FOCUS TOPIC INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY JULY 2015 / $5
Serving a 24 County Area, Including Birmingham, Huntsville, Montgomery & Tuscaloosa
On Rounds Dr. Jack Dabbs at 81: “Medicine Has Been Good to Me” On a recent weekday morning, a lot more people than usual were passing through the offices of Dr. Jack Dabbs, an ENT whose building is on Lomb Avenue near Princeton Baptist Medical Center ... page 3
UAB Lab Studies Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Institute of Medicine Announces New Name for CFS In California, patients wait up to five years for initial appointments at a Stanford clinic that caters to chronic fatigue syndrome. “That’s how little supply there is for the demand,” says Jarred Younger, PhD, head of the new Neuroinflammation, Pain and Fatigue Lab at UAB. “No specialty has taken it on.” ... page 4
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Preventing Breaches with Hardware Firewalls By Jane Ehrhardt
On the Health and Human Services website, a section posts every healthcare organization since 2009 whose patient data covering 500 or more individuals has been breached. Each page of this “Wall of Shame” lists 100 organizations. As of June 15, the list runs 1,249 pages long. Breaches can result in hefty costs. Penalties can range from $100 to $50,000 per violation or record, meaning even a small practice of 300 patients could pay out a minimum of $30,000 in fines. Avoiding a data breach begins with a hardware firewall, say information technology experts. Not to be confused with software loaded onto individual workstations as firewalls, “a hardware firewall is your own private security firm that protects all your internet traffic entrance and exit
doors,” says Curtis Woods with Integrated Solutions in Birmingham. The hardware device connects between a practice’s internal server and their internet connection, serving as a gatekeeper. “It monitors traffic going in and out to make sure it’s not compromised,” says Aaron Woods, also with Integrated Solutions. “It inspects every piece of traffic to make sure it’s allowed through.” Too many healthcare practices, however, never use the entire protective abilities of their firewall. “Everybody understands you need some sort of protection from the internet. And that’s a firewall,” says Russ Dorsey with Kassouf & Co. “But what it should really do is help you control what your users are able to do.” Recent publicized security breaches, from Target to the fed(CONTINUED ON PAGE 6)
Mendelsohn Performs Nation’s First Vessix™ Renal Denervation for Hypertension By Laura Freeman
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Farrell Mendelsohn, MD
When two good ideas cross paths by chance, sometimes something wonderful happens. When Farrell Mendelsohn MD, an interventional cardiologist with Cardiology PC at Princeton Baptist Medical Center, was at a medical conference in Las Vegas, he happened to meet Raymond Cohen, who is CEO of Minnow Medical, a small biotech company that had developed a balloon catheter device designed for leg procedures. As Cohen described his balloon catheter, it occurred to Mendelsohn that it might be adapted to another purpose, an idea that Mendelsohn had been contemplating for some time. “Years ago, before the development of hypertension medications, the only thing medical science could offer patients with lethal levels of hypertension was surgery to cut the sympathetic nerves in the kidneys,” Mendelsohn says. “No one (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16)
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