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reVi v e 2014

Division of Wonder Texas Health Resources MakeForward2015

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reVive 2014

to Enable staff at all levelsOpportunityreVive

over regulation

market shifting financial modelsrecruiting & retaining talentthe speed of knowledge

over regulation

employee stress

Challenges:

innovation largely unseenno visibility into directionunclear messaging

highly committedfitting into the big picturestaff

Challenges:

Integration:language

Approach Do Learn Integrate

Ascent to the Summit

Blue Zones Power 9Healthways Well-BeingPlan Do Study Act

Strategic Outcome StatementJTE - MVVP - Ticket2ClimbGallup Healthways Well-Being IndexMalcolm Baldrige Excellence

Coreoptimized

The Power of Small

Amplifying Talent

Interlacing Teams

forwardEdge

reVive’s 2014 narrow focus

PurposePower 9 #2

ApproachDLI

PDoSA

A

2

D

WellBeing*

*Healthways Gallup Well-Being Index

Celebrating Micro ImprovementsCreating a Mindset of Opportunity

Retain Staff using PurposeEnable Staff & Amplify Talent

Celebrating Paradigm Breaking ShiftsCreate Collaboration & PartneringAgility with Scalable (online) LearningRecruit Staff using Purpose

Zoom:Out

Zoom:In

Identify

Invent

Integrate

MAKE• (make) alter something so that it forms or constitutes (something else):

FORWARD• (forward) onward so as to make progress; toward a successful conclusion:

• (make forward) alter something into something else, so as to make progress:

ForwardMake:

• (make forward) enabling continuous individual micro-innovations, through the venue of peer recognition:

ForwardMake:

ForwardMake:Identify

Invent

Integrate

reVive 2014

Experiences:

AARON + HANNAHhorowitz chungFounders, Sproutel

Aaron Horowitz and Hannah Chung are the founders of Sproutel, a company that makes interactive toys for kids with diabolical / life-threatening / life-ending diseases. They launched Jerry the Bear this past year or two, an interactive teddy bear that literally helps young young young kiddos learn to manage their relationship with diabetes, something that is terrifying / mystifying / painful to so many kids who are diagnosed young.

ALEJANDRO r. jadad

Founder, Centre for Global eHealth Innovation

Alejandro (Alex) Jadad (born August 9, 1963, in Colombia) is a physician, educator, researcher, entrepreneur and public advocate, whose mission is to enable people to live full, healthy and happy lives until their last breath, through innovative global collaborative efforts enabled by information and communication technologies (ICTs).

Dr. Jadad is currently the Founder of the Centre for Global eHealth Innovation (and its Chief Innovator from 2009 to 2012) at the University of Toronto and University Health Network, where he is a full professor, staff physician and holder of the Canada Research Chair in eHealth Innovation.

ALEXANDERmcleanFounder, African Prisons Project

APP is a Uganda-based organization working to improve the lives of men, women, and children living in African prisons through healthcare, education, access to justice and community reintegration. Alexander graduated in July 2007 from the University of Nottingham. Since then he has been based in Kampala, establishing a team of local and international staff and volunteers to professionalize the organization and to enable it to increase in effectiveness and broaden its outreach. Now APP has worked with more than 20 ,000 prisoners in Uganda, Kenya and Sierra Leone and has been invited to begin work in a variety of other countries.

JIMMYlinPresident, Rare Genomics Institute

Jimmy Lin, MD, PhD, MHS, is a 2012 TED Fellow and Founder & President of Rare Genomics Institute, the world’s first platform to enable any community to leverage cutting-edge biotechnology to advance understanding of any rare disease. Partnering with 18 of the top medical institutions, such as Harvard, Yale, Johns Hopkins, and Stanford, RGI helps custom design personalized research projects for diseases so rare that no organization exists to help. Previously, Dr. Lin was also a medical school faculty member at the Washington University in St. Louis and led the computational analysis of the first ever exome sequencing studies for any human disease at Johns Hopkins. He has numerous publications in Science, Nature, Cell, Nature Genetics, and Nature Biotechnology, and has been featured in Forbes, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and the Huffington Post.

