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Debbie
I. Chang, MPH
Debbie is Senior
Vice President and Executive Director of Nemours
Division of Health and Prevention Services where she is
creating and leading a division devoted to developing,
implementing, evaluating and promoting model programs in
the area of child health promotion and disease
prevention. Debbie has 20 years of federal and state
government experience in the health field, primarily
working on the Medicaid program and child health
programs, in particular the State Children’s Health
Insurance Program (SCHIP). She is a national expert on
child health policy and programs and Medicaid. Debbie
was previously Deputy Secretary for Health Care
Financing at the Maryland Department of Health where she
oversaw Medicaid and SCHIP. She has held several
high-level positions with the federal government,
including
leading the national implementation of SCHIP. Before
Nemours, she was Director of Strategic Development and
Policy at the National Academy for State Health Policy,
where she led an effort to improve the Medicaid Program.
She is a graduate of MIT with a master’s degree in
public health from the University of Michigan.
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Keith
W. Cooley
Keith is the
Director of the Department of Labor & Economic Growth
(often called D-LEG). In this capacity, he directs the
activities of more than 4,000 employees in 35 agencies
with oversight of a budget totaling $1.3 billion. His
principal objective–after appointment by Governor
Jennifer M. Granholm in March 2007–has been to “upskill”
Michigan’s workforce to compete in a global community
and provide opportunities for economic uplift. And he is
well-prepared to do so!
Mr. Cooley has played
significant roles in the corporate sector with General
Electric, General Motors and Motorola Corporations, as
founder of a private consulting company, and as a leader
in the non-profit community. His experience ranges from
work as an experimental physicist, strategic planner
crisis manager, marketing and sales executive to CEO of
Focus: HOPE; where he championed the celebrated civil
and human rights organization to become a leader in
manufacturing technology and workforce development
serving underrepresented urban youth.
His professional
activities and affiliations include the Engineering
Society of Detroit and boards of trustees for Te
University of Michigan Engineering Advisory Board, the
Michigan Environmental Council, the Michigan Climate
Action Council and the Michigan Economic Development
Corporation Executive Committee.
Previously he served on
the boards of trustees the Detroit Institute of
Ophthalmology, WIRED (Workforce Innovation for Regional
Economic Development) West Michigan, and the University
Prep Academy.
He has been recognized in Who’s Who in the
World, Tau Beta Pi Eminent Engineer, and the General
Motors President’s Council Honors. He is also a life
member of the National Black MBA Association and the Tau
Beta Pi Engineering Honorary Society.
Cooley received a
Bachelor of Science degree in engineering physics and a
Master of Science degree in nuclear engineering from the
University of Michigan (U-M) in 1967 and 1972,
respectively. As a graduate student, he founded the
Minority Engineering Programs Office, College of
Engineering. In addition, he was a gymnast; the first
African-American to compete in that sport at the school
and was a member of U-M’s 1966 Big Ten Championship
team.
Mr. Cooley is married and has four adult children
and 6 grandsons.
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Patricia A. Gabow, M.D.
Dr. Gabow is Chief Executive Officer and Medical Director of Denver Health.
She received her undergraduate degree from Seton Hill College,
and her M.D. Degree from the University of Pennsylvania School
of Medicine. She trained in Internal Medicine at the Hospital
of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
and Harbor General Hospital in Torrance, California. She received
further training in Nephrology at San Francisco General Hospital
and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Gabow
joined the staff of Denver Health and Hospitals in 1973 as Chief
of the Renal Division.
In 1981 she became Director of the Medical
Service. She became Deputy Manager of Medical Affairs in 1989
and Manager (CEO) of DHH in 1992. Currently, she is CEO of Denver
Health. Denver Health is a highly integrated public healthcare
system, which is the principal safety-net institution for Denver
and Colorado.
She is also a Professor of Medicine in the Division
of Renal Disease at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.
