| Name | Title | Contact Details |
|---|---|---|
Ethan Selfridge |
VP of AI/ML/Text Analytics Engineering Solutions | Profile |
Todd Frech |
Chief Information Officer | Profile |
Jason Penney |
VP - IT Risk and Security | Profile |
Headquartered in Waterloo, Iowa, VGM is a 100 percent employee-owned company providing business and professional services to thousands of business customers across North America. Services include group purchasing, commercial insurance, management of healthcare services and networks in post-acute cases, healthcare distribution direct to patient homes, specialty consulting, on-line education, digital, print and traditional marketing and more. VGM employs more than 1000 people across 30 states and Canada. Approximately 875 people work in the Waterloo offices and the remainder work in one of VGM`s eight offices outside of Waterloo or work from home. VGM has been named the Top Workplace in Iowa on multiple occasions and is proud of its role in the communities in which it serves.
InSync Healthcare Solutions is a leading provider of integrated EMR and practice management software, revenue cycle management services and medical transcription to thousands of healthcare professionals throughout the United States. The company has leveraged advanced technology and proven business processes to provide services and solutions that translate into better efficiency for healthcare organizations. Currently, the company supports a wide range of leading hospitals, medical clinics and physician practices, including some of the most prestigious healthcare facilities in the nation.
Electro-Optical Sciences is a Irvington, NY-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech sector.
St. Joseph Healthcare is a Bangor, ME-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.