JOSEgomez-marquezMedical Device Designer, MIT Little Devices

Jose Gomez-Marquez is a medical device designer at Little Devices. He is co-inventor of the Aerovax Drug Delivery System, a device for mass delivery of inhalable drugs and vaccines to remote populations and the X out TB program, which aims to increase TB therapy adherence in developing countries using novel diagnostics and mobile technology. Recently, the group has developed the MEDIKit, a series of design building blocks that empower doctors and nurses in developing countries to invent their medical technologies.

Jose serves on the European Union’s Science Against Poverty Taskforce and has participated as an expert advisor in the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. He is an instructor of MIT’s D-Lab: Health, a course on designing global health technologies at MIT. Jose is a 3 time MIT IDEAS Competition winner, including two Lemelson Awards for International Technology. In 2009, Jose was selected to Technology Review’s T35, which also named him Humanitarian of the Year. In 2011 he was named a TED Fellow.

JUANenriquezCEO, Biotechonomy

A broad thinker who studies the intersection of science, business and society, Juan Enriquez has a talent for bridging disciplines to build a coherent look ahead. Enriquez was the founding director of the Harvard Business School Life Sciences Project, and has published widely on topics from the technical (global nucleotide data flow) to the sociological (gene research and national competitiveness), and was a member of Celera Genomics founder Craig Venter's marine-based team to collect genetic data from the world's oceans.

Formerly CEO of Mexico City's Urban Development Corporation and chief of staff for Mexico's secretary of state, Enriquez played a role in reforming Mexico's domestic policy and helped negotiate a cease-fire with Zapatista rebels. He is a Managing Director at Excel Medical Ventures, a life sciences venture capital firm, and the chair and CEO of Biotechonomy, a research and investment firm helping to fund new genomics firms. The Untied States of America looks at the forces threatening America's future as a unified country.

In his TED Book Homo Evolutis (written with Steve Gullens), Enriquez explores the far reaches of human change, and asks: Are we done evolving?

ERICbingSenior Fellow & Director for Global Health, George W. Bush Institute

Dr. Eric G. Bing spearheads the Bush Institute’s global health initiatives, with an emphasis on creating programs that engage both the public and private sectors. He is also a professor of global health at Southern Methodist University.

Dr. Bing received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School, a master of public health and a Ph.D. in epidemiology from UCLA, and an M.B.A. from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University.

HEALTHwildcattersHealthcare Seed Accelerator

Health Wildcatters is a mentorship-driven healthcare seed accelerator. The 12-week accelerator program runs in the fall starting August 2013 in Dallas.

Health Wildcatters’ focus is early stage healthcare startups that come from a variety of niches. Just like most seed-accelerators, Health Wildcatters provides an initial seed investment and mentorship for startups in the early stages of funding and development. The healthcare niche brings up a few more twists, but that makes it more interesting. The specific challenges of selling into the healthcare market, dealing with regulatory constraints and  the slower pace of adoption are why we are here.

Note: Will talk to founders based on interest; either someone who runs the program or one of the entrepreneurs.

JAE RHIMleeArtist & Founder, The Infinity Burial Project

Jae Rhim Lee is a visual artist and mushroom lover. In her early work, as a grad student at MIT, she built systems that reworked basic human processes: sleeping (check out her it-just-might-work vertical bed from 2004), urinating and eating (and the relationship between the two). Now she's working on a compelling new plan for the final human process: decomposition.

Her Infinity Burial Project explores the choices we face after death, and how our choices reflect our denial or acceptance of death’s physical implications. She's been developing a new strain of fungus, the Infinity Mushroom, that feeds on and remediates the industrial toxins we store in our bodies and convert our unused bodies efficiently into nutrients. Her Infinity Burial System converts corpses into clean compost. She was in residence at the MAK Center in Los Angeles this fall working on the project. And if this vision of life after death appeals to you, sign up to become a Decompinaut yourself.

