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Adam Mariano, Highpoint Solutions | Informatica World 2019


 

(upbeat music) >> Live, from Las Vegas it's theCUBE. Covering Informatica World 2019. Brought to you by Informatica. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of Informatica World 2019. I'm your host Rebecca Knight along with my co-host John Furrier. We are joined by Adam Mariano, he is the Vice-President Health Informatics at HighPoint Solutions. Thanks for coming on theCUBE! >> Thank you for having me. >> So tell our viewers a little bit about HighPoint Solutions, what the company does and what you do there. >> Sure, HighPoint is a consulting firm in the Healthcare and Life Sciences spaces. If it's data and it moves we probably can assist with it. We do a lot of data management, we implement the full Infomatica stack. We've been an Infomatica partner for about 13 years, we were their North American partner of the year last year. We're part of a much larger organization, IQVIA, which is a merger of IMS quintiles, large data asset holder, big clinical research organization. So we're very much steeped in the healthcare data space. >> And what do you do there as Vice President of Health and Formatics? >> I'm in an interesting role. Last year I was on the road 51 weeks. So I was at over a hundred facilities, I go out and help our customers or prospective customers or just people we've met in the space, get strategic about how they're going to leverage data as a corporate asset, figure out how they're going to use it for clinical insight, how they're going to use it for operational support in payer spaces. And really think about how they're going to execute on their next strategy for big data, cloud strategy, digital re-imaginment of the health care space and the like. >> So we know that healthcare is one of the industries that has always had so much data, similar to financial services. How are the organizations that you're working with, how are they beginning to wrap their brains around this explosion of data? >> Well it's been an interesting two years, the last augur two years there isn't a single conversation that hasn't started with governance. And so it's been an interesting space for us. We're a big MDM proponent, we're a big quality proponent, and you're seeing folks come back to basics again, which is I need data quality, I need data management from a metadata perspective, I need to really get engaged from a master data management perspective, and they're really looking for integrated metadata and governance process. Healthcare's been late to the game for about five or six years behind other industries. I think now that everybody's sort of gone through meaningful use and digital transformation on some level, we're now arcing towards consumerism. Which really requires a big deep-dive in the data. >> Adam, data governance has been discussed at length in the industry, certainly recently everyone knows GDPR's one year anniversary, et cetera, et cetera. But the role of data is really critical applications for SAS and new kinds of use cases, and the term Data Provisioning as a service has been kicked around. So I'd love to get your take on what that means, what is the definition, what does it mean? Data Provisioning as a service. >> The industry's changed. We've sort of gone through that boomerang, alright, we started deep in the sort of client server, standard warehouse space. Everything was already BMS. We then, everybody moved to appliances, then everybody came back and decided Hadoop, which is now 15 year old technology, was the way to go. Now everybody's drifting to Cloud, and you're trying to figure out how am I going to provision data to all these self-service users who are now in the sort of bring your own tools space. I'd like to use Tablo, I'd like to use Click. I like SAS. People want to write code to build their own data science. How can you provision to all those people, and do so through a standard fashion with the same metadata with the same process? and there isn't a way to do that without some automation at this point. It's really just something you can't scale, without having an integrated data flow. >> And what's the benefits of data provisioning as a service? What's the impact of that, what does it enable? >> So the biggest impact is time to market. So if you think about warehousing projects, historically a six month, year-long project, I can now bring data to people in three weeks. In two days, in a couple of hours. So thinking about how I do ingestion, if you think about the Informatica stack, something like EDC using enterprise data catalog to automatically ingest data, pushing that out into IDQ for quality. Proving that along to AXON for data governance and process and then looking at enterprise data lake for actual self-service provisioning. Allowing users to go in and look at their own data assets like a store, pick things off the shelf, combine them, and then publish them to their favorite tools. That premise is going to have to show up everywhere. It's going to have to show up on AWS, and on Amazon, and on Azure. It's going to have to show up on Google, it's going to have to show up regardless of what tool you're using. And if you're going to scale data science in a real meaningful way without having to stack a bunch of people doing data munging, this is the way it's going to have to go. >> Now you are a former nurse, and you now-- >> I'm still a nurse, technically. >> You're still a nurse! >> Once a nurse, always a nurse. Don't upset the nurses. >> I've got an ear thing going on, can you help me out here? (laughter) >> So you have this really unique vantage point, in the sense that you are helping these organizations do a better job with their data, and you also have a deep understanding of what it's like to be the medical personnel on the other side, who has to really implement these changes, and these changes will really change how they get their jobs done. How would you say, how does that change the way you think about what you do? And then also what would you say are the biggest differences for the nurses that are on the floor today, in the hospital serving patients? >> I think, in America we think about healthcare we often talked about Doctors, we only talk about nurses in nursing shortages. Nurses deliver all the care. Physicians see at this point, the way that medicine is running, physicians see patients an average two to four minutes. You really think about what that