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In this captivating episode of data driven, we engage in a thought

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provoking discussion about equities of care and disparities in the health

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care system. Our guest explains how patients

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experience varying levels of care based on their unique circumstances,

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an issue that undoubtedly impacts both the health care system and the

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patients themselves. We discuss the administrative

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inefficiencies and lack of effective management in healthcare systems.

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Can data and AI really fix this issue? Listen

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to find out.

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Hello, and welcome to Data Driven, the podcast where we explore the

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emergent. Right? It's no longer emerging. Fields of data science,

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machine learning and artificial intelligence, and, of course, data engineering, which

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is really the foundation for all of the good stuff that we're gonna talk about

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today. How you doing, Andy? I'm well, Frank. How about yourself? I'm

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doing alright. I'm still working on memorizing the season 7 kinda intro,

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which is probably by the time this show goes out, it's It's been a

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little different each time. So Sure. But it's all good. I I like

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the, the emphasis on data engineering, of course. Mhmm. I'm

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Naturally. But, totally

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totally get that. And, I'm really excited about,

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today's guest. Cool. Yeah. Me too. I I will add

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that that before we talk about our guest, that the the emphasis of

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data engineering isn't just for you. It's mostly for you. Well,

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thanks, Frank. I appreciate that. The more work I've done in

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in enterprises, the more I realized that, you know, this is

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It is foundational. Right? And and and if you follow me on on my Red

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Hat channels and things like that, you know, I have this this talk, you know,

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red, rock stars and roadies. Right. Like, our office hours talk, by the way.

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Oh, thank you. Yeah. And, you know, and I use the

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example of Taylor Swift because my niece is a huge fan of hers. Right? So

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people buy the tickets for Tay Tay. Right? But Tay Tay's concert

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wouldn't be awesome. I'm not a fan. Right? So I'm not and they don't

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hate. I don't fan. I'm very neutral. I'm Tay I'm Tay Tay neutral. Right?

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And my my my Tay Tay Probability wave has

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function is not collapsed yet. So, that's

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a quantum computing joke, which you will get or you won't

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get or neither, I suppose, which is another joke. Anyway,

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it really comes up that that, you you know, it's important. Right? Like, the the

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rock star is important. That's who sells the tickets, but Absolutely. The

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performance can't go on without all the people that go in. So roadies.

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Yeah. With that, I'm gonna we're gonna have a great conversation with Joe

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Bethone, or Bethony. I'm not we'll get the corrected pronunciation in a

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minute. He's the cofounder and CEO of Anexis Health, a leading health care

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tech company That helps lessen Nice. Administrative and

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logistical barriers across the patient experience, increase access to

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care, reduce financial burdens at both Patient and provider

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levels. His goal is to change the world by building a culture around health care

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data that people wanna be a part of. Welcome to the show, Joe. Thanks so

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much, Frank. Hey, Andy. Hey. Yeah. It's it's we had a

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little bit of a chat in the virtual green room here, and we'll get to

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that maybe at the, as the show progresses. But, just

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wanna welcome you, Joe, to the show. The, the the

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goals, the mission, of the company just sounds amazing.

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It sounds what exactly is needed. Right? Yeah. So so

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so tell us about how did you how'd you get here? Like, how'd

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you How'd you get there? How'd you hit that

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frustration point? What made you take the action, and then what your firm is

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doing? Yeah. Yeah. I I think that it It took me

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longer to get here than I than it should have. Right? I

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think I'm more stubborn than I ever thought, And

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maybe it just takes me longer to learn. I spent a lot of time in

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the pharma industry doing a bunch of different things.

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So the things that I did in pharma that relate to what I'm doing

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today, were around roles I

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played in the business of oncology. Alright. So

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I did things like create payer focusing teams, facing

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teams, led reimbursement Teams. I led

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relationships in big health care companies. I

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had the opportunity and the blessing To lead

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our relationships with advocacy groups. And

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that was probably one of the most meaningful experiences in my

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professional career Because it got me

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into this seat to watch people that dedicated their

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entire Professional life. 2, advocating on

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behalf of patients. In this case, cancer patients.

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So it was extremely meaningful for me

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To watch people or to interact with people and try

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to play some kind of meaningful role in the

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lives of those that were looking to impact the lives of

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patients with a cancer diagnosis. So that was a really cool

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opportunity. I did learn a lot through all of These

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other experiences, another big experience was

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leading relationships with large health care

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companies. Large health care companies that supported and sold

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into pharma. So what I learned was

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there's a lot of crap out there. Right? And there's some good stuff.

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And learning the ability to kinda

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sift through things, learning the ability to say, hey, this looks really cool,

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But how do you measure it? Right? There's a kind of a data story in

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that. Right? Right. So ultimately,

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I spent too much time because I'm Stubborn,

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and I think that I learn quickly, but sometimes I refuse

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to learn On other's terms. Right? And

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so other's terms, the Andy God, in this case. Right?

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Where there is a there there's a plan in play here. So, Ultimately,

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I don't have any regrets, and, really, the honest truth is is I needed all

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those experiences to help me as an operator. So I stepped out of

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pharma. I did the operator gig somewhere else prior to this

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and it was around data. It was around taking clearing house

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data, bringing it in, And creating meaning and action

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to that date. Meaning so it's clearing us data for

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claims and remittance. And there's a lot of good data in there. Right? But

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it's all how it's packaged. Right? So in the oncology space,

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provider organizations are buy and bill. They have pharmacy dispensing software,

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So they've got skin in the game. Certainly, the patient has skin in the game

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and stuff not getting paid for it is getting paid for. Right? So we

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ingested the data. We looked at it closely. We found out what was going

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on with things that were being denied. Why was it being denied?

