The wrapup line on ViVE

Digital health conference ViVE 2025 in Nashville wrapped on Wednesday–and surprisingly, there weren’t any bombshells. The well-attended Sunday-Wednesday conference in the Music City was abbreviated due to…snow. Even though the snow came in at a less-than-forecast 1.5 inches, many participants, concerned about flights, headed for home.

Observations from an (anonymous) attendee on HIStalk (News 2/19/25 and 2/21/25) were generally positive. He or she reported a filled conference, show floor, and meeting spaces at the Nashville Convention Center and much more. Highlights:

  • 10,000 attendees–2,500 more than ViVE 2023 in Nashville, and 2,000 more than 2024 in Los Angeles. 30% were C–level from 725 provider and payer organizations represented. Tuesday was the busiest day but only 2,000 remained on Wednesday due to the snow report.
  • The real action took place in 1:1 and group meetings, most pre-scheduled–over 5,000 were booked in ViVE’s meeting spaces and “cubes”. The Provider and Payer Connect Lounge was much larger with at least 170 small tables for meetings with vendors. Unsurprisingly, the Investor Connect Lounge was smaller. The impression this person had was that there were fewer investors attending this year.
  • The show floor had a lot of activity and was nearly filled. Effectively every vendor pitched their AI capabilities. By the last day, usually the lightest anyway but with the snow, one-third were unattended or packed up. 
  • Sparsely attended and in smaller spaces: the four primary presentation stages.

ViVE has become a place to meet, talk, initiate/advance the buyer journey, and move towards a ‘deal deal’. It’s also for scoping out the competition. Presentations and panels have become beside the point.

A third article in HIStalk’s Readers Write were additional reflections from Mike Silverstein, a managing partner at DRI (Direct Recruiter Inc.), recruiting in the health IT and life sciences area. AI tools “are really getting smart, borderline scary smart”–especially AI agents being trained on “serious healthcare data and workflows”. Vendors are layering their workflows on top of off-the-shelf AI agents and the speed to market is “blinding”. Investment is up too with less ‘hand to mouth.’

Announcements, heavy on the AI, made during ViVE and recapped in MedCity News: 

  • Data analytics firm MultiPlan rebranded as Claritev. The company provides payments and pricing solutions based on healthcare claims data. It will start trading on the NYSE under CTEV next Friday 28 February. Release
  • Abridge announced their $250 million Series D [TTA 21 Feb]
  • Automation platform developer Innovaccer announced seven new AI agents. These ‘agents of care’ automate administrative  tasks in scheduling, protocol intake, referrals, prior authorizations, care gap, HCC, and patient access. The agents are designed to support multiple care teams, including clinicians, care managers, risk coders, patient navigators, and call center agents. Release
  • Lumeris launched an AI tool, Tom, that automates tasks like care coordination, chronic disease management and patient outreach in clinical workflows for primary care providers. Release
  • UPMC Enterprises soft-launched a virtual environment, Ahavi, for developers to test and evaluate the efficacy of AI models against UPMC’s patient population data. UPMC Enterprises is the innovation and commercialization arm of the UPMC health system. More on this from HealthPoint and FierceHealthcare.
  • IKS Health launched a generative AI scribe, Scribble Now. It automates notes during the patient visit via automated speech recognition (ASR) and generative AI (GenAI). Release
  • Healthcare operations software developer Symplyr launched the Symplr Operations Platform (SOP). It unifies separate solutions onto a AWS cloud-based infrastructure to unify disparate solutions. Release

Short takes: VA seeks vendor to support EHR testing; Defense Health seeks ‘digital front door’ vendor; GAO recommendations to Oracle; Nonin partners with Finland’s Medixine; Lumeris gains $100M equity funding

VA needs support for testers of the Oracle Cerner EHR. Formally, this is called the Independent Enterprise Testing and Support Services Contract for the Department of Veterans Affairs. This will support the testing community overseen by the VA Electronic Health Record Modernization (EHRM) Integration Office Program which is part of the transition/deployment to the Oracle Cerner EHR. The IETSS covers project management, test and evaluation support, testing and technology support, test systems engineering and implementation support and test process, and quality management support. As is typical of Federal/VA contracts, it is a hybrid firm-fixed-price and time-and-materials contract with a 12-month base period of performance, four 12-month options, with an optional transition support period at the end of the period of performance. Responses are due by 3 May. ExecutiveGov, contract/application details on SAM.gov

