The AI Care Standard is a free, dynamic evaluation framework at aicarestandard.com that grades AI tools across 10 patient safety principles Most consumer-facing AI tools like ChatGPT cite Reddit and pop health blogs, not peer-reviewed clinical sources, and that is a patient safety problem A Little About Aaron: Aaron Patzer is Founder & CEO of Vital.io (AI-powered patient experience at 100+ hospitals), Mint.com (25m users), and five other startups. He served as Head of Product Innovation and an officer at Intuit. If you've used TurboTax, Quicken, Mint, or QuickBooks, you and 200M other people have used software he's designed. Fortune Magazine named Aaron one of the Top 40 Executives Under 40, has won 5 product design awards, and done over 600 press interviews, at one time appearing as a regular on CNBC, and writing a column for Parade Magazine. He is an angel investor in dozens of startups, including Carbon Health, Radix (now Relatient), HealthTap, and more. He holds degrees in electrical engineering & computer science from Duke, with PhD work at Princeton, and 10 patents as lead inventor, all in algorithms

    25 min
  3. How DirectTrust Is Vetting Health Apps, Accrediting AI, and Gaps HIPAA Didn't Address

    22 APR

    How DirectTrust Is Vetting Health Apps, Accrediting AI, and Gaps HIPAA Didn't Address

    In this episode, host Sandy Vance welcomes back Kathryn Ayers Wickenhauser, Chief Strategy Officer at DirectTrust, for her third time on the show. This time the conversation goes deeper than ever, covering three major developments: DirectTrust's role in vetting apps for the new CMS Medicare App Library, the launch of a groundbreaking AI accreditation program built on the NIST AI Risk Management Framework, and the urgent but widely misunderstood gap in HIPAA coverage that leaves millions of consumers thinking their health data is protected when it really isn’t. If you work anywhere in the health tech ecosystem, this episode is essential listening. In this episode, they talk about: HIPAA only covers covered entities and business associates, meaning most consumer health apps have little obligation to protect your data The CMS Medicare App Library is a vetted directory of trusted digital health apps, and DirectTrust is helping validate which apps earn a spot in it When CMS moves, the rest of the industry follows, making this app library a trust signal far beyond Medicare beneficiaries DirectTrust's AI accreditation program is built on the NIST AI Risk Management Framework and assessed by independent third-party reviewers The program will offer two tiers: a foundational version for organizations early in their AI journey and a comprehensive version for those with greater maturity The four pillars of the AI accreditation program are governance, management, mapping, and measurement AI is unlike any other technology implementation because it touches every aspect of an organization simultaneously DirectTrust's annual conference is October 20th and 21st in Kansas City at the Oracle Innovations Campus A Little About Kathryn: Kathryn Ayers Wickenhauser, MBA, FACHDM, CHPC, is Chief Strategy Officer at DirectTrust®, the national non-profit alliance and accreditor building trust in healthcare technology and secure information exchange. With nearly two decades of advancing interoperability, identity, privacy, and technical trust, she leads community engagement, communications, and strategic partnerships, shaping national standards and policy. Kathryn is a recognized thought leader featured in outlets like Healthcare IT Today and Health IT Answers, and under her leadership, DirectTrust has earned multiple HITMC awards, including Marketing Team of the Year in 2025. She has been named among the Top 50 Women Chief Strategy Officers and Becker’s 100 Women in Health IT to Know.

    20 min
  4. How Vouched Is Helping Telehealth Providers Verify Patients Without Losing Them