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What are the things that we could do to impact Denials or

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approvals or time to payments. Right? And that all impacts patient

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care. So we took that data. We ingested We

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created meeting in action. We created pretty pictures, and we sold in to

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pharma. We help providers, right, help their patients.

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So during that time, as an operator, we

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were discovering and exploring other things to truly have an

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impact on improving access to health care for

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patients. And so at that time, in

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that role as an operator With other partners,

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we actually were working with another software company to start to build the

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bones of our technology at Anexis Health today,

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And that is assist point. We can get a little into a little bit more,

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about that later, but that's the journey that led me to

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Anexis Health. Do we wanna pause and banter or,

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go through some questions, or you want me to tell you a little bit about

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Anexis Health? Well, I'd like to know more about Anexis Health. I mean, there's there's

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a lot to unpack what you said, but I think if we kind of if

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you close the loop and kinda see what you do, that might that might make

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the questions a little more clearer. Yeah. And I think to the audience and maybe

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you guys, depending on how much time that, you

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guys spent just looking at our website, Ultimately, there's a big

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conversation going on right now around equities of care.

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I don't know if you guys have heard about that, but ultimately,

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Whether you call it equities of care or disparities of care,

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there is a real issue in our healthcare system

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where Based on specific circumstances,

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patients are getting care or not getting care, or getting care

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in a different way. Right? And it's having an impact on our health care system.

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It's having an impact on patients. So it's it's really interesting

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that this is a really hot topic. We actually started building

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building this this concept of a company really before

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this became a hot topic. So what we're solving for

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is actually improving the

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way the health care journey is managed. And our focus

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is busting through administrative toxicities That often lead to

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financial toxins. So how do we do that? Yeah. We

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basically provide a comprehensive

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Tooling through technology and through

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services, tech enabled services, to manage

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financial assistance start to finish For provider organizations.

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So it could be a community provider, and we're in 14 different disease

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states now. We started in in oncology. And, ultimately,

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What we do for provider organizations as it relates to financial

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assistance is 4 key pillars, search and roll, track, and adult.

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So if you guys know anything about the health care space and revenue

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cycle management, ultimately, what we do for financial assistance

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is that complete cycle of management around financial

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assistance, and and it does a couple things that are really important. Number 1,

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it makes the providers whole Economically so that they can continue to treat

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patients the way they need to. It takes a burden off

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of the patient, so they get the health care they deserve.

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And, ultimately, we're making this heavy administrative

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process and function cleaner, Easier,

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more automated, more comprehensive, and so that's 1 that's what we

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started. Right? That was the the MVP that we created, And then

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we started to develop other tools around access. And

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so management of free drug is a really important thing in the

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space. It's something that is needed to get patients on the

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therapy that they need, but often, it's a net

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negative To life science, to the provider, even to the patient

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because of what's actually not being paid for wrapped around that. And so

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we do a really good job of Managing that, making sure that where there's an

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opportunity to convert patients to other assistance options to get

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commercial drug, we do that as well. So those things

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that we're currently doing right now, inclusive of making sure that

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everyone has access to other services like travel, Lodging,

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psychosocial, other other services are in one

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destination, in one place. Now Why is

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this a big thing? Because before we started doing this, really, we were the

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1st to market with this provider centric comprehensive way of

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approaching things. It was all spreadsheets. It was fax machines. It

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was post it notes. It was free text notes in EHRs and rev

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cycles. So it was a mess, And that was

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our competition. Now our vision our vision of this organization

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is to bust through in more administrative top systems

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by providing the enterprise platform for provider

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organizations. So it could be community providers, health

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systems, institutions. The enterprise platform

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we that that we wanna provide is focused on administrative logistics. So in

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the health care system, provider organizations have Three key technology

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enterprise platforms, the EHR, the electronic health record,

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the revenue cycle management system, the cash register, And

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and the intake engine and the pharmacy dispensing software.

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All of those systems are not designed to manage

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The administrative logistics of the patient's care journey. So as

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a country, we talk about equities of care. We talk about managing the

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patient experience in their health care journey, and we haven't

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tooled the space to do that effectively. Right? And if

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you think about it, Most of the if you guys have

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individual experience or family experience or friend experience, getting

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a diagnosis of cancer or some

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disease that is associated with the sophisticated disease

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states like gastroenterology, rheumatoid arthritis. I could go on and on. That's a

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heavy piece of information to receive. Right? Oh, it's a life changing

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event. Oh my god. And then they said, go figure it out. I think you

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should get this, But go figure out all these scenarios, like, how you're gonna pay

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for it? Is there help out there? Right? Are you going to have

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to be at a certain, like when we talk about disparities,

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Andy, you live in Farmville, Virginia. I don't know how close the the

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the the really top notch next level

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Center you would go to for a cancer diagnosis, but Yeah. Getting there

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and getting there on a regular basis is something that we struggle with. Right? So

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if you're in rural America or there's other scenarios around Urban America. Anyway,

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there's a lot of administrative functions that aren't managed

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effectively, and it's all one off. So the things that we wanna Really

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carve out and manage from an enterprise approach

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with provider organizations is the remote nature of patients that are

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on oral therapeutics. The cell and gene space is

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heavily laden with administrative logistics, the testing,

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diagnostics, and genomic profiling space. So

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by doing that, we're creating a technology network. We're pretty big

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already with our current state. And by creating that technology

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network, We create the ecosystem by which

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services and data solutions flow through, and pharma invests

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heavily in that To automate, to make sure there's fulfillment

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to impact 3 key things. Getting patients on intended therapy,

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Getting them on therapy quicker and keeping them on therapy because we know

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from our data, when there is an a therapeutic

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designed and there's scientific evidence around the impact it

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has. And if you do those 3 things, you're gonna improve outcomes.

