Cloud-based platform seeks to ease paperwork burden on clinicians

KEEPING TRACK: Juell Milder, left, associate product manager, speaks with Scott Duarte, sales executive, at My MOC Inc. in North Kingstown. The technology company developed a cloud-based platform called MOCingbird to help clinicians keep track of requirements they need for various certifications. / PBN PHOTO/RUPERT WHITELEY
KEEPING TRACK: Juell Milder, left, associate product manager, speaks with Scott Duarte, sales executive, at My MOC Inc. in North Kingstown. The technology company developed a cloud-based platform called MOCingbird to help clinicians keep track of requirements they need for various certifications. / PBN PHOTO/RUPERT WHITELEY

PBN 2021 Innovative Companies Awards
IT Services: My MOC Inc.


As many health care workers are increasingly facing burnout due to the difficulties of working during the COVID-19 pandemic, My MOC Inc., a North Kingstown-based technology company, is offering a potential solution that it hopes will make clinicians’ lives a little bit easier: a cloud-based platform called MOCingbird.

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Many health care workers are required to complete various continuing medical education and maintenance of certification, or MOC, requirements to maintain their medical board certifications. MOCingbird brings all of this content together into one dashboard, making it easier for clinicians to keep track of what requirements they need to meet and what they have completed already.

When clinicians open the platform, founded and incorporated by Ian Madom and George Fernaine in 2017, on their desktop or mobile devices, they’ll be faced with a dashboard that informs them of the upcoming tasks they need to complete.

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For My MOC CEO Brad Artery, much of the platform’s innovation is automating and bringing disparate information together to ease clinicians’ administrative burdens so they can get back to the core part of the job, which is taking care of patients.

“Clinicians are burning out at a higher and higher rate. All they want to do is manage patients and not manage paperwork. And unfortunately, that paperwork continues to be kind of a growing burden for them,” Artery said. “MOCingbird was developed with the clinician in mind to really simplify his or her life.”

It’s been an exciting year for the company. Artery says the platform went to market in the final quarter of 2020. The company has gained new business partnerships, including with health care company Grand Rounds in August 2021.

For Artery, who joined My MOC in 2019, the company’s mission is personal, as his wife is a health care worker.

“It was finally my opportunity to get into health care and help fix a problem that I didn’t feel directly, but indirectly, in my home that my wife had been dealing with,” he said.

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