October 1999 to Present - After lengthy discussions and correspondence, the AMA (American Medical Association) tells MyHealthScore.com it must remove CPT-4 (Current Procedural Terminology) information from its web site. CPT's contain the billing codes and descriptions used by physicians to charge for their services which MyHealthScore.com considers important for the consumer's use. The AMA final licensing offer included conditions and fees from the public that were unacceptable to MyHealthScore.com. Click here to read more about the AMA's CPT issue.

April 1999 - MyHealthScore.com adds public use Provider Rating Reports to its web site, listing the top 25 providers for each State. These new reports are created from existing Patient Satisfaction Survey tables for the most current 12 months and can help patients locate healthcare providers. If you have been treated recently, please find your healthcare providers and fill out Patient Satisfaction Surveys (found on a hyperlink on the top their page) to help other patients looking for healthcare guidance. An enhanced Employer Group report is also available. It captures surveys using the company domain name (eg, @MyHealthScore.com) in the e-mail address field and provides benefit managers with comparative information about the care provided to employees.

Copyright 1999 - Harvard Business School Press publishes the book "Net Worth", by authors John Hagel, III and Marc Singer, which highlights the internet phenomenon of "infomediary" especially the urgent need for consumer healthcare information, and names MyHealthScore.com as a popular site for satisfying that need.

January 1, 1999 - Practice Guardian News by Michael J. Berry, lists MyHealthScore.com as a "1999 Top Choice" for Medical Practice Management

September 16, 1998 - The Journal of the American Medical Association publishes an abstract titled "The Urgent Need to Improve Health Care Quality" by Mark R. Chassin, MD, MPP, MPH; Robert W. Galfin; and the National Roundtable on Health Care Quality.

June 1998 - In Phoenix, AZ, Maricopa County 's 15,000 employees began using MyHealthScore.com to evaluate their satisfaction with their health care providers and insurance programs from intranet links to their workstations. Pete Cerchiara, employee benefits manager for Maricopa County said he is optimistic about MyHealthScore.com. "I think it's a real valuable tool for employees to get a sense of what the current delivery system looks like as to the quality and cost and providers as well as plans", he said.

May 1998 - HCFA Health Watch Newsletter links to MyHealthScore.com for searches on Hospital Inpatient Benchmark Fees and Physician Procedure Benchmark Fees. HCFA is the federal agency which established these payment methodologies to help manage the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

December 5, 1997 - The Business Journal, Phoenix, AZ - Angela Gonzales writes a front page article describing the initial release of MyHealthScore.com on the internet.