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So That's what we're doing as an organization. I

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I wanna tell you guys that I am a capitalist

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at heart With a purpose to change the world. You said that earlier, and that's

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something that we can be and can do. Well, that's

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true. They're not mutually exclusive, and there's a lot There's a lot

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of unpacking that. Right? And then and just as, you know,

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thank God I never had a cancer diagnosis, but

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just Doing stuff in the health care system. Right? Yeah.

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Just doing anything in the health care system. You look at the mass

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quantities of paperwork that has to go And I mean, not just

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paperwork, like, in the term, but, like, actual paper that's still

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used. Like, you mentioned post it notes and spreadsheets. About the

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fax machine, Frank. Or the fax machine. It's crazy. And

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it's, like, I'm just in my back of my head, like, that little

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data engineer in me is Freaking out because, oh my god, like, that's

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at least it's like there's n number, x number of formats,

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and and and and it just And, you know, people

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of this show know, like, that is that is a huge,

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barrier. Like, that's a and that's a big

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That alone is it will will block it. And you kinda look at it like,

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can't this be better? And, you know, and I kinda see, like, oh, yeah. You're

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still using fax machines. Wow.

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Yeah. So so it's kinda interesting where when I

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was talk talked to you about How how we start and what we're doing

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around this equities of care thing. And

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what's going on in this space is

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It's very similar to Frank, Andy, how you describe

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on, your website around the what's

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going on with data Related to the old what

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went on with oil. Right? So when we think about

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equities of care, when we think about the health care Space.

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What you guys describe around the data opportunity

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is incredible. I think about it on a couple different levels. Number

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1, You can tell I'm passionate about what I'm doing. Right? Absolutely. And

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you can tell that hopefully,

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you Stan, right, I'm on this program because data is really important to me. But

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it's super important to me for a different reason than it is to you guys.

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And I think But there's some similarities. Right? Where Oh, sure.

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Data make data makes a freaking difference. Right? And so for me,

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to sit here and tell you my story, Or to sell into life science, or

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to sell into a provider, or sit on another podcast that I was

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on yesterday and describe how we're impacting the market,

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I have to have data to tell the story to be able

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to prove that I can, actually, in my company, right,

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can improve the likelihood that a patient's gonna get on therapy, and we do.

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Right? To make sure that we're demonstrating with what we do, we're getting patients on

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therapy quicker. We're getting patients on therapy and maintaining them on

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therapy. So in everything we do, we're constantly analyzing

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the data to demonstrate that we're doing those things. But, Frank, I

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think you said something earlier, or maybe we're talking offline about, like,

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the the whole idea of well, no. You just said it. Right? Like, the

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cumbersome nature of the paperwork Process. Yeah. Right? I think

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about some of the things that we do. Right? We wanna we wanna get rid

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of the spreadsheets. We wanna get rid of the paper. But sometimes we

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can't do it fast enough. Right? So We're constantly

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iterating on our technology. So the iteration in our

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technology has to include machine learning and AI and RPA.

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And you know what? You don't invest in that heavily, if you don't understand it

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deeply, then you're gonna spin and spin

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and spin. And then, ultimately, my unit economics Don't improve because I got

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people doing stuff that they shouldn't be doing, processing paper or

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manually entering something in the system that should be

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automated. So I, anyway, besides the fact that I'm really

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passionate about what I do, when I started to read about you guys and listen

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to some of your podcasts, you got me, you got me all fired up. Now

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I wish you Oh, cool. This Friday because I was ready to roll. Oh, that's

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awesome. Thank you. Thanks for that feedback, Joe. And I know I've had

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a Couple of experiences that I could, you kinda

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relate to what you're talking about. 1, I, worked for

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Unisys for a couple years, And we did Medicaid,

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systems, MMIS systems. And so you've got

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kind of that it it's a bit of a fringe element or at least people

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kinda think of it that way. It's not quite like,

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the big insurance companies and stuff, and I I've done work on their data as

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well, helping them with data engineering there. That's that's what I

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do. But it was very eye opening to

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see, You know, to see and hear the stories and

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managing a team that grew to 40 people. That was new

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for me as well, but the key was Picking a story and

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going with that and saying it was a it was a pharmacy story. And

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it was sometime in the future after we deploy this,

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Some grandmother is gonna go and try at 10 minutes to 5 on

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a Friday, afternoon, and Monday's a holiday. She's

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gonna try and fill her prescription. And if she doesn't fill

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it, she doesn't know this, but if she doesn't fill it, she's not gonna make

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it till Tuesday. And so our job is to make

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sure that that grandma gets her prescription in plenty of time before

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the pharmacy closes at 5, and that she gets to live for

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however long she's supposed to and enjoy her life and have her children and

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grandchildren, you know, enjoy her life. And

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Pausing in the middle of a presentation of that and just watching

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the, you know, they, at this point, we were all remote

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watching the faces on the screens And everybody kind of got that

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and it resonated. And it's your the stories you're

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telling, I I feel are in alignment with that. You're you're focused

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on the outcome. And the outcome is people's lives are

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better or longer or both. The other personal

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story is my my dad passed away in 2019, and

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he lived in Appalachia, so a couple 100 miles west of

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here. And, you know, I've I've done,

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I've been very honored to to be able to go and do

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missions work in Honduras. I have few few mission trips down

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there. And that area out there is not it

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it's it's way closer to Honduras than it is to where I was. I've been

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in Farmville. It's just It's neglected,

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almost. And and people are struggling even now,

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and they were back then as well. And but yet and still,

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there were there were good hospitals there. There were doctors there that were caring. I

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met with them, talked with them. They were doing their level best. But

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When I mentioned that I did data after we had, had

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built a little bit of trust, when I I worked on data, they they

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kinda opened up to me, and they were describing Problems similar to what

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you're solving. The EHR systems that they just

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hit a blocker. And and this is not a complaint. Everybody's doing their

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best. It just wasn't there yet. And

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what you described sounds like a big part of the

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solution that a a conversation I had with 1 of dad's docs.