translates to if you're not doing a surgery on somebody, it's enough time to talk to them about their problem, look at their chart and leave. And so nursing care is the point of care, we have a lot of opportunity to create deflection and how care is delivered. I can change quality outcomes, I can change safety problems, I can change length of stay, by impacting how long people keep IVs in after they're no longer being used. And so understanding the way nursing care is delivered, and the lack of transparency that exists with EMR systems, and analytics, there's an opportunity for us to really create an open space for nursing quality. So we're talking a lot now to chief nursing officers, who are never a target of analytics discussion. They don't necessarily have the budget to do a lot of these things, but they're the people who have the biggest point of control and change in the way care is delivered in a hospital system. >> Care is also driven by notifications and data. >> Absolutely. >> So you can't go in a hospital without hearing all kinds of beeps and things. In AI and all the things we've been hearing there's now so many signals, the question is what they pay attention to? >> Exactly. >> This becomes a really interesting thing, because you can get notifications, if everything's instrumented, this is where kind of machine learning, and understanding workflows, outcomes play a big part. This is the theme of the show. It's not just the data and coding, it's what are you looking for? What's the problem statement or what's the outcome or scenario where you want the right notification, at the right time or a resource, is the operating room open? Maybe get someone in. These kinds of new dynamics are enabled by data, what's your take on all this? >> I think you've got some interesting things going on, there's a lot of signal to noise ratio in healthcare. Everybody is trying to build an algorithm for something. Whether that's who's going to overstay their visit, who's going to be readmitted, what's the risk for somebody developing sepsis? Who's likely to follow up on a pharmacy refill for their medication? We're getting into the space where you're going to have to start to accept correlation as opposed to causation, right? We don't have time to wait around for a six month study, or a three year study where you employ 15,000 patients. I've got three years of history, I've got a current census for the last year. I want to figure out, when do I have the biggest risk for falls in a hospital unit? Low staffing, early in their career physicians and nurses? High use of psychotropic meds? There are things that, if you've been in the space, you can pretty much figure out which should go into the algorithm. And then being pragmatic about what data hospitals can actually bring in to use as part of that process. >> So what you're getting at is really domain expertise is just as valuable as coding and wrangling data, and engineering data. >> In healthcare if you don't have SMEs you're not going to get anything practical done. And so we take a lot of these solutions, as one of the interesting touch points of our organization, I think it's where we shine, is bringing that subject matter expertise into a space where pure technology is not going to get it done. It's great if you know how to do MDM. But if you don't know how to do MDM in healthcare, you're going to miss all the critical use cases. So it really - being able to engage that user base, and the SMEs and bring people like nurses to the forefront of the conversation around analytics and how data will be used to your point, which signals to pay attention to. It's critical. >> Supply chains, another big one. >> Yeah. >> Impact there? >> Well it's the new domain in MDM. It's the one that was ignored for a long time. I think people had a hard time seeing the value. It's funny I spoke at 10 o'clock today, about supply chain, that was the session that I had with Nathan Rayne from BJC. We've been helping them embark on their supply chain journey. And from all the studies you look at it's one of the easiest places to find ROI with MBM. There's an unbelievable amount of ways- >> Low hanging fruit. >> $24.5 billion in waste a year in supply chain. It's just astronomical. And it's really easy things, it's about just in time supplies, am I overstocking, am I losing critical supplies for tissue samples, that cost sometimes a $100,000, because a room has been delayed. And therefore that tissue sits out, it ends up expiring, it has to be thrown away. I'll bring up Nathan's name again, but he speaks to a use case that we talked about, which is they needed a supply at a hospital within the system, 30 miles away another hospital had that supply. The supply costs $40,000. You can only buy them in packs of six. The hospital that needed the supply was unaware that one existed in the system, they ordered a new pack of six. So you have a $240,000 price that you could have resolved with a $100 Uber ride, right? And so the reality is that supply could have been shipped, could have been used, but because that wasn't automated and because there was no awareness you couldn't leverage that. Those use cases abound. You can get into the length of stay, you can get into quality of safety, there's a lot of great places to create wins with supply chain in the MDM space. >> One of the conversations we're having a lot in theCUBE, and we're having here at Informatica World, it centers around the skills gap. And you have a interesting perspective on this, because you are also a civil rights attorney who is helping underserved people with their H1B visas. Can you talk a little bit about the visa situation, and what you're seeing particularly as it relates to the skills gap? >> We're in an odd time. We'll leave it at that. I won't make a lot of commentary. >> Yes. >> I'm a civil rights and immigration attorney, and on the immigration side I do a lot of pro bono work with primarily communities of color, but communities at risk looking to help adjust their immigration status. And what you've had is a lot of fear. And so you have, well you might have an H1B holder here, you may have somebody who's on a provisional visa, or family members, and because those family members can no longer come over, people are going home. And you're getting people who are now returning. So we're seeing a negative immigration of places like Mexico, you're seeing a lot of people take their money, and their learnings and go back to India and start companies