Healthcare
Next Level Innovation Requires Next-Level Data—and Courage
Healthcare leaders must embrace data-driven decision-making to overcome institutional barriers and reimagine patient care delivery
Key takeaways
Healthcare leaders must embrace data-driven decision-making to overcome institutional barriers and reimagine patient care delivery
In the vanguard of healthcare transformation, next-level data emerges as a tool and a catalyst for courageous innovation that Dr. Emily Lindemer and Morgan Health are championing.
Healthcare Rethink, a FinThrive podcast hosted by Brian Urban, delves into this fusion of next-level data and healthcare innovation with guest Emily Lindemer, PhD, the VP of Healthcare Innovation at Morgan Health of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Together, Urban and Lindemer unpack the transformative role of data in shaping healthcare delivery.
Lindemer shares her journey from neuroscience to spearheading healthcare transformation through data analysis. Her personal story, beginning with a teenager's confrontation with dementia's impact on her family, showcases the driving force behind her passion for healthcare innovation. McGill University's unique computational neuroscience program laid her academic foundation, leading to Lindemer's pursuit of understanding the underlying mechanisms of health issues through data.
This episode delivers profound insights into how harnessing next-level-data approaches improves health outcomes and the overall healthcare ecosystem, particularly in employer-sponsored insurance.
About the author
Brian Urban has a deep skill set in health promotion and product development for rare disease and senior populations with Large Health Plans and Specialty Pharmacy. Urban has served as a speaker on such topics for the Alzheimer’s Association, Obediah Cole Prostate Cancer Foundation, Cigna Corp and Utica University Institute for the study of integrative healthcare. Urban has received a Masters of Science in Exercise Physiology-Health Promotion, Masters of Business Administration in Market Development and is currently completing a Masters in Public Health at Dartmouth College. Urban is currently a research-fellow sponsored by a Robert Wood Johnson Grant supporting Utica University public health research in Upstate New York.