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So that's it's amazing. I think that there are companies out

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trying to solve that. And the technology has gotten so

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ubiquitous and connectivity, so ubiquitous and and the

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tech's so cheap that it's while it looks

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like a large jump from filling in the forms or typing in Excel

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To working on a tablet, it's really not anymore. So Well, I

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I I I I would take the contrarian point of view of that because, like,

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it Okay. It

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I I I wonder, like, it's very easy as a technologist,

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right, to just assume everybody's gonna Comfortable with technology. Right? You're not wrong,

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Andy, but it's just about the patients, mind you. My dad, Andy, my

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tablet? No. Probably even the medical even the doc,

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The medical field is a field that is driven has always been driven

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by data. Right? Like Yeah. You know? But they are not Data

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driven. And, you know, that's not a plug for the podcast, but, like, it just

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it's like you know, for instance, right, and and a more lighthearted thing. Right?

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This that's not life and death. Right? I have a Fitbit. I I I track

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my heart rate. I I I, you know, I I track a lot of data

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and track my weight. I go into my doctor and,

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You know, I show it was like a group practice. I showed her, like, you

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know, this is the data, like, you know. Because, you know, you look at my

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profile, my age, my height, my weight, like, You know, but I'm like,

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here's my resting heart rate. Here's all the data I have on my heart rate.

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Yeah. And she just looked at me like I was insane. And I'm

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probably you're definitely an you're not insane. But you are an anomaly, I think, that

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you not only track it, but you present it, to your

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doctor. So But, you know, you think of that you know, it just seems like

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some doctors, I think, are more open to the idea.

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Well, I guess there's multiple angles to this. This is probably why it's a difficult

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problem to solve. Right? Because there there's there's Yeah. So many players, but everybody

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has their own different systems. Right. And, you

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know, I I just I just can't I mean, this is there's so much to

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unpack. Right? Like, because I can't imagine Yeah. You're getting a some kind of

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Bad diagnosis, and

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that's a life changing event. And then you're thrown all of this stuff, like, you

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know, like like like, all the things that That Joe had said, it's just like

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Yeah. You know, how I mean, on a normal like, just a

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like, I had a knee surgery, like, 10 years ago. I mean, the the knee

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surgery, was 3 months from, you know,

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doctor said you need to do it to what was done. And then, like, 3

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years later, I'm still getting paperwork, Like, oh, this has to be paid. Like and

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it's just like, I I just can't imagine,

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like, it just I don't know. Like, that just blew my mind. Like,

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3 years later, like, I I I I I half expect to get email

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at mail at the new house, like, hey, you still owe us $5

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and A $50 processing fee, which, again, like,

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is so bizarre. It's it's interesting too

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what's going on in the space, so So, actually, to both of your points.

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Right? So we've come very far. Mhmm. I just think about some of the

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things that the federal government does that's A colossal failure, and then I think about

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some things that are favorable. So let's stay positive. Right? Sure. So as it

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relates to system and it relates to data, You know, the

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federal government launched this meaningful use thing

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years years ago, and the health care system

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battled. Providers battle over this, being forced

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into using an electronic chart system,

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right, versus This paper, you still go into

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these practices and you still see they've got their manila folders up

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on on the wall. And, ultimately, they

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it was initially a carrot, and then it became a stick, and there was a

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lot of complaining. And there was some heavy economic toll. Right? Because the

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amount of money that the federal government was giving through meaningful use wasn't

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meaning. Right? Mhmm. But provider organization struggle for what we're all

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better for. We all are better better for it, and

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we're better for it because of data. But we still struggle. Right? Because if

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you're not capturing this data in a way Through or the data

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is an input in fields? You guys know. Right? You're not

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capturing structured data. Right? You're capturing Right. Free text notes. What the hell do

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you do with that? And I don't care how good you think you are at

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natural language processing. There's still people you gotta apply to it and still

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ineffective. Right? Right. So I just think about that movement

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and and how it's getting much better, and we are trying to force everyone to

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think about forcing this in the field. Let's understand the fields. Right?

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Because the next level of what the federal government has done

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very positively, again, is interoperability. So meaningful

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use became interoperability. Now everybody's talking about shell

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sharing health care data that we used to put walls

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around. And that's, yes, such crap They were putting walls

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around that, and the primary reason was because people wanted to make money. Right?

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Mhmm. So the federal government has decided that this health care data is the patient's

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data. Let's figure out a way to share data through a standard

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API approach. Right? And Right. Although we're way far from that,

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It still has actually made the conversation easier. It's made it

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easier for Nexus Health to do the data

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thing To allow us to do what we do from a tech and services

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perspective much easier and much better because I'm talking to these EHR

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systems, these rev cycle systems, these pharmacy dispensing systems,

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these data aggregators or institutions or whatever it may

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be, and where they may have sat in a place where they're like,

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no. You can't come anywhere near my data because I would have

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monetized it, and they had no interest in changing the world. Right.

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But then Right. To change the world by putting money in their pockets so they

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could go spend it somewhere else. Right? So now I think the the industry is

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looking at it a little differently, And it's opening

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up. I think getting back to the original point that I wanted to make, though,

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I think things are getting better. I think it's light new day

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Different than it was, like, 10 years ago, but we still have basic challenges.