She has authored 150 articles and book chapters. Dr. Gabow is
a member of numerous professional societies including the Association
of American Physicians and is the recipient of numerous awards
and professional distinctions including the American Medical
Association’s Nathan Davis Award for an Outstanding Public Servant;
the University of Colorado’s Florence Rena Sabin Award and has
been inducted to Colorado’s Women Hall of Fame. She has been
named as one of the top 25 women in health care, one of the
top 50 physician executives, and one of the 100 most powerful
people in American health care. She is recipient of the 2008
National Healthcare Leadership Award.
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PETER
D. JACOBSON, JD, MPH
Peter is Professor of Health Law and Policy, and Director,
Center for Law, Ethics, and Health, at the University of
Michigan School of Public Health. He teaches courses on
health law, public health law, and health care regulations.
Before coming to the University of Michigan, Professor
Jacobson was a senior behavioral scientist at the RAND
Corporation in Santa Monica, California.
In 1995, he received
an Investigator Award in Health Policy Research from the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to examine the role of the
courts in shaping health care policy. The project culminated
in the publication of the book Strangers in the Night: Law
and Medicine in the Managed Care Era (Oxford University
Press, 2002). Jacobson co-authored a law school casebook
with Lawrence O. Gostin titled Law and the Health System
(Foundation Press, 2005), and is also a co-author of False
Hope vs. Evidence-Based Medicine: The Story of a Failed
Treatment for Breast Cancer (Oxford University Press, 2007).
Professor Jacobson’s
current research interests focus on the relationship between
law and health care delivery, law and public health systems,
public health ethics, and health care safety net services.
Currently, he is the Principal Investigator (PI) on studies
examining how public health practitioners define and resolve
day-to-day ethical challenges, the impact of state and
federal law on public health preparedness, and enhancing
organizational and operational efficiencies in Michigan’s
health care safety net providers.
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David KENNEDY,
MSW, MHSA
David Kennedy is a
2006 graduate from the Schools of Social Work and Public
Health (MHSA). David knew early in his life that he was to
work in a field serving others. During high school and
college his focus shifted from becoming a physician to
creating an organization that would serve the elderly. After
finishing up his BA in History from the University of
Michigan in 2003, he enrolled in the School of Social Work
and began laying the foundation for his home care agency
Kennedy Care (www.kennedycare.com).
He managed and grew Kennedy Care in Ann Arbor while
completing graduate school and has since seen his
organization double in size for the last two consecutive
years. A staff of 120 caregivers serves the elderly and
chronically ill with mostly non-medical services in a
variety of care settings. Kennedy Care also began operating
in Raleigh, NC in August 2007 with plans to open another
office in the next few months. In October 2008 David became
a managing partner of Home Care Solutions, a Medicare
certified home care agency out of Southfield, MI. This has
enabled Kennedy Care to service both private pay clients and
Medicare patients in their homes across southeast Michigan
and northern Ohio.
In addition to
founding Kennedy Care, in June 2008 David launched an online
business called TheCaringSpace (www.thecaringspace.com).
The mission of this site is the connect families with
privately hired health practitioners. Having been in the
home health field for 5 years, David saw an opportunity to
fill a gap that had not yet been addressed in long term care
– locating, interviewing, hiring, and managing private pay
caregivers. His idea to create the website came about while
he was researching ways to recruit caregivers for the North
Carolina office. TheCaringSpace not only connects families
with caregivers, but also assists in providing knowledge and
tools for families manage private caregivers in the same
manner as if a home care agency was being used.
David’s future plans
include continuing to expand and develop Kennedy Care as a
leader in private duty and certified home health care. He
plans to offer TheCaringSpace worldwide while continually
enhancing the tools and features found on the site. At only
26 years old, he sees himself founding more businesses
related to long term care while working to discover new ways
to meet the needs of our nation’s elderly population.
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ROBERT
M. LANE, MSBA
Robert
is Chairman and CEO of Saint Catherine Healthcare, LLC. Mr.
Lane is a successful hospital entrepreneur having founded a
number of healthcare companies, most notably Cancer
Treatment Centers of America, Bariatric Treatment Centers
(later renamed Barix), Specialty Health, and Saint Catherine
Healthcare. He has served as President of all these firms
from their founding. Having more than thirty years of
healthcare executive experience, Mr. Lane has significant
expertise in developing companies in specialized niches of
healthcare. Further, he has turned around a number of
community hospitals as well as started several hospitals
from scratch. He received a Bachelor of Science degree summa
cum laude in Business Administration from the University of
Detroit and a Masters in Health Services Administration in
Hospital Administration from the University of Michigan.