    21 APR

    How Vouched Is Helping Telehealth Providers Verify Patients Without Losing Them

    In this episode, host Sandy Vance chats with Matthew Stern, the CEO at MyStart Health, and Nick Mortek, Strategic Consultant at Vouched. They have a practical and energizing conversation about one of the most underestimated problems in telehealth: patient identity verification. Matt built MyStart Health to help patients access GLP-1 medications and other telehealth services, only to discover that a clunky ID upload process was costing him nearly 28% of his patients before they ever got started. Nick and the Vouched team solved that problem in under a month and delivered a 40% net impact to the business. If you are building or running a telehealth product and wondering why your funnel is leaking, this episode has the answer. Telehealth funnels bleed revenue at identity verification. Telehealth provider MyStart Health boosted patient intake through passive identity checks with Vouched identity verification, keeping high-intent buyers on their platform. In this episode, they talk about: Up to 40 to 50% of telehealth patients drop out of the funnel at the ID upload step alone Vouched runs passive identity verification through 3,000 data providers in under 400 milliseconds MyStart Health saw a 20% increase in front-end conversion and a 20% improvement in backend verification after implementing Vouched The total impact was a 40% net swing to the bottom line in the first month Implementation can take as little as a few days for agile teams and no more than two weeks for larger organizations Patients are more comfortable with low-friction passive verification than with uploading sensitive documents to an unknown system Trust is the real product in telehealth, and every touchpoint in the patient journey either builds it or destroys it The future of healthcare is a personalized, data-rich hub connecting blood work, DNA, connected devices, and medications into one patient experience A Little About Matt and Nick: Matthew Stern is the CEO and founder of MyStart Health, a rapidly growing telehealth company focused on improving patient access, engagement, and long-term health outcomes. A seasoned entrepreneur with over 20 years of experience building and scaling businesses across multiple industries, Matthew brings deep expertise in customer acquisition, brand growth, and digital marketing. At MyStart Health, he is pioneering a more personalized, data-driven healthcare experience—leveraging technology, telehealth, and emerging treatments to help patients take greater control of their health and longevity. Nick Mortek is a Strategic Consultant at Vouched, where he helps healthcare and digital health organizations implement secure, low-friction identity verification solutions. With a background rooted in financial services and identity technology, Nick specializes in helping companies streamline patient onboarding, reduce fraud, and improve conversion across digital experiences. At Vouched, he works closely with founders and product teams to build trust-driven, HIPAA-compliant verification systems that enhance both security and user experience in the evolving telehealth landscape.

    22 min
  5. From Data Chaos to Data Confidence in Healthcare

    15 APR

    From Data Chaos to Data Confidence in Healthcare

    Healthcare has more data than any industry in the world—but without trust in that data, it’s almost useless. In this episode, Clay Ritchey, Chief Executive Officer of Verato, breaks down why identity is the missing foundation behind interoperability, AI, and better patient experiences. From fragmented records to failed digital transformation promises, Clay shares how solving “who is who” unlocks everything from improved clinical outcomes to lower costs—and why now is the moment healthcare can finally get it right. In this episode, they talk about: Why healthcare generates massive amounts of data but struggles to use it effectively The core problem: lack of trust in data due to poor identity resolution What it means when one patient exists as 10 different records across systems How fragmented identity impacts patient experience and clinical outcomes The connection between clean data and successful AI adoption Why consumers are driving change with higher expectations for digital experiences The role of identity in enabling true interoperability across organizations How Verato creates a single longitudinal view of patients across thousands of data sources The impact of identity on reducing duplicate tests, costs, and delays in care Why this moment—AI + regulation + consumer demand—is a tipping point for healthcare A Little About Clay: Clay Ritchey is the Chief Executive Officer of Verato. Clay brings more than 20 years of experience driving growth and innovation in market-leading healthcare technology organizations to Verato. As CEO, Clay is passionate about working with healthcare, life science, and government organizations across the care continuum to transform the way that consumers and patients engage with them to build deeper relationships resulting in improved outcomes and sustainable growth for our customers.

    19 min
  6. Turning Healthcare AI from Vision to Verified Impact with Pegasus One

    13 APR

    Turning Healthcare AI from Vision to Verified Impact with Pegasus One

    What does it really take to get a healthcare AI product past the proof-of-concept stage and into production? In this episode of the AI at ViVE series on the BEAT Podcast, host Sandy Vance sits down with Tushar Puri, CEO of Pegasus One, and Sebastian Ouslis, Co-Founder of ChartR Health, to find out. Together, they pull back the curtain on how ChartR is building an autonomous analytics platform that lets hospitals interrogate their own data across silos in real time, and how Pegasus One's SONG framework is the foundation making it possible. From managing agent drift to the very real stakes of lagging data in sepsis care, this conversation is a masterclass in building healthcare AI that can actually go from pie-in-the-sky to impact you can quantify.  In this episode, they talk about: Why most healthcare AI projects never reach production The real meaning behind the SONG framework How data silos slow down hospital decision-making Turning weeks of analysis into minutes with AI The hidden cost of poor workflow integration Why governance must be built in from day one The importance of designing for real-world healthcare systems How ChartR enables continuous analytics across hospital data What agent drift is and why it matters long term The role of partnerships in building scalable AI products A Little About Tushar and Sebastian: Tushar Puri is the Founder and CEO of Pegasus One, where he helps organizations build scalable AI and software products that actually make it to production. With more than 15 years in product engineering, he specializes in bridging the gap between technical innovation and real-world implementation, especially in healthcare. Sebastian Ouslis  is the Co-Founder of ChartR, an AI-driven healthcare analytics platform focused on turning complex clinical data into real-time insights. His work centers on using AI to help hospitals continuously learn, adapt, and improve patient outcomes.