The Defense Health Agency (DHA) wants to build a ‘digital front door’ for health services. Partnering with the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) at the Pentagon, what’s required is creation of a “technology-enabled framework” in a “new model for delivering care’ integrated with or replacing their current system and that “removes administrative, cognitive and repetitive burdens from the workforce.” This can be supplied by a single vendor or a team of vendors. The change areas are patient experience, provider-supported technology in the health ecosystem, and data management support. NextGov/FCW, DHA press release  The Digital Front Door Plus solicitation with details has a response due by 1 May

The US Government Accountability Office (GAO) has recommendations coming out of their ongoing user satisfaction study of MHS Genesis that impact the joint MHS/VA implementation at the MHS Genesis Lovell FHCC implementation. This went live in March. The recommendation for the VA side is that “the Secretary of Veterans Affairs should direct the Federal EHR Modernization Office to identify and address specific barriers to maximizing integration at the FHCC, consistent with the FHCC executive agreement.” GAO report summary

Shifting away from government work…

Finnish health tech company Medixine is expanding its partnership with Nonin’s med monitors. Medixine will be co-developing with Nonin Medical remote digital monitoring services for patient diagnoses of chronic conditions. The first usage combines the Medixine monitoring platform with Nonin’s pulse oximetry devices in areas such as sleep screening using overnight sleep oximetry. This can determine if patients need and qualify for supplemental oxygen or require further testing for sleep apnea in a single night’s test. Medixine release

 

Lumeris completes a $100 million equity capital raise. The 2 April round announced on Monday was led by lender Deerfield Management and new investor Endeavor Health. Also participating were existing investors Kleiner Perkins, Sandbox Industries, BlueCross BlueShield Venture Partners, and JDLinx (an investment company owned by John Doerr). Total funding now tops $325 million (Crunchbase). Lumeris describes itself as a care strategy, technology, and operations provider for large provider groups to manage all value-based populations, including Medicare Advantage, traditional Medicare, commercial, and Medicaid. The new funding will support expanded partnerships with health systems and physician groups to move them into value-based care models. Mobihealthnews, release

News roundup: FCC RPM/telehealth push, NHS EHR coding breach, unstructured data in geriatric diagnosis, Cerner-Lumeris, NHS funds social care, hospital RFID uses

[grow_thumb image=”https://telecareaware.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/Lasso.jpg” thumb_width=”125″ /]FCC backs post-discharge RPM plan. The “Connected Care Pilot Program” proposed by FCC commissioner Brendan Carr would provide $100 million for subsidies to hospitals or wireless providers running post-discharge remote monitoring programs for low-income and rural Americans such as those run by the University of Mississippi Medical Center. The goal is to lower readmissions and improve patient outcomes. The proposal still needs to be formalized so it would be 2019 at earliest. POLITICO Morning eHealth, Clarion-Ledger, Mobihealthnews

NHS Digital’s 150,000 patient data breach originated in a coding error in the SystmOne EHR used by GPs. Through the error by TPP, SystmOne did not recognize the “type 2 opt-out” for use of individual data in clinical research and planning purposes. This affected records after 31 March 2015. This breach also affects vendors which received the data, albeit unknowingly, but the duration of the breach makes it hard to put the genie back in the bottle, which NHS Digital would like to do. Inforisktoday, NHS Digital release

Unstructured data in EHRs more valuable than structured data in older adult patient health. A new study in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society compared the number of geriatric syndrome cases identified using structured claims and structured and unstructured EHR data, finding that the unstructured data was needed to properly identify geriatric syndrome. Over 18,000 patients’ unstructured EHR notes were analyzed using a natural language processing (NLP) algorithm.

Cerner buying a share in population health/value-based care management company Lumeris through purchasing $266 million in stock in Lumeris parent Essence Group Holdings. The angle is data crunching to improve outcomes for patients in Medicare Advantage and other value-based plans. Lumeris also operates Essence Healthcare, a Medicare Advantage plan with 65,000 beneficiaries in Missouri. Fierce Healthcare

NHS Digital awarding £240,000 for investigating social care transformation through technology. The Social Care Digital Innovation Programme in 12 councils will be managed by both NHS and the Local Government Association (LGA). Projects to be funded span from assistive technologies to predictive analytics. Six winners from the original group of 12 after three months will be awarded up to a further £80,000 each to design and implement their solutions. New Statesman

Curious about RFID in use in healthcare, other than in asset management, access, and log in? Contactless payments is one area. As this is the first of four articles, you’ll have to follow up in Healthcare IT News