JOSHUAduyanVP of Marketing, Lumos Labs

The Human Cognition Project (HCP) is a collaboration between Lumosity’s in-house science team and various academic scientists, clinicians, and educators interested in understanding and exploring human cognitive abilities.

Lumosity is a leader in the science of brain training.

LAURENsilvermanHealth, Science & Technology reporter/blogger, KERA News

Lauren Silverman is the Health, Science and Technology reporter/blogger for KERA News. Before joining KERA, she worked at NPR’s  Weekend All Things Considered in Washington D.C. Lauren produced national stories on everything from the politics of climate change to the future of online education, including a piece on neighborhood farms in Compton, Cal., that won a National Association of Black Journalism’s ‘Salute to Excellence Award.’

As a freelance reporter, Lauren has written and recorded stories in English and Spanish for a variety of news outlets, including American Public Media’s Marketplace, NPR’s Morning Edition, All Things Considered and Latino USA.

Panel host: The New Economics of Healthcare

MERT + YURIiseri malinaFounders, Swipe Sense

SwipeSense was founded in 2012 by Mert Iseri and Yuri Malina, two Northwestern University graduates, and co-founders of Design for America.

With their backgrounds in science, engineering, and design, Mert and Yuri took on the challenge of Hospital-Acquired Infections by applying the principles of human-centered design to hand hygiene.

SwipeSense is the only complete system that combines point-of-care hand hygiene dispensers with real-time data from existing dispensers. Eliminate dependency on both hand hygiene campaigns and manual observations by leveraging data to encourage sustainable culture change.

ADITHYA + VINJAIganesh valeYoung Inventors

The Internet’s vast information and open-source projects have enabled innovators to stand on the shoulders of others.  Nine months ago, Vinjai and Adithya – two students with an interest in electronics – came up with an idea to help with a major problem: finger amputations. Join them on their journey of creating, publishing, and open-sourcing their mind-reading bionic glove – part of the new movement of “Open Innovation.”

ANNAdragsbaekPresident & CEO, The Immunization Partnership

Anna C. Dragsbaek became aware of the critical role that vaccines play in the health of a community when she worked in a rural hospital as a Peace Corps volunteer in Sierra Leone, West Africa. Watching children suffer from vaccine-preventable diseases, such as tetanus, measles and polio, was an experience that left a deep impression.

Later, Anna lived in China where she again witnessed people suffering from vaccine-preventable diseases, including severe influenza. Upon returning to the United States and settling in Houston, Anna pursued her law degree, specializing in Public Health law at  University of Houston, which was a natural progression from her undergraduate degree in Social Work from Marquette University. As the President/CEO of the Immunization Partnership, Anna looks forward to working with partners to ensure that all communities are protected from vaccine-preventable diseases. "In a community where we have top-class medical facilities and a dedication to preserving health, we can and should be the leaders in achieving and sustaining high immunization levels. Our community, our neighborhoods and our families are worth it."

IANcionDirector, The Arts in Medicine Program, MD Anderson Children’s Cancer Hospital

The Arts in Medicine Program at MD Anderson Children's Cancer Hospital has one primary goal – to use art to help young patients feel better.

Through collaborative, large-scale projects and one-on-one art sessions, artist-in-residence Ian Cion works with pediatric patients and their families to help make their experience better while undergoing cancer treatment.

