| Name | Title | Contact Details |
|---|---|---|
Emily Rutter |
Vice President Human Resources | Profile |
Michael Shaffer |
Chief Financial Officer | Profile |
US Fitness is constantly growing and improving the fitness experience, and we want you to be part of this revolution! We want passionate, driven individuals who want to spread health and fitness to their communities and are ready to deliver that Ultima...
NextHealth Technologies (NHT), based in Denver CO, drives measurable medical cost reduction through a prescriptive analytics and consumer engagement platform. NextHealth’s proprietary SaaS platform integrates three foundational technologies - prescriptive analytics, behavioral economics, and multichannel consumer engagement. This end-to end, technology-enabled solution predicts risk reduction opportunities and then prescribes personalized member level actions or “nudges" to dramatically improve outcomes. NHT has been able to deliver a sustained and ground breaking 25% reduction in ER visits and over $17 per member per year in medical claims cost reduction for targeted commercial, ASO, and Medicaid populations. NHT offers over 30+ use cases including ER visit reduction, out-of-network reduction, and retention of high value individual members. NextHealth offers an at risk managed services contract based on 20% of causal claims savings. These results have led the company to be named by Gartner as one of the most innovative healthcare analytics vendors in the US. NHT’s multi-year software and managed services solution is currently contracted and supporting over 1.5 million members with some of the most reputable health plans in the country including: UnitedHealthcare, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, and Colorado Access.
Pharos Life is a Cambridge, ON-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, & Biotech sector.
Intercell USA is a Gaithersburg, MD-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech sector.
DCPCA is a nonprofit health reform organization founded in 1996 by health care professionals who were concerned that the shortage of primary health care in the District was contributing to increasingly poor health outcomes for DC's most vulnerable residents. With a budget of $140,000 in seed money from the federal government's Bureau of Primary Care, Sharon Baskerville became DCPCA's first executive director in 1998. As DCPCA established itself in the late 1990s, District voters elected a new mayor and six new members of the DC Council. The improved political environment made it possible for the District's budget to emerge from direct federal control. Under these new conditions, DCPCA emerged as a health reform leader and quickly became the local voice promoting progressive health care financing and public policy, galvanizing political support at the local and federal levels.