West Virginia Executive Fall 2018 | Page 88

and emergency department visits while enhancing access to quality care for the state’s most vulnerable and rural residents. “We teamed up with community para- medicine experts in our area to produce these videos as a way to help both patients and health care providers understand the positive impact of CP on people with Medicare who live in West Virginia,” says Biddy Smith, network task lead for special projects at Quality Insights. The videos, which are available on Quality Insights Quality Innovation Network’s YouTube channel, include a patient-focused video titled “Community Paramedicine: Quality Health Care at Your Door” that explains the benefits of CP from the patient perspective. A provider- focused video, titled “Community Para- medicine: Enhancing Access to Quality Health Care,” examines the impact of CP on the health care industry. “Community paramedicine is filling a gap of needs within our communi- ties,” says Monica Mason, director of community paramedicine at KCEAA. “Once patients are discharged from the hospital, our paramedics go out into the home and visit them to ensure the plan 86 WEST VIRGINIA EXECUTIVE of care from the hospital is continued to the home until they get back to their doctor’s office for follow-up and further recommendations.” West Virginia Forward and Discover the Real West Virginia Host Round Table on Urgency to Reduce National Security Backlog to Accelerate Job Growth in West Virginia The increasing national backlog of security clearance approval hinders West Virginia’s ability to take advantage of one of the nation’s fastest-growing economic sectors, prompting two development groups—West Virginia Forward and Discover the Real West Virginia Foun- dation (DRWV)—to convene a discus- sion this fall with Senator Joe Manchin, representatives from the office of Sena- tor Shelley Moore Capito and an array of government officials and industry lead- ers on how to chip away at the buildup. Although there are many existing assets and structural advantages that make West Virginia an attractive destination to bol- ster the state’s cyber and IT industry, West Virginia businesses have faced difficul- ties as a result of the security clearance backlog, noting the national backlog has dramatically increased from 190,000 cases in 2014 to a record high of 725,000 in June 2018, according to the Office of Personnel Management. More than 40 experts participated in the discussion, with U.S. Department of Defense officials providing a status report of the federal government’s plan to bring down the backlog and others sharing insights on ways to continue to grow West Virginia’s cybersecurity and IT ser- vices sectors as the government works to modernize the clearance process and reduce the backlog. “There is an understanding among government, industry and academia that there is urgency to improve the security clearance process and solve the national backlog issue, both of which impact busi- ness growth and our national security,” says Tom Heywood, board member of DRWV Foundation and managing part- ner at Bowles Rice LLP. “By examining solutions and opportunities within this promising industry, we can open doors to broaden this industry’s job market and garner a bigger IT workforce. As a member of DRWV and a partner of West