Decades of network engineering, pointed at one industry.

We started Medical ANS in 2014 with a simple frustration. The networks running American hospitals were running on yesterday's assumptions — built for nursing stations, not for connected pumps; for fax machines, not for sub-second EHR latency; for IT, not for clinical operations. We set out to build the alternative.

Founded by network engineers who'd spent careers watching healthcare lose.

Our founders came out of carrier core engineering and large-enterprise security. Between them, they had deployed networks for telecoms, banks, and federal agencies — environments where downtime is measured in dollars per second.

When they began consulting in healthcare, they kept seeing the same pattern: networks under-architected, security retrofitted, costs inflated by carrier sprawl, and clinical teams paying the price in slow imaging, dropped video visits, and unscheduled outages. Medical ANS was their answer.

Eleven years. Real receipts.

11yrs
In healthcare networking
90+
Sites under active management
6,400
Beds on Medical ANS networks
99.99%
Median WAN availability, trailing 12 mo.

A team built for the job.

Network architects, security engineers, biomedical integration specialists, and healthcare compliance leads — under one accountable team. Every engagement is led by a principal.

Elena Marsh

Chief Executive Officer

Twenty years in carrier engineering and enterprise architecture. Former network practice lead at a top-three US carrier. Sets the standard for what an accountable healthcare partner looks like.

Daniel Korr

Chief Technology Officer

Network architect who's stood up production networks across hospitals, ambulatory networks, and specialty centers. Holds CCIE, CISSP, and runs our private-cellular practice.

Renée Atwell

VP, Engineering

Leads our delivery organization. Twelve years running multi-site WAN and SD-WAN deployments for regional hospital systems. Champion of "boring networks" as a clinical-safety value.

Jamal Forrest

VP, Healthcare Solutions

Former hospital CIO. Translates clinical workflows into network requirements and writes the requirements documents nobody else writes well.

Priya Venkat

Director, Security

Built zero-trust architectures for federal and healthcare clients. Owns our HIPAA, HITRUST, and SOC 2 alignment programs. CISSP-ISSAP.

Samuel Okafor

Director, Customer Success

Runs our quarterly business reviews and the ongoing optimization program that has reduced average client carrier spend by 22% in year one of every engagement since 2021.

Assess. Architect. Operate.

Three phases. Each handed off to the next with a written deliverable and an executive readout. No hand-waving, no surprise invoices.

Phase 01

Assess

A structured 4–6 week network and security assessment. Site walkthroughs, traffic capture, carrier and contract review, IoMT inventory. Output: a written architecture-and-cost baseline with prioritized gaps.

Phase 02

Architect

Solution design tied to clinical requirements, with named technologies, costs, and a phased rollout plan. We bring T-Mobile's solution engineering team in for joint review where carrier services are part of the design.

Phase 03

Operate

24×7 NOC, security operations, lifecycle management, and quarterly business reviews. We're measured against a written SLA, with optimization targets tracked every quarter.

What we won't trade.

Healthcare runs on trust. So do we.

Patient impact first

Every architecture decision passes through one filter: does this make care safer, faster, or quieter for the clinical team? Network elegance is a means, not an end.

Security by default

We don't ship designs that require future security upgrades. Zero-trust posture, segmentation, and logging are foundational — not roadmap items.

Vendor neutrality

We don't resell hardware. Our recommendations are tied to outcomes, not margin. When the right answer is a competitor's product, that's the answer you'll get.

Transparency

Quarterly reviews come with the numbers — uptime, incidents, MTTR, optimization wins, and where we missed. We write the report we'd want to read.

Bring us your hardest network problem.

The first call is a 30-minute working session. No slides, no decks — just questions about your environment and an honest read on where we'd start.