Healthcare Thought Leadership & Innovation Awareness Month Expands Recognition for Sharing Data Strategies to Improve Health Outcomes
Download Part Two of our latest white paper!
Listen to our webinar “Exciting Breakthroughs in the Future of Limb Loss Care for 2,100,000 Americans.”
The Thought Leadership & Innovation Foundation (TLI) is pleased to announce the successful conclusion of the first national Healthcare Thought Leadership & Innovation Month in the Health Observances & Recognition Days calendar published by The Society for Health Care Strategy & Market Development (SHSMD), part of the American Hospital Association (AHA).
During the month-long event, we conducted an impactful webinar “Exciting Breakthroughs in the Future of Limb Loss Care for 2,100,000 Americans,” which featured limb loss patient Ariel Rigney, MPA, a self-proclaimed nonprofit “nerd,” athlete, world traveler and adventure-seeker, Bill Oldham, President, TLI, and Dr. Kenton Kaufman, Ph.D., PE, Director, Motion Analysis Laboratory, Mayo Clinic.
We also released Part One of “At the Intersection of Thought Leadership & Innovation: Where Meaningful Healthcare Change Happens” and have made available Part Two of this series here.
The Future of Limb Loss Care
During the webinar, panelists focused on the national Limb Loss & Preservation Registry (Registry), which has entered a major new phase, under contract with the Mayo Clinic and funded with federal funds from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health and Department of Health and Human Services.
The Registry addresses the lack of evidence-based data for this underserved population, demonstrates how better data is critical for effective programs and execution, and highlights how providing the fundamental building blocks for sustainable progress can improve healthcare in the United States.
Delivering Meaningful Change
Part Two of “At the Intersection of Thought Leadership & Innovation: Where Meaningful Healthcare Change Happens” further explores our methodology and track record for deriving innovation from data and showcases extensive health services support for veterans through partnerships and projects, including the Uniformed Services University and Henry M. Jackson Foundation (HJF) for the Advancement of Military Medicine Building Health Military Communities (BHMC) on the Operation Live Well project.
Over the years, TLI has tackled issues related to healthcare redesign, including how to achieve optimal human performance in the military, identifying societal factors that have spawned the need for innovative approaches and anticipating the behavioral health fall-out from the COVID-19 pandemic.
TLI’s methodology and track record for deriving innovation from data in each project drives the thinking behind our mission and processes. We aim to better support underserved populations most harshly impacted by society’s problems and embed this value proposition across programs covering specific patient populations, broad healthcare issues and economic empowerment.
For more information or to become a partner or donor, contact the foundation.