Heritage launched the $3 million Heritage Health Prize with one goal in mind: to develop a breakthrough algorithm that uses available patient data, including health records and claims data, to predict and prevent unnecessary hospitalizations. Heritage believes that incentivized competition – one that includes the involvement of those with passionate minds that don’t know what can’t be done – is the best way to achieve the radical breakthroughs and innovations necessary to reform our health care system. Sponsoring this prize is simply one way that Heritage believes it can help solve a societal problem. Heritage is not an insurer and doesn’t stand to benefit directly by solving this problem – but Heritage is in the business of looking after the health of Americans and believes that corporations have a role in enabling change for the better.

This has the potential of catalyzing big breakthroughs in healthcare analytics. At too many healthcare clients have I seen Informatics departments stuck in operational reporting instead of the higher-value analytics work that they were probably originally recruited for. Sure, every client is different, but a common experience in healthcare consulting is that data is 1) hard to get, 2) hard to interpret, 3) hard to put to use. Health insurers have hard enough time managing their databases and data warehouses given limited IT budgets and qualified resources, let alone do significant value-add or R&D work in effectively mining their membership health and claims data. Other industries are having problem managing and drawing insights from “big data,” but it is especially difficult for healthcare due to HIPAA privacy and other government regulations.

So, the fact that the Heritage provider network has partnered with Kaggle to create an analytics competition is great news, indeed! Finally medical data is available for data scientists and other analytics wizards to comb through, innovate, and perhaps come up with true out-of-the-box thinking on this problem: patient identification and member-level targeting to truly reduce cost (and not just lipservice/buzzwords to put on vendors’ latest care management platform marketing collateral). IT and Informatics/Business Intelligence departments within healthcare companies are too busy doing “business as usual” and “maintenance” projects… so crowdsourcing “anonymous” health data to scientists and data experts just makes sense. I hope to see more of these types of competitions within the healthcare space in the near future.

I have signed up for the competition; looking forward to getting knee-deep in the member data, and getting a real-world handle on the types of challenges that Informatics departments must deal with on a daily basis.

For more info check out

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Great overview of Hadoop and related “big-data” tools

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Launch of DAVIDphoto.co

March 20, 2011

Just wanted to let everyone know I launched a new photo website! It’s simple, showcasing only 20 photos. The rest can be seen on my flickr stream. Thanks for viewing!

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ARO Mobile – Finally “truly intelligent” smart phone software…

October 28, 2010

Here’s an idea my friends and I have been kicking around for a while… turns out another bunch of (well-funded, well-connected) people have been secretly working on this in the meantime…. So what is Aro? Currently, it’s a piece of software that runs on top of Google’s mobile Android OS. But it’s not just another [...]

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David Beach’s Blog: Developing for Android

September 9, 2010

Like it or not, Android is huge. Creating an open source mobile platform was one of the smarter things Google has done. It's too bad that they haven't done that great of a job doing it. Android has succeeded despite Google. In fact it's safe to say that Android is successful for one primary reason. [...]

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GDC 2010: Ngmoco’s Neil Young on how freemium will change the App Store world

September 9, 2010

interesting article on freemium model for mobile app development He and his company decided that an app was a trade with customers — customers would pay money to have the company fill out their free time. And that’s how the company attached itself to the concept of DAUs. DAUs, explained Young, are “daily active uniques” [...]

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Fun: New York 2010 :: Red Bull Air Race

June 1, 2010

Prepare for Takeoff – New York 2010 :: Red Bull Air Race Videos.

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China: GMIC And CHINICT Tech Conferences In Beijing: Learnings From China

May 30, 2010

Great article on techcrunch about a Beijing tech conference; was in town a month ago, too bad I missed it, would have been great to attend: After exploring the mobile and Internet landscapes in Shanghai and Beijing, the GeeksOnAPlane (GOAP) group (30+ techies mostly from the Silicon Valley) continued their Asian field trip to Korea [...]

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How Zappos was Born: Place Bets on Passionate People – The Conversation – Harvard Business Review

May 24, 2010

Thought this was a great quote describing “bootstrapping” (quite literally too) at Zappos… Nick talked about the progress that the website had made over the past few weeks. They were already getting $2,000 worth of orders a week, and the numbers were growing. They weren’t making any money, because anytime an order was placed, Nick [...]

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Doing business in China

May 15, 2010

I traveled to Beijing to meet truckers and brokers first-hand while performing market research with Xin Tian You (XTY). Xin Tian You (XTY) was founded by industry veterans with the vision to transform the Chinese transportation industry. China has 26M truckers, approximately 12M trucks (85% individually owned/operated), and hundreds of thousands of information brokers. Shipping [...]

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