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Right? Like, I think about one of the things that we're facing right now,

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where I need to create a

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better system by which we connect with charitable foundations

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because it's really bulky, what we're solving for there. The charitable

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foundations are a five zero one c three. They don't have the people, the time,

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the FTEs to engage in some basic conversations.

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Like, we make things really easy. And if anybody's listening from charitable

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foundations, please contact Sunexis Health because we can make your life

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easier. We could make you do better at what you do. You're gonna get more

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money in because that we improve it, and we're gonna cost you less money by

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the way you process things. But ultimately, people are resistant. There's not a lot of

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time. So I'm trying to RPA things. Right? But if I've got an

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unwilling participant because They think it's gonna be too much,

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or they think there's gonna be security risks. And they're not even willing to

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have the conversation that if I wanna do The really clean,

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easy way without their participation, they got

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stuff blocking my box. And alls I wanna do is the right

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thing for the patient. Right? So, yeah, we can we can solve for that and

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do that. But guess what? You know how much money we're Spending to solve for

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this and iterate on this thing. And ultimately, every penny I

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spend on that kind of crap, and it makes it more expensive for me,

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Then it makes it harder for me to impact patients. So there's

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Every cycle every cycle you spend doing that is a cycle you're not

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spending. Sorry, Andy. I got you off. That's okay. No. And and you've got

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some well intentioned regulation, HIPAA,

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And and just other privacy concerns, just general,

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personally identifying information type stuff that that's out

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there. And it all collides, I think at at medical

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data. So, you know, I while I understand some of

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the resistance that you're seeing and I and I kinda get where it's coming from

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and and agree with that Part of it, there's ways

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to de identify data and and go after aggregates,

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especially if you're Trying to do what you're trying to do. You're trying to smooth

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out the system for everyone. You're not while while it will

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benefit individuals, you're not going after individual data.

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So and there's other things. Right? Like, you just gotta make sure. And you do

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have to put some time into it. Right? Like, isn't excess help legit? Right?

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Well, there's things that can understand if they're legit or not. Are you SOC

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2? Are you HITRUST? Right? So there's things that we are

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doing from a regulation perspective That make it easier for us to

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trust those that wanna prevail in the data. So do you think

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that people or organizations hide behind regulations

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by saying, like, oh, that's that's HIPAA. We we can't do that, or

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it's too much of a risk. Is that is that a thing? It was like

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I think, we I think we can all agree that HIPAA has been has

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its use. Right? It has its purpose, but I don't understand. Has that been a

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has that been a have people used that as blockers? For Unequivocally,

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yes, Frank. Unequivocally, yes. Yeah. And and I and

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it might it could be It's anywhere. It's

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anywhere. It it is and and I think about the segments of our business. Right?

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So working with a large Health system

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or institution. Right? And and my people are

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dealing with 3 lawyers, 2 security

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folks, 3 compliance folks, 4 regulators, and

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Wow. They all have a really important purpose in this. Mhmm.

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But If their purpose is to say no

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and Mhmm. Say no, hiding

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behind Regulations

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and policies versus Yeah. Understanding the reason for that

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regulation and Policy and being solution oriented? Oh my

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gosh. Yeah. So it blocks or cost time and money at the

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provider on the same thing in the life science world, Right? Where

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you have lawyers that they're there to do the job. They they have to.

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Right? Because no life science company OIG coming down on them for

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whatever the reason, but you have to be solution oriented. You gotta look

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at the organization. You gotta make sure that organization is

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actually doing what it's saying it's doing, and there's

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ways to test that and look into that, versus saying no. And and and that's

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like, you can you can hear, Frank, The passion and my answer on that question?

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Oh my gosh. I've spent so much time and so much money

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getting through Those that sit in a seat that they're hiding

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behind something because it's easier to say no than to work to a

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solution. Yeah. That is that is true.

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What are your thoughts about the fire? The, f

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h I r. Is it pronounced fire or is it fear? Because I've heard both.

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I say fire, and I'm using the authority on the way things are

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said. But what's

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fascinating is so so the previous job, I, you know, I

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I was, technology architect for data and AI at at

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at one of the MTCs, Microsoft Technology Centers, And I had never heard

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of fire. Right? I've been out of the, electronic health record space

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since 2006, and so I it was completely

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new to me, and I would blow my mind. It shouldn't blow my mind, but

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it was like, wow. This is actually a couple things blew Wow. People

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actually in this space got together to work together? That blew

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my mind. 2, it was both, Java's, JSON

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and XML compliant, Which I thought was pretty pretty cool.

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Has that helped? Is that is that been a good kind of kind of having

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a common language for these systems to talk to one another?

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Yeah. So I think, generally speaking let's just step back. So so fire,

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I think there's a lot of conversation around it because that's how the federal government

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has decided to put language around the standards. Right? The

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standard for communicating. So fire API. So I think just the

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API Approach is yes. It's

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all good. Right? So let's standardize the way we're gonna share

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information in a safe private matter. So, yes, it has changed the

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game, but the whole discussion around FHIR and creating FHIR APIs and

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standards of communication has opened the door

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incredibly to this

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idea that we should be really investing

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in sharing data and we can't Sit in a

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position of hiding behind something or just being scared to death. So Yeah.

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I think that the the the conversation, And I think the

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work being done and I think the work being done, and then, absolutely, the

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application. Right? So whether we describe that we're Using

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a FHIR API or we're using an API approach

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that we've created the specs around or we're working with someone else's

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specs, A whole idea that you can communicate between between

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with these application programming interfaces is

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Life changing. Right? Because there's still a lot of stuff that we're doing through h

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l seven, ADT feeds. There's stuff that we're absorbing in a

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flat file. Right? And I can't wait for the day that all of it is

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through API. Why? Right. Because it's gonna be better. It's gonna be cleaner. It's gonna

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be faster, And it's god, I hope gonna be less

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expensive. Well, yeah. I mean, you're right. Go ahead, Frank.