KATEcanalesDirector of Design and Innovation Programs, SMU Lyle School of Engineering

Kate is the director of Design and Innovation Programs at the Lyle School of Engineering. She has a background in product design, design research and design strategy. Her area of focus is innovation through an understanding of human needs and behavior. Kate has worked as a designer and researcher at IDEO and as a creative director at frog design. Her writing on human-centered design has appeared in GOOD magazine, The Atlantic and The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science. In 2012 she and her team at frog design received an IDSA Gold Award for their work on mobile phone systems in health care for UNICEF in Zambia and Malawi. She has worked across many industries applying human-centered design methods to major innovation projects. A Dallas native, Kate is delighted to be at SMU where she is working to infuse the engineering curriculum with a human-centered design approach. She lives in East Dallas with her husband, two children and three backyard chickens.

PEDAL POWER designsNY-based Pedal Power designs and builds pedal-powered machines that allow users to generate their own energy while reaping the health benefits of an active lifestyle. Founded in 2008, the company is run by two best friends Andy (engineer, entrepreneur, and bicyclist) and Steve (programmer and entrepreneur). This hand-built machine, named Big Rig, is constructed from all-steel frames and stock bike parts, and it redefines the way we use a bicycle.

Typically, the core function of a bicycle is for transportation, pleasure, and entertainment. Pedal Power believes that, as humans living on this planet, we can apply that same technology to perform a number of daily tasks by creating power through our own motions. The innovative design functions similarly to riding a bicycle, generating energy that has been used by brewers, farmers, educators, and homesteadors, to name a few. According to the company, an average adult can generate 100 watts of electricity via the optional electric generator that can be mounted to the frame, which is more than enough to power your laptop.

The product allows users to power your world without harming the environment. The company explains: "Bicycle technology can and should be used for many everyday tasks. Using your own power rather than plugging into the grid is not only fun, but also helps you understand your energy use and reduce your ecological footprint."

TEDrummelOrthopedic Surgeon

Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Ted Rummel was devastated with the news of a blood-filled cyst on his spine in 2010 that would eventually burst and lead to his paralyzation from the waist down. Despite the complications, however, the dedicated doctor has managed to find a way to continue working in the operating room through the use of an electric stand-up wheelchair.

The doctor, who would average approximately 1,000 surgeries a year, was met with great difficulty in continuing his career as a surgeon after his own major health setbacks. While most people in Dr. Rummel's situation would understandably retire, he chose to return to work to care for his patients. Though he now travels around in a wheelchair, he still has the hand-eye coordination of a successful surgeon.

The inspiring doctor says, "I relate 100 percent differently to patients now. After going through something like this, you’re going to listen better and be more empathetic. I really feel for their condition and how it’s affecting their life, such as not being able to use your hand." Seeing his patients at Progress West HealthCare Center and Barnes-Jewish St. Peters Hospital, Dr. Rummel is said to bring great joy to everyone he works with, including the medical and OR staff.

ALANNAshaikh

Founder, Blood & Milk

Alanna has been working in international development for about a decade now. She has worked for NGOs, contractors, the US government, and a UN agency. She’s been in charge of programs in East Africa, Central Asia, and the Middle East. She’s been to four of the world’s most dangerous places. The biggest portfolio she ever had was about fifty million dollars, and the most fun she ever had was running a country program in Turkmenistan. She has an undergrad degree from Georgetown and a Master’s in Public Health from Boston University. Alanna is the founder of Blood & Milk, a blog looking at issues in international development, and she has spoken widely on her family’s experiences as her father suffered from Alzheimer's Disease.

ALEXglasscockFounder & Owner, The Ranch at Live Oak Malibu

The Ranch at Live Oak Malibu offers an intensive no-options, endurance, wellness and nutrition program with stays starting at a one week minimum. The Ranch recalibrates guests’ lifestyles towards achieving and sustaining their health goals. Founder and owner Alex Glasscock wanted to create an environment where people could unplug from their chronically business daily lives and recalibrate their mind and body. Both the setting of The Ranch and the program forces guests to focus on themselves to create a positive shift in their physical and mental health and jumpstart a more conscious approach to healthy living.

GOOGLEhelpoutsTelemedicine at Google Helpouts just one innovation in healthcare offerings via telephone and video-conferencing.