Additionally, he obtained a Master of Science degree in
Healthcare Finance from the University of South Carolina.
Mr. Lane has been a Fellow in the American College of
Healthcare Executives and a member of the Board of Governors
of the Federation of American Healthcare Systems in
Washington, D.C. Mr. Lane serves on the Board of Directors
of a number of healthcare companies and not-for-profit
charitable organizations. He has published several books in
the healthcare field including An Administrator’s Guide to
Physician Relations.
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GEORGE LEAHY,
MSc
George worked in
the NHS for over 20 years. The majority of that time was
spent working in Public Health in Hackney, Tower Hamlets
and Newham, 3 of the most deprived areas in the UK. From
2001-2006 George was Director of Public Health & Health
Improvement for Tower Hamlets, based in the Primary Care
Trust. George joined the Department of Health, in March
2006 as the Head of Public Health Development. George
trained as a Health Economist by background. He has
worked on a variety subjects and projects including HIV
services, development of community orientated diabetes
services and bilingual advocacy services.
George is
currently on secondment as Director of Research & Policy
for the Social Enterprise Coalition–the UK voice for
social enterprise.
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Christy
Harris Lemak, PhD
Christy is Associate Professor in the Department of Health Management and
Policy at the University of Michigan. Dr. Lemak’s research focuses on various
aspects of organizations that serve
vulnerable populations. In recent
years, her funded research has focused
on Medicaid programs and providers,
community-based collaboratives, and
substance abuse treatment providers. She is currently
part
of a team conducting an independent evaluation of
Florida’s
Medicaid Reform Initiative and has studied other
Medicaid
demonstrations, including a minority physician network
and a provider service network.
Dr. Lemak teaches management, strategy, and leadership
at
the University of Michigan. Before coming to Michigan,
she was on the faculty of the Department of Health
Services
Research, Management and Policy at the University of
Florida. At Florida, she was recipient of Department and
College teaching awards and the 2005 College of Public
Health and Health Professions Faculty Leadership Award.
Dr. Lemak is currently Chair of the Academy of
Management Health Care Management Division.
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Sarah
Loughran, MHSA, MBA
Sarah is
the Executive Vice President of Health Grades, Inc. She has
helped to drive HealthGrades’ mission to guide America to
better healthcare and directed much of its development since
1998. As Executive Vice President, Ms. Loughran has
strategic and operational responsibility for HealthGrades’
business-development and quality improvement services for
hospitals.
Ms. Loughran led
company product development from 1998 to 2006, including the
creation of the initial methodologies used for HealthGrades’
hospital, nursing home, and home health ratings. Ms.
Loughran also directs HealthGrades’ corporate communications
and marketing initiatives.
Ms. Loughran received
a BA in Economics from Vanderbilt University and an MBA and
MHSA from the University of Michigan.
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Phyllis
D. Meadows, Ph.D, MSN, RN
Dr.
Meadows currently serves as the
Director and Public Health Officer
for the City of Detroit. Her responsibilities
include Executive oversight
for the Department of Health and its
comprehensive public health programs
and services. Dr. Meadows has
provided leadership for several existing
and developing community partnerships
to address critical health issues impacting children,
adolescents, adults, and families. She serves on numerous
local, state, and national boards; and serves as an advisor
to national foundations and health organizations. Her
interest and involvement in community based approaches to
outreach, education and early screening and care spans over
20 years. Dr. Meadows had received local, state and national
awards for her work in nursing and public health. In 2006,
she received the Wayne State University School of Nursing’s
Lifetime Achievement Award; and was most recently the
recipient of Michigan Department of Community Health
State’s Directors Award for innovation in public health
programming.
