The Last Word: Axxess’ John Olajide on Earning ACHC Certification

“The future of healthcare is in the home.”

John Olajide
President and CEO 
Axxess
.…on his company earning ACHC certification, via LinkedIn.

Here's "who said what" in Dallas Innovates Every Day.Dallas-based Axxess empowers healthcare in the home with a suite of enterprise software solutions that help companies streamline their operations and grow their organizations.

And now it’s doing that with a new status. Writing on LinkedIn last week, Olajide announced that Axxess’ software has earned product certification from the Accredited Commission for Health Care with “zero deficiencies.” Olajide noted that the zero deficiencies status “is an impressive accomplishment for organizations in the care at home industry.”

“It is deeply gratifying to have Axxess once again be recognized for the quality of our home health, home care, and hospice solutions and our operational excellence,” Olajide wrote. “Congratulations to my Axxess colleagues on their commitment to ensuring compliance and delivering solutions to drive quality patient outcomes.”

According to Stacie Adams, SVP of external affairs at Axxess, the company “went through a rigorous, independent audit verifying that our solutions meet the highest clinical, operational, and financial standards.” She said being ACHC Certified gives clients confidence that when they partner with Axxess, their staffs will be empowered to “deliver the very best care” while the companies maintain compliance with the latest regulatory requirements. 

For more on what’s new and next in North Texas, check out Every Last Word.

Get on the list.
Dallas Innovates, every day.

Sign up to keep your eye on what’s new and next in Dallas-Fort Worth, every day.

One quick signup, and you’re done.

R E A D   N E X T

  • THE LAST WORD on Dallas Innovates. Find "who said what" in our collection of quotes on Dallas-Fort Worth Innovation.

    Read “who said what” in our roundup of quotes about all things North Texas, including ENO8's Jeff Francis; MyndVR's Chris Brickler and Ted Werth; Axxess' John Olajide; the Urban Land Institute's Ron Pressman; Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson; the Mavs Foundation's Katie Edwards; UT Arlington's Yi Hong; HomeUSA.com's Ben Caballero; ParkHub's George Baker Sr.; and more.

  • The eighth annual HackDFW, powered by Say Yes to Dallas and presented by Google, connected hundreds of aspiring technologists to several Fortune 100 companies. It was a unique 48-hour marathon that challenged more than 550 people from 80 universities. Tech teams created ways to innovatively tackle waste management, climate change, better understand decisions from the Supreme Court, and much more.

  • As many North Texans try to move on from the pandemic, Dr. Bell is focused on the "tens of millions of patients" who've developed long-haul COVID—and who are experiencing life-altering symptoms long after their COVID-19 infection cleared.

  • Levy has been writing about technology for more than 30 years. A founding writer at Wired, he's widely considered to be the premier tech journalist in the U.S. He’s covered the digital revolution since the early 1980s, reporting every major trend and profiling its key figures. Today, as a keynote speaker on the closing day of Dallas Startup Week, he took stock of how we got here—and what's next. 

  • With an initial target raise of $20 million, Ty Lee's Common Dwelling online platform offers everyday Americans a chance to invest in—and profit from—single-family home rentals. "I wanted to create a platform where people can invest with however much money they have available to them," Lee said. Even if that's as little as $100 or $1,000.