Monday, October 27, 2008

USPTO -- no immediate fatal flaw in patent application

Hello! It's a been a busy few months, being CTO, CEO, CFO and CBW (chief bottle-washer).

Best of all, last week, in a teleconference, the U.S. Patent Office voiced no immediate concerns about Medical Onshoring's patentability.

I sought patent protection for a number of reasons: to get credit for being the first-to-invent; to ensure quality; and, hopefully, recover the enormous amount of capital required to be a Thomas Edison.

More soon.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Reply to comments

Hello, and thanks for your comments. As they say, the artist needs the audience ..

About the Alaskan dental therapists serving Alaskan Natives -- I believe that is a function of the Indian Health Service. Which, by treaty, serves Native American Indians.

About contacting the AARP -- GREAT IDEA. THANK YOU!

Monday, May 19, 2008

The Health Care Economist Weighs In

Hello, everyone,

I'm the subject of this blog-post --

Medical Onshoring?

A few follow-up points:

* About "Medical Tourism" --

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_tourism

* McKinsey & Co. on medical tourism --

http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/article_abstract_visitor.aspx?ar=2134&pagenum=1

* Shameless Commerce note: the "Medical Onshoring" process is patent-pending and under review by a variety or organizations (e.g., Native Peoples, health care). And our intellectual property rights are defended by Dewey, Cheatem & Howe, PLLC.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dewey,_Cheatem_&_Howe

Again: how can great nations let their citizens fly up to 25,000 miles (round-trip) for affordable medicine?

It is up to individuals to solve problems. Waiting while others debate (and debate, and debate ..) can be fatal.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

For "Minot Daily News" readers

Hello, everyone, I'm the subject of the story.

http://minotdailynews.com/page/content.detail/id/515197.html


Very competent work on the story, based on my nationwide experiences.

Follow-on points:

(1) Indian gaming pioneers were arrested by California state officials; ultimately, tribal sovereignty was affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court.

http://library.findlaw.com/1999/Jan/1/241489.html


(2) sky-rocketing U.S. medical costs require brave, bold, and grounded acts by experienced experts. I realize what I proposed will be a major challenge. But having worked with the Missionaries of Charity worldwide -- who began with one donation and one patient -- I believe that it is committed, dedicated individuals who create solutions.

(3) re-importation of Canadian pharmaceuticals is very complex due to chain-of-custody issues and legal liability. Having advised in this area, I have a deep understanding of the issues involved.

First -- who is handling the pharms, from point to point?

Second -- if something goes wrong, who is responsible?

Third -- how reliable is supply (i.e., Canada is one-third the size of USA)?

Fourth -- the USA shoulders 50% of global pharm-development -- is that fair?

(4) off-tribal grounds Indian gaming is also a very complex, very controversial matter, and so would any similar activity. Any possible off-tribal grounds medical clinic is possibly 40 to 50 years in the future.

(5) where's the logic in great nations making citizens fly 12,000 miles for affordable medicine?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_tourism


(6) for more, read lead-article NYTimes story on Alaskan tribes forming dental clinics.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/28/business/28teeth.html?_r=1&ref=us&oref=slogin

More info is at http://www.medicalonshoring.net

First announcement

May 10, 2008 – IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Special to Minot Daily News

FORMER MINOT TELEPHONE CONSULTANT FILES PATENT APPLICATION FOR AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE – “MEDICAL ONSHORING” – WITH U.S. PATENT OFFICE

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (May 10, 2008) – Cl. Alex. Chien, formerly a rural economic development staffer with RochesterTel (former owners of Minot Telephone Co.) this week filed a patent application for a medical‑care system designed to reduce U.S. health care costs by at least 15%.

“Having closely studied the economies of Minot and North Dakota, it is my considered opinion that the Minot area would be a prime candidate for the prototype ‘Medical Onshoring’ clinic,” said Chien, now a self-employed engineer. “Technology, transportation, environment – all are excellent in Minot.”

Covering the professional world (e.g., health care, computing), Chien’s patent-pending application details how – using proprietary technology and Joint Commission International-accredited medical providers, in JCI‑accredited facilities located on the sovereign and quasi-sovereign (self-rule) nation‑lands of the 520 federally‑recognized Native American Indian tribes [1] – quality medical services at affordable prices can be offered to U.S. residents and others. The JCI‑accredited medical providers would be from Asia and Europe; MedOn would also work to improve medical care in those nations.

“Our patent-pending model would supplement existing health care providers,” Chien said. “Our goals are to maximize scarce medical care dollars and provide affordable, quality health care services that are engineered with best practices at the forefront.”

The patent-pending medical-care process model – which Chien coined “Medical Onshoring” -- came in a “flash of insightful inventiveness,” according to Chien, who operates www.MedicalOnshoring.net.

Chien, whose late father/accountant consulted for the Cree Tribe of Canada, said he “could not understand -- in a super-power nation with most of the best physicians in the world – why U.S. residents are flying 12,000 miles overseas to obtain affordable medical treatments.

“I thought there had to be alternatives, that individuals can make a difference,” Chien said.

“I immediately created lab notebooks to document the inventive concept. Now, with this patent-pending system-design, I believe that many things are possible. That includes the newest JCI-accredited treatments, as well as education and training for caring, qualified peoples of the world.”

Bart Stuck, a PhD in electrical engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology who is well-known on Wall Street, has been given a confidential review of the novel, non-obvious “Medical Onshoring” patent-pending model.

Dr. Stuck, who worked with Chien on North Dakota’s state communications network plan in the early 1990s, noted that the patent-pending model relies on global information technology to help assure the highest quality medical care and health care possible.

“I am familiar with Alex’s work in advanced communication networks over a 20-year period, having collaborated together,” said Dr. Stuck, managing director of Signal Lake Management L.L.C. of Westport, Conn. “This current project may offer considerable upside.”

Jeen Kim, an MBA/JD graduate of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (’92) and investment banker with a Top 10 investment bank in New York, has also been given a confidential review of the patent-pending “Medical Onshoring” system-design.

“Based on those patent model drawings, ‘Medical Onshoring’ may have potential for becoming one of the solutions to help resolve the USA’s medical care dilemma,” said Mr. Kim, a graduate of Harvard College. “I am personally familiar with this work.”

Now that the “Medical Onshoring” patent documents are patent-pending with the U.S. Patent Office, the inventors’ group will begin seeking investment capital and key staff on a global basis, Chien said. A founding chief executive officer will also be sought to help lead the launch of a prototype “Medical Onshoring” clinic in Indian County.

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[1] Or any special economic development zone established by federal, state or local government.

© C.A. Chien, 2008.