Dr. Meadows has served as a Lead Program Director for the
W. K. Kellogg Foundation in areas of Health, Youth and
Education and Technology. During her 12 years of service
with the Kellogg Foundation, Dr. Meadows provided support
for community based programs, developed international
programs; and facilitated the conceptualization of a
$55 million national initiative to support early learning
and
development of children 0-6 years of life. She has held a
variety of management and leadership roles in community
health, oncology, home care and maternal and child health.
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Randel
E. Richner, BSN, MPH
Randel
founded Neocure Group in June 2006, a consulting firm
specializing in reimbursement, health policy, economics, and
government advocacy support for biopharmaceutical and
medical technology companies. Prior to founding the Neocure
Group, Richner was Vice President, Global Government
Affairs, Reimbursement and Outcomes Planning for Boston
Scientific Corporation (BSC) for 9 years.
At Boston Scientific,
Richner built a global reimbursement and outcomes strategic
process for new and existing less invasive medical
technologies for BSC product platforms. During this time,
she was actively engaged in national and international
policy and legislative arenas as an advocate for the
benefits of innovative medical technology, FDA, regulatory,
international trade and payment issues.
Richner has been a
leader in policy initiatives in Washington with Congress and
the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). She
served on a four-year term as the first industry
representative to the Executive Committee(EC) of the
Medicare Coverage Advisory Committee (MCAC), contributing to
the development of national coverage and MCAC process
guidelines. In 2007, she was reappointed to MedCAC for a 2
year term. She is a frequent contributor on policy panels on
health care issues related to the technology industry, such
as an Institute of Medicine (IOM) special committee on
cost-effectiveness and post-market surveillance in 2005.
Richner is on the College of Fellows of the American
Institute of Medical and Biological Engineers (AIMBE);
National Institute of Health Commercialization Program
(NIH-CAP) Advisor; Executive Advisory Board of the Center
for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health (CEVRH) Tufts
New England Medical Center; Executive Advisory Board to the
Dean of the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health
and the University of Michigan Ross Business School
Healthcare Life Sciences Corporate Advisory Board. She
serves on the board of Entellus Medical.
Prior to BSC, Richner
worked for GlaxoSmithKline (formerly SmithKline Beecham) in
both London, England and Philadelphia, focusing on global
pricing and economic issues for cardiopulmonary and diabetic
drugs, publishing extensively. She was a member of the
Global Health Policy Group (GHPG) consortium of leaders of
health economics groups in the pharmaceutical and device
industry. Richner has been an active member of the
International Society of Pharmacoeconomics and Research
(ISPOR) serving as a Board member for 2 years, founder of
the US Medical Device Council of ISPOR, and Asia-Pacific
Medical Device Council.
Richner has a master’s
degree in public health policy and administration from the
University of Michigan where she is also a magna cum laude
graduate of the bachelor’s in science nursing program.
Before her career in health economics and policy, she was a
practicing dialysis and transplant nurse for 13 years at the
University of Michigan Hospital and Northern Michigan
Hospital.
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Mark L. Vachon
Mark is
the President and CEO for GE Healthcare’s Global Diagnostic
Imaging business, is committed to helping the world see life
more clearly and to advancing the promise of early health by
providing world class technology in imaging and diagnostics.
Since joining GE in 1982, and graduating GE’s leadership
programs, Vachon has provided leadership in a number of GE’s
businesses, including the Global Research Center, GE
Appliances, GE Plastics (recently sold to Saudi Basic
Industries Corp), NBC, and led GE’s investor relations
organization under both CEO Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt. In
recognition for his contribution to GE, Vachon was appointed
a Corporate Officer in 1999. Today, Vachon leads a global
organization headquartered in Waukesha, Wis., of more than
12,000 employees who share his commitment and enthusiasm for
realizing the benefits of early health.
Vachon is an active
member of the Center for Corporate Innovation and a director
of the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce. He is
the Vice Chair for the Imaging Sector of the Advanced
Medical Technology Association. Vachon also serves on
the Board of Overseers for Northeastern University, Boston,
his alma mater.
Vachon is dedicated to supporting clinicians around the
world re-imagine new ways to predict, diagnose, inform,
treat and monitor disease, so people can live their lives to
the fullest.
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