Audacious Inquiry


Audacious Inquiry is an American company founded in 2004 and with headquarters in Baltimore, Maryland. The company deals in provision of health information technology, including cloud-based software, med tech consulting and strategy services.

History

Audacious Inquiry was founded in 2004 by Chris Brandt, who serves as the company's CEO.
The company endured the Great Recession, which was afflicting major world markets not long after the company was formed. The company graduated from the Maryland Center for Entrepreneurship in 2010 and is now headquartered in the BWtech Research Park on the campus of University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Audacious Inquiry became a certified B Corporation in 2013. In 2017, it received outside investment from ABS Capital Partners. Scott Afzal was named President of Audacious Inquiry in 2018.
In 2018, the company received "hall of fame" recognition from Inc. Magazine; as of 2019, the company has been named to the publication's list of fastest growing companies in America for nine consecutive years.

Health Information Technology

The company provides cloud-based software that enables the secure exchange of actionable medical and other data across multiple healthcare organizations. Audacious Inquiry also performs IT consulting and advisory services to advance healthcare interoperability and public health.
Beginning in 2007, Audacious Inquiry collaborated with Johns Hopkins Medicine, University of Maryland Medical System, MedStar Health, Erickson Living, and the Maryland Department of Health to develop and establish the Chesapeake Regional Information System for our Patients, a health information exchange. The firm developed the Encounter Notification Service, an event-driven model for standards-based health information exchange, in partnership with CRISP. The firm now supports or directly operates similar, "connected healthcare" efforts in several other US states and regions.
The firm developed the Patient Unified Lookup System for Emergencies and now partners with the Sequoia Project to enable it as a nationwide disaster response application. In 2017 and 2018, providers used PULSE during the California wildfires. In 2020, PULSE COVID was deployed by public health agencies in several states to support the effort to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.
In collaboration with the US Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and Health Level Seven International in 2020, Audacious Inquiry launched the Situation Awareness for Novel Epidemic Response project. The SANER project will establish a technical specification to enable public health authorities to gain situational awareness through electronic communication of information on healthcare capacity, staffing, and availability of key supplies like ventilators and personal protective equipment.