With Helpouts you can get help anytime from people with expertise across a range of topics – teachers, counselors, doctors, home repair specialists, personal trainers, hobby enthusiasts, and more.

You can choose who to get help from based on qualifications, availability, ratings and reviews. Also, you can choose to get help right away or schedule a Helpout for later. While some Helpouts are free, you'll need to pay for some.

Note: Google is in the process of hiring a new telemedicine specialist; we will have name/bio shortly.

LUCYmcraeBody Architect

Lucy McRae is a Body Architect exploring the relationship between the body, technology and the grey areas of synthetic and organic materials. She invents playful, imaginary worlds steered by complex scientific challenges to create portals of possibility that provoke the way people embody the future.

Trained in classical ballet and interior design, Lucy staked her

claim as the world’s premier Body Architect during her formative years at Philips Design. Working in the far future design research lab she developed stretchable electronics, an electronic tattoo and a range of emotional sensing dresses

awarded Time’s Best Fashion Invention in 2007.

On a search for beauty in the biological Lucy invented the

Swallowable Parfum a scented capsule that releases a genetically unique fragrance through the skins surface. A serendipitous encounter with Swedish pop icon Robyn, resulted in a color changing liquid textile for her Indestructible single; echoing their shared thinking that 'Technology are feathers for the body'.

RED SWINGprojectArt Installation

We strive to positively impact under-utilized public spaces with simple red swings.

The Red Swing Project started in February 2007 as an urban intervention within the city of Austin, Texas. Our swings are made of red painted wood and hung using retired rock climbing rope. Over the years, we have hung over 200 red swings in USA, India, Thailand, Brasil, Taiwan, South Korea, France, Spain, Portugal, Haiti, Poland, Italy, Germany and Australia.

The red swing remains the constant while the environmental backdrops and cultural contexts change from place to place. We pay particular attention to public response to this familiar object set in an unfamiliar place.

WHITNEYaustin grayResearch & Innovation Director, Cannon Designs

With a passion and curiosity for the built environment and public health, Whitney Austin Gray leads the firm’s research and innovation platforms. Overseeing primary and secondary research, prototyping and invention platforms, Gray works to develop and promote new ideas that will increase the impact of research and innovation firm-wide and deliver transformative projects to clients.

She holds dual appointments as an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Georgetown School of Nursing & Health Studies, with research interests that include the effects of building design and operation on health outcomes. In particular, her interests lie in the development of innovative and sustainable design strategies, processes, and products that provide a safe and healing environment for patients and staff. Gray’s efforts have been featured in American Journal of Nursing, GreenSource, and the Health Environments Research and Design (HERD) Journal. She is an invited presenter at national and international conferences—often speaking on topics related to human centric design in healthcare environments.

JEFFfrazierDirector of The Center for Performing Arts Medicine, Houston Methodist Hospital

Jefferson Todd Frazier is a composer, educator and non-profit leader. He is the Director of The Center for Performing Arts Medicine at The Methodist Hospital, Founder of the American Festival for the Arts and Houston Arts Partners, and is the former Executive Director of Young Audiences of Houston.

Performers, like skilled athletes, rely on physical dexterity and mental acuity to inspire and entertain audiences. Performing artist may experience ailments or injuries such as tendonitis, focal dystonia, depression, stage fright, or problems surrounding your voice, hearing, joints, hormones, skin or teeth. 

The physicians and therapists of Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine (CPAM) at The Methodist Hospital help by treating and/or preventing these problems.

Note: Performance option?

MATTHIAShollwichCo-Founder, HWKN

New Aging investigates and applies recent advances in architecture and urbanism dealing with age related challenges; ones that assures the best utilization with the utmost dignity for age.