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Sorry. No. Anytime you say flat file, it's kinda like,

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Yeah. I started to sweat. I said it. I start my palms are sweating.

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Right? I I had those sinking feeling in my stomach. So I'll get the

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task Andy's memory. We had a guest that made an analogy, and I only remember

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part of it where it was basically Data data professionals

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were, used to be kind of guardians or

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gatekeepers, and now they're shopkeepers. I forget who said

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that. That's Donald Farmer. That's what I thought.

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I wasn't sure. So so we had a show, and he's like he kinda has

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wax is very philosophical because data at one point was Hidden

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within an enterprise. There were silos were considered normal. But I think

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now what you're talking about with all these different parties, like Like you said,

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they have to open it up. They have to be like a store almost. Obviously,

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with HIPAA and things like that, there has to be some constraints, but Yeah. But

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I think it's a mindset shift. My mindset shift. I didn't

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say that. What I was gonna say. Yeah. It's definitely a mindset

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culture switch. And I like you, I cringed a little bit

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when I heard an EDI, you know,

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specification. And I believe h l seven was one

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of those. I've it's been a while, but, yeah, those were hard those

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are hard to load. And I just did a recent blog post related

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to that. I I titled it h, sorry, XM held.

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XM held. This

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is, you know, give me anything, something,

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anything other than XML. But But that but as we're

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having that conversation, The different formats and the ways that we, the company,

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a data company so we're we're a health care solutions company, but we're a

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data company at heart. Right? Right. So I think about

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How we wanna be better every day around ETL. Right? So

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extract, transform, and load. And and I just think about

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the pain that we've been through, The process that we've been through,

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but the whole idea is that if we're gonna do this data

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thing right, Right? Yeah. And we are there's gonna be

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individuals. There's gonna be companies that are gonna invest in this. Like,

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there's a lot. There's a lot to doing this. There's a lot to being in

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this game for us, right, as data people. And I'm

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not a real data person. Right? I'm a I'm a I'm I'm

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a I'm a change the world geek, and and so you guys ask questions, I

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think, typically, in our website, like, what brought you to data? It's because

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data is the only way that I wanna prove that we can change the world

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and then how we do it better. But this whole idea that we've gotta invest

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so much money And extract, transform, and load.

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Right? I don't care. Like, I'm I'm gonna I'm gonna say this to demonstrate I

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don't know what I'm talking about. But the amount of money we're investing in palaces

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and lakes and Rivers and whatever the hell that is for ETL.

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Right? It's crazy. Like, let's just get ourselves wrapped

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around the fact that Figuring out the best way

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to share data, figuring out the best way to ingest

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data and be able to study it in a meaningful way Yeah.

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Changes the world, and that's what I wanna do. And I that's why I love

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what I see that you guys are doing. Right? Oh, thanks. Well, thanks.

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Yeah. This is an awesome conversation. We can go on for another

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hour, but, probably good times. Yeah. It's all fun at the

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moment. Well, I'm on these guys

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So you kinda touched upon the first question we asked, which is how did you

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find your way into data? Did you find data or did data find you?

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You know what? And and and I I let out some of the stuff that

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I pre prepared, but, like, literally all good. Yeah.

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Literally, I, for the longest time, knew I

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wanted to change the world. I just didn't know how the heck I was gonna

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do it. Right? Yeah. So as I started to think about things and I started

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to look at things, data points are really like, I think

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in bullet points. I think in spreadsheets. Not even knowing that I was a

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data guy, I tell our data scientist lead all the time that,

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you know, that's what I wanna do next. I want to learn how to be

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a data scientist. Right? Because I'm nowhere near that. Like, I gotta go to probably

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50 years of slow learner, 50 years of schooling to to be that. But it

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was it was this this thing that's changed the world geek inside of

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me that let me know I was constantly absorbing data

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points. And so once I cited or

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once God laid on my heart what I actually wanted to do. Right?

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Then it became really clear to me

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The data is the way to do it. Right? Data is the way to decide

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what you wanna do. Data is the way to decide you is the way to

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decide How you build it better, how you structure it. Data is the way

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you prove what you've intended to do is working, and then

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data will tell you what to ship and what to change to. So, Anyway, I

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was brought to it, but I guess in my heart, I always was that kind

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of data geek. I just need to learn a lot more to be as cool

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as you guys. Oh, We're constantly learning

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too. It keeps changing on us, Joe, so it's all good.

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Our second question is which go ahead. I love the story. I love the

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story in data. Right? Oh, yeah. There are there are stories in

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every data point. Ab absolutely. And that's a really good way to

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kinda get everybody on the same page. We've been listening to stories

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since, you know, we were kids, so, you know, that helps.

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Our our second question is, what's your favorite part of your current gig?

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When I go back to the stuff I'm saying over and over again, it's making

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a difference. Right? So It's good. I told you guys I was a

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capitalist, through through. But it's not about

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making money. I've done a bunch of different things in my professional life and

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made money. Right? That I, Andy, when you're talking

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earlier, I don't get satisfaction fulfillment

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from my job, There's professional satisfaction

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that comes along with your work, and, ultimately,

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I get that satisfaction through making a difference. So I just feel like,

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man, I'm and and I guess I shouldn't be putting this out there, but

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at 57 years of age, I had no

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intention or no idea that I'd be working the kind of hours that I'm working,

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but I can't wait. I'm a real early riser, and it's because I can't wait,

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it's not because I'm stressed out, it's because I can't wait to get to work

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and make a difference. That's fantastic.

