Ochsner Clinic Foundation
Vice President Revenue Cycle
Education:
Carnegie Mellon University 1996 - 1998
Master's degree, Health Care and Information Technology
Elmhurst College 1984 - 1985
Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Economics and Bus. Adm.
Skills:
Revenue Cycle Healthcare Information Technology Healthcare Management Healthcare Consulting Hospitals Healthcare Emr Ehr Hipaa Revenue Cycle Management Healthcare Industry Process Improvement Managed Care Medicare Strategic Planning Medicaid Physicians Epic Systems Practice Management Physician Relations Medical Billing Performance Improvement Informatics Healthcare Information Technology Medical Coding Quality Improvement U.s. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Meditech Cerner Electronic Medical Record Ambulatory Inpatient Patient Safety Icd 9 Cpoe Nursing Hl7 Health Information Management Clinical Research Medicare/Medicaid Reimbursement Business Process Improvement Working With Physicians Information Technology Medicaid Managed Care
There have been other pieces of evidence, but I would say this paper really confirms that most of the highest energy cosmic ray particles are not coming from the Milky Way galaxy, Gregory Snow, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) physics professor, who was a co-author on the paper and is educat
Date: Sep 22, 2017
Category: Science
Source: Google
Most Powerful Cosmic Rays Come from Galaxies Far, Far Away
"The particles we detect are so energetic they have to come from astrophysical phenomena that are extremely violent," study co-author Gregory Snow at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, who serves as the education and outreach coordinator for the Pierre Auger Observatory project, said in a st
Date: Sep 21, 2017
Category: Science
Source: Google
Cosmic-Ray Hotspot Discovered, Offering Clues on Deep Space Mystery
"It looks like the Telescope Array hotspot is just outside our field of view," said Gregory Snow, a physicist from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, who does research at the Auger observatory. "That's why it's great to have cosmic-ray experiments in both hemispheres, so together they can view the
John Parker, Frederick Miller, Fred Rice, George Davis, Alan Wakeman, David Simmerer, Philip Harrison, William Katz, Jim Marks, Peter Stadler, Richard Edwards