There are 17,000 Medicare and Medicate certified nursing homes in the United States, which basically store old people away. Some of these places are decorated to seem “home like” with floral wallpaper and vinyl wooden floors, but these homey touches do not disguise the fact that our culture shuns the aged and prefers them out of sight. We are interested in the alternative. From “Geropolis, the city of the elderly” to “BOOM” our research is intellectual, human, and architectural.

FREDleeAuthor

Fred Lee is the author of the best-selling healthcare management book, If Disney Ran Your Hospital; 9 ½ Things You Would Do Differently, and winner of the 2005 ACHE Book of the Year. Mr. Lee’s principles are changing cultures in healthcare nationwide by casting new light on patient/employee satisfaction and loyalty.

Fred Lee has the enviable distinction of having been both a senior vice president of a major medical center and a cast member at Disney University. Disney recruited him because of his expertise in helping hospitals achieve a culture that inspires patient and employee loyalty. At Disney he helped develop and facilitate Disney’s 3-day seminar, Disney’s Approach to Quality Service for the Healthcare Industry.

GAUTAMgulatiChief Medical Officer & Head of Product Innovation, Physicians Interactive Holdings

Health Hooligan. Hustler. Hacker. Physician Artist. Unusual Suspect. These are a few words that have been used to describe Dr. G’s unique vantage point as a renaissance doctor. “My modus operandi is simple…’pursue what you love and you will love what you do. The rest will play itself out!’”

Dr. Gulati is currently the Chief Medical Officer and Head of Product Innovation for Physicians Interactive Holdings, where he leads a world-class team to ideate, design, build, and deploy disruptive solutions for a health audience. In addition to his executive role, he serves as an Adjunct Professor of “Medical Innovation and Entrepreneurship” at Johns Hopkins University Carey Business School, sits on numerous company boards, and speaks at a variety of corporate and inspirational events around the world.

JEFFfrazierDirector of The Center for Performing Arts Medicine, Houston Methodist Hospital

Jefferson Todd Frazier is a composer, educator and non-profit leader. He is the Director of The Center for Performing Arts Medicine at The Methodist Hospital, Founder of the American Festival for the Arts and Houston Arts Partners, and is the former Executive Director of Young Audiences of Houston.

Performers, like skilled athletes, rely on physical dexterity and mental acuity to inspire and entertain audiences. Performing artist may experience ailments or injuries such as tendonitis, focal dystonia, depression, stage fright, or problems surrounding your voice, hearing, joints, hormones, skin or teeth. 

The physicians and therapists of Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine (CPAM) at The Methodist Hospital help by treating and/or preventing these problems.

Note: Performance option?

3ModelsFull Day:10a-5p 3/4 Day:11a-4.30p 1/2 Day:12p-4p ArrivalTHR Leadership North StarPOD 1: 10.15-12.00 (4-5) Speakers possible Break-out sessions MakeLabLunch: 12.00-1.30 Community mealPOD 2: 1.30-3.00 (4-5) Speakers possible Break-out sessions MakeLabmaketime: 3.00-3.45 Connect with...POD 3: 3.45-5.00 (3-4) Speakers possible MakeLab ShareCeremonial Collective Closing

ArrivalTHR Leadership North StarPOD 1: 11.15-12.30 (4-5) Speakers possible Break-out sessions MakeLabLunch: 12.30-1.30 Curated culinary eventPOD 2: 1.30-2.30 (3-4) Speakers possible Break-out sessions MakeLabmaketime: 2.30-3.00 Connect with...POD 3: 3.00-4.30 (3-4) Speakers possible MakeLab ShareCeremonial Collective Closing

ArrivalTHR Leadership North StarPOD 1: 12.15-2.00 (4-5) Speakers possible Break-out sessions MakeLabmaketime: 2.00-2.30 Connect with...POD 3: 2.30-4.00 (4-5) Speakers possible MakeLab ShareCeremonial Collective Closing

3Models:

Division of Wonderdivisionofwonder.com

Jeff Sharpe | Bill Burgess

Creative Brief prepared for Texas Health Resources | Ed Marxby