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Awesome. So we have, 3 complete the

Speaker:

sentence, questions. When I'm not working, I

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enjoy blank. Interesting.

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Surfing. Cool. So you're on the East Coast you mentioned just a minute ago.

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Yeah. Where do you surf? So I have a place in

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Bethany Beach, Delaware, and so I'm storm chaser. I'm a hurricane chaser,

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but I will you know, I'll I'll find ways to get to places

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that have really good waves on a regular basis. Awesome.

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Awesome. Our next our next fill in the blank,

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is I think the coolest thing in technology today is

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blank. The pace of change. I think that,

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Andy, you guys were Frank both were talking about this

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earlier, and I think we were talking about it through the conversation, like, the differences

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that we've seen. And I think that, like, you you use the analogy

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of oil. We can also use the analogy of the

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industrial revolution and, like, how things change so rapidly.

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Everybody talks about the technology revolution. I mean, I think we should be talking about

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the data revolution, right, about what's going on and how fast it's

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all changing. So I I think that, ultimately,

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It's really cool. It's really cool no matter what frustrations I express,

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no matter what, you know, ripping off on

Speaker:

about, you know, the fax machine. The pace of change is really cool right

Speaker:

now, and I'm wired that way. Right? Like Nice. I think I love

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what I do every day because it's not predictable, and it changes

Speaker:

Very rapidly. It does. Yeah. So, Frank, we need

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a new order for a t shirt. So, we've got Data is the

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new oil That's right. And which, listeners can pick up and

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help the show out. We need one for the, data

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revolution now. I think Joe inspired me. Yeah. I think, I think I'll

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be I'll be hitting up Photoshop later today. But

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the, Or maybe even DALL E. Who knows? I may I don't even have to

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do the actual artwork. So that's an interesting

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point because there was there was something you talk about data and and how it

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can transform it's Transform everything. Right? So one of the stories I heard was

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this is regards to staph infections, and I forget,

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speaking of rogue AI, Alexa, stop.

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She's like, She I don't know how what I did to trigger her, but

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the the short of it is is that there was a story about a, a

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woman lost her child Because he had some kind of staph infection

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or whatever, and she mentioned the notion of

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data leakage. Right? So it turns out, Again, I'm getting the details

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wrong. But, basically, if you track your heart rate or heart rate var

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variability, There's a signal in that

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in that data that there's some kind of massive infection,

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but most times, you know, when you're in the hospital, they only check your

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pulse but so often. So that I think that's a good example of how

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data can transform medicine. And is

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that is that something you've seen or heard of? Or

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or just getting the fundamentals right is just so is the process right

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now. So I think that, you know, I

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was involved a little bit more on the clinical side at different

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roles in pharma because But right now, I'm so focused

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on the administrative and logistical challenge

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associated associated with The

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care journey, I would say, I'm sure. There's example

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after example of that. Right? I think about some things that I've

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seen, right, in terms of Very similar things

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where, I just was exposed to something recently about

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suicides, and the The the the

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epidemic in the way certain groups are

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deciding to to to do this, and

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There's data in it. Right? Like, there's there's blood markers

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that are telling for okay. What happened? And what are

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we looking at? Why did that happen? That we can act more quickly.

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Right? So Yeah. To to help that that that

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person. So I think, absolutely, we probably could Bring somebody clinical

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line and talk to that all day long. But I can tell you the thing

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that I see that's really meaningful where and this will have an

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impact on health care. Right? The cell and gene Area

Speaker:

is crazy with logistics. So these personalized immunotherapies, I don't know if

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you guys have heard much about that, where basically, You're

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having a patient go get blood drawn,

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have their t cells spud off, or sending it to a manufacturing

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Right. Then they're creating a personalized therapy for

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that patient, then it has to be shipped to a treatment

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which is not typically where the primary care is going on, and then that patient

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has to have things set up for the logistics around the 30 day inpatient

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stay, the care I just hit on a few things, but the

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logistical challenges in all of that, if you improve

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one thing that typically there's, like, 20 to 30 steps in

Speaker:

that And they all take dates. If you can use technology to

Speaker:

shrink those elements down, wow. These

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things are Curing. These personalized immunotherapies, we're not

Speaker:

calling them cures yet, but I'm telling you, like, no evidence of disease. It looks

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like it's curing patients Where they were on 4th line of therapy, and they were

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gonna be dead in a month. It's having real impact, and

Speaker:

technology Process improvement

Speaker:

can really impact health care, and those are the things that we wanna study. When

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I think about data, like, I wanna be able to study that Time in motion,

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and how are we having an impact in the cell and gene space? I absolutely

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love that. Just just that the whole concept of reducing the

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steps. And if you can move you got somebody who's

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been diagnosed and and given a month to live. You're

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You're changing the you're moving the needle significantly if you

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can stop it from being Monday morning and make it Friday

Speaker:

afternoon. I mean, that's significant, and

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that's amazing. It sounds like, oh, you're shuffling papers. Well,

Speaker:

if you wanna look at it that way, knock yourself out. But I'll

Speaker:

guarantee you, you know, that person is having that starfish

Speaker:

experience where, you know, there's a kid on the beach picking up Starfish and

Speaker:

throwing them back into the water, and somebody walks up and says, you know, what?

Speaker:

You're this is useless. You're you know, they're just gonna wash back up

Speaker:

again. Doesn't mean anything, and a kid says it means a lot to that

Speaker:

one. He just chunked. For sure. Well,

Speaker:

actually, getting back and think about getting back back getting back to Trife's point. Right.

Speaker:

You think about these staph infections. Right? But let's think about it

Speaker:

in the word way of, like, a blood infection, like sepsis. So,

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like, you get a blood infection, you're gone quickly. Right?

