Detect, Prevent And Control Healthcare Data Breaches – Webinar By Mentorhealth

Why should you attend: Attend our 90-minute, vendor-neutral webinar to learn about crucial topics ranging from recognizing symptoms of a breach and breach diagnosis to analysis of a security incident and notification requirements. Participants will have dedicated time for questions and answers after the presentation.

Areas Covered in the Session:
Breach overview
Causes of breach
Symptoms of a breach
What do you do if you suspect a breach?
How to minimize breach impact?
Key takeaways

Who Will Benefit:
Health Information Manager
Healthcare Privacy Officer
Healthcare Security Officer
Chief Information Officer
Healthcare Counsel/lawyer
Chief Compliance Officer
CEO, CFO, HIPAA Officer
Healthcare Staff
Alan J. Roth CISA, is an expert in digital forensics. He is a retired United States Postal Inspector with experience in investigations, audit (financial, contract and developmental/information technology), digital forensics, and IT security. As a Program Manager for the Postal Inspection Services Digital Evidence Unit, Alan led a team of Forensic Analysts specializing in computer, video and audio analysis for nine years, supporting criminal investigations around the U.S. In this capacity Alan testified in Federal court as a Computer Forensic expert on several occasions.

He also served as liaison to the National Institute of Science and Technologys (NIST) Digital Evidence working group, and participated in the development of National Institute of Justice (NIJ) guides and special reports on digital evidence topics, co-sponsored by NIST. His most recent assignment prior to retiring from the Postal Inspection Service was as the Law Enforcement liaison to the Postal Services CIRT team and Information Systems Security group. In a previous assignment he served as the security officer for the Postal Inspection Services Information Technology Division.

Alan is an experienced trainer/presenter, having provided digital evidence training to Postal Inspector Basic Training classes for many years. He was also co-developer of the Postal Inspection Services Digital Evidence course for Postal Inspectors, and coordinated or assisted in coordinating training conferences for Forensic Computer Analysts during his tenure as a Program Manager for the Digital Evidence Unit. His work experience includes serving as postal inspection service representative to National Institute of Science and Technology Joint Steering Committee for Computer Forensics. He is a Certified Information Systems Auditor(CISA), current Director of ISACA, the Information Systems Audit and Control Association of RTP chapter and past 2nd Vice President of the Carolina chapter of HTCIA, which is the High Technology Crime Investigation Association.

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Healthcare Industry China Animal Feed Industry Research Report

Animal products such as meat, milk and eggs are an expensive source of food as compared to stable crops. Due to this, the consumption of animal protein in the developing nations is well below the world average. However, the transition in the economies of these countries has lead to growth in disposable income, purchasing power and the consequential rise in demand for animal protein. Food consumption level is now considered a clear indicator of the size of a country’s population and the health of its economy. China is by far the best example to highlight the validity of this point.

China continues to develop and is rapidly becoming a stronger economy. The sophistication and rising standard of living of the population has resulted in a change in dietary patterns. China is the world’s largest consumer of meat and is nearly self sufficient in meeting its requirements. Livestock production has been growing faster than any other agricultural sub-sector in China in recent decades, mainly due to the substantial growth of pig and poultry industries. To support its large number of livestock, the country requires animal feed in quantity and quality. This is the most important reason behind the growth of the animal feed industry in China.

The 6 broad categories of animal species for which feed is specifically manufactured in China are pig, boiler poultry, layer poultry, aquatic animals, ruminant and feed for other animals such as horses and pets. Since China is the largest market in the world for pork, pig feed is the major segment within animal feed in the country. Furthermore, the consumption of chicken is increasing rapidly, thereby amplifying demand for boiler poultry. However, feed for aquatic species is the fastest growing segment owing to the booming aquaculture sector in China.

-Due to the development of China’s economy, the population is increasingly being able to afford animal protein and is constantly adding the same to their diets. Subsequently, animal feed is required both in quantity and in quality to support the livestock in the country.– according to the research report -China Animal Feed Industry Review to 2018- Thriving Aquaculture Sector to Accelerate Growth’ by Ken Research

The report provides detailed overview on compound feed, concentrate feed and premixes and additives, in addition to feed for specific animal species in China and helps readers in identifying the ongoing trends in the key segments of the industry and anticipated growth in future depending upon changing industry dynamics in coming years. The report will aid industry consultants, animal feed companies, marketing companies and other stakeholders to align their market centric strategies according to ongoing and expected trends in future.