there and work remotely. So we're seeing a big up-tick in people who are looking for staffing again. I think the last quarter or so has been a pretty big ramp-up. And I think there's going to continue to be this hole, we're going to have to find new sources of talent if we can't bring people in to do the jobs. We're still also, I think it just speaks to our STEM education the fact that we're not teaching kids. I have a 28 year old daughter who loves technology, but I can tell you, her education when she was a kid, was lacking in this technology space. I think it's really an opportunity for us to think about how do we train young people to be in the new data economy. There's certainly an opportunity there today. >> And what about the, I mean you said you were talking about your daughter's education. What would you have directed her toward? What kinds of, when you look ahead to the jobs of the future, particularly having had various careers yourself, what would you say the kids today should be studying? >> That's two questions. So my daughter, I told her do what makes you happy. But I also made her learn Sequel. >> Be happy, but learn Sequel. >> But learn sequel. >> Okay! >> And for kids today I would say look, if you have an affinity and you think you enjoy the computer space, so you think about coding, you like HTML, you like social media. There are a plethora of jobs in that space and none of them require you to be an architect. You can be a BA, you can be a quality assurance person, you can be a PM. You can do analysis work. You can do data design, you can do interface design, there's a lot of space in there. I think we often reject kids who don't go to college, or don't have that opportunity. I think there's an opportunity for us to reach down into urban centers and really think about how we make alternate pathways for kids to get into the space. I think all the academies out there, you're seeing rise, Udemy, and a of of these other places that are offering academy based programs that are three, six months long and they're placing all of their students into jobs. So I don't think that the arc that we've always chased which is you've got to come from a brand named school to get into the space, I don't think it's that important. I think what's important is can I get you the clinical skill, so that you've understood how to move data around, how to process it, how to do testing, how to do design, and then I can bring you into the space and bring you in as an entry level employee. That premise I think is not part of the American dream but it should be. >> Absolutely, looking for talent in these unexpected places. >> College is not the only in point. We're back to having I think vocational schools for the new data economy, which don't exist yet. That's an opportunity for sure. >> And you said earlier, domain expertise, in healthcare as an example, points to what we've been hearing here at the conference, is that with data understanding outcomes and value of the data actually is just as important, as standing up, wrangling data, because if you don't have the data-- >> You make a great point. The other thing I tell young people in my practice, young people I interact with, people who are new to the space is, okay I hear you want to be a data scientist. Learn the business. So if you don't know healthcare get a healthcare education. Come be on this project as a BA. I know you don't want to be a BA, that's fine. Get over it. But come be here and learn the business, learn the dialogue, learn the economy of the business, learn who the players are, learn how data moves through the space, learn what is the actual business about. What does delivering care actually look like? If you're on the payer side, what does claims processing look like from an end to end perspective? Once you understand that I can put you in any role. >> And you know digital four's new non-linear ways to learn, we've got video, I see young kids on YouTube, you can learn anything now. >> Absolutely. >> And scale up your learning at a pace and if you get stuck you can just keep getting through it no-- >> And there are free courses everywhere at this point. Google has a lot of free courses, Amazon will let you train for free on their platform. It's really an opportunity-- >> I think you're right about vocational specialism is actually a positive trend. You know look at the college University scandals these days, is it really worth it? (laughter) >> I got my nursing license through a vocational school originally. But the nursing school, they didn't have any technology at that point. >> But you're a great use case. (laughter) Excellent Adam, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE it's been a pleasure talking to you. >> Thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight for John Furrier. You are watching theCUBE. (techno music)

Published Date : May 22 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Informatica. We are joined by Adam Mariano, he is the Vice-President and what you do there. in the Healthcare and Life Sciences spaces. And really think about how they're going to execute How are the organizations that you're working with, I need to really get engaged from a master data So I'd love to get your take on what that means, It's really just something you can't scale, So the biggest impact is time to market. Once a nurse, always a nurse. the way you think about what you do? They don't necessarily have the budget to do In AI and all the things we've been hearing it's what are you looking for? We're getting into the space where you're going to have So what you're getting at is really But if you don't know how to do MDM in healthcare, And from all the studies you look at And so the reality is that supply could have been shipped, And you have a interesting perspective on this, I won't make a lot of commentary. And I think there's going to continue to be this hole, I mean you said you were talking about your So my daughter, I told her do what makes you happy. the computer space, so you think about coding, in these unexpected places. for the new data economy, which don't exist yet. So if you don't know healthcare get a healthcare education. And you know digital four's new Amazon will let you train for free on their platform. You know look at the college University scandals But the nursing school, they didn't have on theCUBE it's been a pleasure talking to you. I'm Rebecca Knight for John Furrier.

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