News | May 27, 2025 Grit, Grace and Vision Defending Healthcare Launched in the Paper Era, Excelas tackled the tedious, time-consuming, and error-prone task of manually examining, interpreting, and organizing patient records to extract relevant information for legal cases and insurance review. In the two decades since, technology, including Excelas’ proprietary ZAXAS® tool, has been Excelas’ cutting edge competitive edge, to accelerate its delivery, efficiency, accuracy, and performance outcomes. “That’s what she said!” is a phrase television audiences recognize as a recurring, inappropriate statement made popular by the character, Michael Scott (Steve Carell), in 2005’s breakout series “The Office.” “That’s what she did,” is what occurred, equally notable, in the same year, to revolutionize the medical/legal analysis sector: Excelas was launched by Jean Bourgeois from a kitchen table in Northeast Ohio. Excelas could have easily been a customer of The Office’s fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company, as documents and work products were primarily in paper format. But Jean recognized these mountains of paper were not enabling clients to have information at their fingertips. What they did: More than a decade ago, Jean realized that technology could solve the “paper” problem. A visionary, not a techie, she invested in her team’s development of a proprietary software tool, ZAXAS®. It digitized hand-written, and then electronic, medical records to quickly organize, sort, and document (Bates stamp) patient data. Excelas’ medical and legal analysts reviewed the records for accuracy and completeness, and generated reports to help build winning defense strategies for healthcare organizations, long-term care systems, and the insurance industry. ZAXAS® was cutting edge and Excelas’ competitive edge: it created chronologies, visual charts, and other reports useful for internal/external audits, demonstrating compliance, answering challenges. One of the rockiest periods in Excelas’ twenty year journey is one that was felt around the world: COVID-19. Theirs, as well as client partners’, is a people-oriented business. Suddenly, everyone was forced to isolate, while still finding ways to work together – safely. Federal, state, and local health guidelines were changing almost daily, as new information was emerging about the mysterious and devastating disease. Meanwhile, Excelas was quietly and diligently collecting and documenting these changes. It understood the confusion and concerns in the ever-shifting environment would make the task of compliance complicated and challenging. Additionally, Excelas was compiling and updating a list of PREP Act cases before the courts throughout the United States, from October 2021 through May 2023. Monthly updates were posted on the Excelas website to keep industry professionals informed on decisions that might impact their interests and worries. Excelas’ foresight was a game-changer, resulting in the development of Excelas’ COVID-19 Comprehensive Integrated Timeline Tool (CITT, pronounced “kit”). Instrumental in defending COVID-19 claims brought against long-term care facilities and other healthcare institutions, the layered timeline tool clearly and effectively demonstrated an organization’s compliance according to guidance published at a given time. After we moved on from the immediate covid threat, it was found that layering timelines (chronologies) could be applied in many situations, including combining a mother’s and baby’s medical chronologies to illustrate the medical situation when birth resulted in an adverse event, evaluating two patients’ or residents’ medical histories when an altercation between them resulted in an injury, or when comparing the facts contained in a medical record to comments made about an event during a deposition or testimony. Excelas clients found infinite ways to utilize the CITT tools, developed by Excelas for covid, to solve problems that existed before the pandemic, but for which there had not yet been a solution. Much has changed since those debuts. Fans followed the ups and downs of the fictional Dunder Mifflin for nine TV seasons, yet real-life Excelas is still going strong twenty years later. This milestone provides an opportunity for reflection on the attributes that contributed to this longevity. A recurring theme in conversations about Excelas with staff, partners, and clients is resilience. The team depicted in The Office dealt with external challenges, such as dwindling paper demand and heightened competition from “big box” retailers, all while under the guidance of an awkward but well-meaning manager. Similarly, the Excelas team has contended with rapidly changing technologies, shifting regulatory standards, and the impact of a global pandemic. Fortunately for Excelas, Jean Bourgeois’ leadership bears no resemblance to that of Michael Scott. Through her strong guidance, Excelas has been able to adapt and flourish. As of March 2025, Excelas has reviewed over 20 million pages of medical records. That’s about one million pages a year, 83,333 pages a month, and 2,778 pages per day – for twenty years. Now imagine Excelas’ work visually: each stack of 1,000 pages of standard paper at 0.1 mm thick per sheet, would measure about 4 inches high. 1 stack = 1,000 pages = 4 inches high 20,000,000 pages divided by 1,000 pages/stacks = 20,000 stacks That’s nearly 1.25 miles high.The Empire State Building is 0.257 miles high. Excelas’ 20 million pages stacked next to the Empire State Building would tower over it 4.5 times! Excelas HomepageFollow us on LinkedInLearn More from our YouTube Post Tags: anniversary Defense Tactics documentation Excelas Excelas 20th anniversary Medical Records Medical Review