Speaker:

So identification, diagnosis, Improvement

Speaker:

in how things are being processed and identified through technology and

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through data will have a Critical

Speaker:

impact on some of those things that are really truly urgent in the

Speaker:

moment. I I love it. Wow. We went down a rabbit trigger here

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off our question. But that's that's what we do. I'm not even sure what question

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we are. I think we kinda It's u and number 6.

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Okay. I look forward to the day when I can use technology

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to blank.

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Totally off script, Brush my teeth and floss because that takes a lot of time

Speaker:

for me throughout the day. But beyond that, I I actually am

Speaker:

always, Jotting notes, and sometimes those

Speaker:

notes become more formal documents and outlines and

Speaker:

wireframes for The the next thing. Right?

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I'm still a very young 57. I tell my kids I'm biologically

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31. So I got 2 or 3 or more gigs in me.

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And so I look forward to using technology

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to solve for food deserts. I look forward to using

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technology to solve for a comprehensive

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approach approach to health care insurance alternatives. I think our

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insurance industry our health care insurance industry is totally broken.

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Right? The way we approach it, the way we just approach

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insurance, right, through the standard brokerage approach, through the standard

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markets approach, I think we need to open that up, and I think we can

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open up through SMEs. Right? So subject matter

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experts applied to technology. So those are the things

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Besides flossing and brushing my teeth, I would love to apply type 2.

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That's funny you made that because there was a TV show called Farscape,

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Like, in the early early 2000. And and one of the one of the plot

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points I forgot was, like, they they they have, like, little nanite,

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robots that clean and floss your teeth for you. Forget that that came up. Yeah.

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Yeah. Yeah. That's a great idea.

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So our next, thought is we asked to asked that you

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share something different about yourself. You already mentioned surfing.

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So, but it, and we remind all our

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guests, not just you, to, remember it's a family podcast, and

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we wanna hang on to our clean rating.

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I think that I don't

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know how different this is, but I think my obsession

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Is what makes it different? I am obsessed with challenging the

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norm and expected behavior.

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I think that I think that too

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many of us in this world

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I've settled in the fact that this is what

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it's expected. This is what is the norm. This is what

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we're told to do, and this is how we're told to do it. Yeah. I

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think that there are more people That it could have

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a major impact on others if they would in the right way.

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Right? This is family friendly. I'm not talking to do things to to do

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things that are Harmful or nefarious around challenging norms

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and expected behaviors, but I think in a healthy way, my

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obsession with it is sometimes unhealthy, but I think that's a little different

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and maybe even a little off with me. Interesting.

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You know, one of, Frank and I, follow,

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success coaches, and and the one I'm thinking of, I know it went through

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Frank's mouth whenever we hear the word obsess, is, Grant

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Cardone. And he has a book called Be Obsessed or Be Average.

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And it's, it was a very challenging, listen for, for

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me. I know Frank Got a lot out of it as well. And,

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I I don't think there's anything wrong with being obsessed. I I think,

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yes, Like anything, it can be taken to an unhealthy

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spot. But it I don't think that that spot out you know,

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the word that popped into my mind first was extreme. But I'm not so

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sure extreme is the definition of unhealthy there. I think there

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are 2 different spots and I can hear the passion, in your

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voice, Joe. And for those listening to the audio, you can't see Joe's

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face. Here we are recording this as video, but then we usually Strip

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out the audio because we got more listeners, listening than

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watching. But I I get it. I can see

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that in your it's a good passion. It's not unhealthy at

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all in my opinion.

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Interesting. Okay, Frank. I lost track now. No. No. No. No. I think it's you.

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I think you're not And I'm going to do the audible one, then we'll ask,

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the final question, which is where people can find out more. So do you do

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you do audio books or or or, Or not. If you do, can you

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recommend a book? So I I typically don't do audio.

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I love to read, because I love words, But I

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typically love to read to take me away,

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because of my obsessed approach to things. I'm always

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on. So I have one that I can

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recommend that I read years years ago, and I still think it was one of

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the the the the more Thought provoking take

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me away books that I read, but I I do need to say first

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that the book I recommend to everyone is the bible. So that's the

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one that that I actually read every day and

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I find important as it relates to guidance, advice,

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And how I should be approaching things from a foundational perspective, but it

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also reminds me daily of my failures in trying to accomplish that.

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The other the book that I I would recommend,

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is The Genesis Code by a pseudonym

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John Case. And it's a biological thriller. So thought

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provoking, some cutting edge, interesting blending of that could

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be possible, Not possible type type stuff. Interesting.

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Awesome. Audible is a sponsor of Data Driven. If you go to the datadrivenbook.com,

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I'm sure I know that there's multiple readings of the bible. My

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my, my wife uses Audible all the time because I see it come through. There

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you go. Oh, very cool. Yeah. I I am the

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heavy user. I I use my wife's credits because we're on the same account. So,

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I don't know if that's that ranks in the share Netflix password thing, and somebody

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from Audible's gonna give me a call. I don't know, but we'll find out.

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That's what data science is all about. I have Hypothesis, I do it.

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Mhmm. Sometimes I plan the hypothesis. Sometimes it just comes out of my

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mouth. So on that note, before I say anything

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else stupid, Share something. No. We did that. Where

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can people find out more about you and your company? The best place to go

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is our website, anexus, a n n e x

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US. And by the way, a Nexus is

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for connectivity in Latin, and you guys heard through the stories

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today Yeah. That connectivity is really to what we do, so ennexushealth.com.

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Okay. Excellent. Well, thank you, and we'll let Bailey finish the

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show. Thanks for listening to Data Driven.

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If you have any suggestions for future episodes or topics you'd like us

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to explore, please reach out to us. We value

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your feedback and strive to address the needs and interests of our

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listeners.