    25 min
  7. 10 APR

    Reinventing Blood Testing for Better Patient Experience with Web Golinkin, President at Babson Diagnostics

    What if the biggest barrier to better healthcare outcomes is… the blood draw itself? In this episode, Web Golinkin, President at Babson Diagnostics, discusses how his company is reinventing blood testing with a patient-friendly, fingertip-based system. He explains why traditional venipuncture drives anxiety and non-adherence, and how BetterWay improves both experience and outcomes. He also shares how automation and simplified workflows reduce operational burden and expand access points for care. Finally, he explores why patient experience is becoming the key competitive differentiator in ambulatory healthcare. Tune in to learn how rethinking a decades-old process could unlock better care, better business, and better patient engagement. About Web Golinkin: Web Golinkin has focused his career on making health information and care more accessible and affordable. He has done this as CEO of five companies over the past 35 years, including three he co-founded. These companies include the largest cable TV network devoted to health (America’s Health Network), one of the nation’s largest operators of retail-based clinics (RediClinic), a leading population health management company (Health Dialog), and one of the nation’s largest operators of urgent care clinics (FastMed). Web also co- founded the Convenient Care Association and served as its Chair for many years. He has been widely covered in the national media and has spoken at numerous healthcare conferences. Things You’ll Learn: Blood testing drives around 70% of medical decisions but has not fundamentally changed in decades. About one-third of patients skip testing due to discomfort or inconvenience. BetterWay uses a fingerstick method and requires 90% less blood. The system eliminates the need for a phlebotomist, enabling more flexible staffing. Automated sample preparation reduces errors and manual workload. The approach is backed by extensive validation, including IRB studies and peer-reviewed data. With an NPS of 79, compared to negative industry scores, it delivers a significantly better patient experience while supporting ambulatory growth, reducing leakage, and improving chronic disease management. Resources: Connect with and follow Web Golinkin on LinkedIn, visit his website, or reach out via email. Follow Babson Diagnostics on LinkedIn and explore their website. Learn more about BetterWay here.

    21 min
  8. 10 APR

    Modernizing Healthcare Infrastructure with AI-Native Networking with Matt Roberts, Healthcare Business Lead at Hewlett Packard Enterprise

    The network is no longer just a hidden utility. It is becoming an intelligent engine for safer, smarter healthcare operations. In this episode, Matt Roberts, Healthcare Business Lead at Hewlett Packard Enterprise, discusses how AI-native networking is changing the role of infrastructure in healthcare. He explains why traditional networks have created operational blind spots, how self-driving network capabilities can improve user experience and security, and why modernizing infrastructure is no longer just about keeping systems running. Matt also shares how the Juniper acquisition expands HPE’s ability to support healthcare providers across data center networking, AI-ready environments, and built-in security, while also opening new possibilities for asset tracking, wayfinding, staff safety, and more proactive IT operations. Tune in to learn how smarter networking could help healthcare organizations modernize infrastructure without compromising care delivery. About Matt Roberts: Matt Roberts is a healthcare industry leader focused on helping provider, payer, and life sciences organizations modernize their networking infrastructure to support better user and operator experiences. His background spans healthcare IT, business development, sales strategy, and digital transformation, with a strong emphasis on making the network a more intelligent and proactive part of healthcare operations. Before his current role, Matt served in healthcare leadership positions at Juniper Networks, Brocade, and Cerner, where he helped shape go-to-market strategies, lead healthcare business development, support large-scale implementations, and build strategic partner ecosystems across the industry. His work has consistently centered on helping healthcare organizations reduce complexity while improving performance, security, and infrastructure readiness. Things You’ll Learn: AI-native networking can help remove blind spots and make the network more proactive, secure, and easier to operate.  The cost of inaction can be just as risky as the fear of disrupting care during modernization efforts.  Built-in security and policy-driven infrastructure are becoming essential as healthcare organizations prepare for more digital and AI-powered environments.  Modern networks can support far more than connectivity, including wayfinding, asset tracking, and staff safety use cases.  User experience is becoming a central metric for evaluating network performance and value.  Partner ecosystems remain critical for helping healthcare organizations navigate infrastructure and security transformation. Digital twins and virtual network assistants are likely to play a growing role in future IT operating models. Resources: Connect with and follow Matt Roberts on LinkedIn. Learn more about Hewlett Packard Enterprise.

    9 min

Descrizione

The Beat, powered by HLTH, is a weekly interview series dedicated to paving a better path forward for the future of health. Each week a variety of hosts bring you authentic conversations with prominent thought leaders. Through these interviews with people at the forefront of change in healthcare, we hope to spark new ideas and encourage new collaborations among listeners.

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