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Contact Person: Ankur Gupta
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Healthcare Service Provider Solutions

The healthcare sector is a growing and has been continuously under-going change to stay ahead of the curve. Therefore healthcare management solutions needs to be improvised in business processes, cost-effective, and should be more customer-centric. The healthcare software solutions applications should be able to address the problems faced by the healthcare sector. An efficient healthcare software solution has to meet various business challenges. These are streamlining of the processes, increasing speed of information flow, distributed access to medical information, healthcare data- warehousing & analytics, reducing medical errors, should adhere to some regulatory standards. The healthcare software solutions helps healthcare organizations save time, control costs, maximizes productivity, and helps in maintaining the highest quality of care for their customers and patients. Customized software solutions developed for the healthcare industry takes care of all the medical activities and increases the workflow effectiveness. Your choice to outsource your healthcare software application development services should depend upon various criteria like cost effectiveness, time bound, reliable, affordable, customized, etc. Mindfire Solutions is the best third party service provider to outsource your Healthcare management software development requirements. Mindfire Solutions has deep expertise in outsource Healthcare software development services and has executed various projects in outsource Healthcare application development services. Please visit our outsource Healthcare software development projects page for more details.

Mindfire Solutions is one of the leading outsourcing company in Healthcare software development services. Mindfire Solutions has deep expertise in various technologies like web, mobile, database, plugins, reports bi, QA & Automated testing, Desktop, RIA, App-based development Services. Mindfire Solutions is the ultimate destination to hire dedicated offshore Software programmers and testers. You get the benefit of most flexible hours of working, affordable cost, experienced Software consultants and time savvy benefits. We have a highly experienced team of dedicated outsource software Developers with years of experience in various Offshore software application development services. We also have 100 hours risk free trial* for new clients.

To know more about our expertise in Healthcare software development services and outsource your healthcare software solution requirements, please contact us at [emailprotected] or call 1-248-686-1424. We will be glad to help you.

Healthcare Reform Rising Costs of Benefits Puts Onus on Employees

Up to 159 million Americans (52 percent) are covered by employer-sponsored plans. The Affordable Care Act is changing the group health insurance scenario. Employers are concerned about the rising cost of per-employee benefit costs and are expecting their employees to contribute more out of their pay checks to the benefits package. This is borne out by the results of several studies, including ERCs recently published 2011/2012 Policies & Benefits Survey covering Northeast Ohio employers.

Recent Deloitte and the International Society of Certified Employee Benefit Specialists (ISCEBS) research1 indicates that 85% of employers expect new health insurance law to raise per-employee benefit costs. Employees are expected to help employers face this challenge by paying more out of their pay checks to their benefits package. In fact, the focus on controlling healthcare costs is evident: 73% of the employers surveyed said that health care reform will push them to reevaluate their benefits packages over the next 12 months in light of health reform changes. Sixty-two per cent of employers have already made cost-sharing a part of their benefits packages.

Two-thirds of the Deloitte employer respondents are making no immediate changes to their benefit programs and adopting a “wait and see” approach for final healthcare reform provisions that may reduce plan design flexibility.

More controversial was the recent McKinsey & Company survey2 of 1,300 employers in early 2011 which found that 30% said they would “definitely or probably” stop offering employer coverage after 2014. Nearly half of the employers said they would consider alternatives to their current plans, including an insurance option that would only offer coverage only to certain employees.

A survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Urban Institute3 last year showed that in 2010, employees with coverage contributed a greater share of the total premium, a significant change from the steady share they paid on average over the last decade. In 2010, covered employees on average contributed 19% of the total premium for single coverage (up from 17% in 2009) and 30% for family coverage (up from 27% in 2009).

According to ERCs 2011 survey, Northeast Ohio employers report that the average health insurance deductible paid by employees has risen significantly since 2009. As organizations strive to cope with the increase in costs, they are resorting to greater cost-sharing with employees. The survey indicates that employees’ co-pay amounts and contribution to group health insurance premiums also increased in the last two years.

Competing objectives are complicating matters. Deloitte/ISCEBS rates employers top five total reward priorities as:

Cost of healthcare benefits Employees willingness to share more of the benefit Ability of the benefits program to attract, motivate and retain talent Ability to comply with and adjust to PPACA’s mandate Clear alignment of total reward strategy with business strategy and brand