Angeion Corporation (NASDAQ: ANGN) today announced that its board of
directors has elected Gregg O. Lehman, Ph.D., president and chief
executive officer (CEO), and appointed him as a director. Lehman joined
Angeion in May as interim CEO.
Gregg O. Lehman, Ph.D. CEO of Angeion Corporation (Photo: Angeion Corporation)
"Gregg has demonstrated exceptional leadership at the company in a short
period and has positively affected our customers, employees, business
partners and shareholders,” said Mark W. Sheffert, chairman of the
board. "Having worked closely with Gregg at Health Fitness Corporation,
I have great confidence in his skills and track record to successfully
lead Angeion.”
Lehman brings three decades of executive management and governance
experience to Angeion including 20 years in the healthcare industry.
Most recently, Lehman served as president, CEO and director for Health
Fitness Corporation, a health and fitness center management company,
from 2007 to 2010. Prior to that, Lehman held numerous senior-level
positions in the medical and education industries including: CEO of
Inspiris, Inc., a health care management company; CEO of Gordon Health
Solutions, Inc., which provides lifestyle and disease management
programs to employers and health plans; CEO of the National Business
Coalition on Health (NBCH) in Washington, D.C.; and president of Taylor
University in Indiana.
"I’m honored by the opportunity to leverage my background and serve as
Angeion’s CEO,” said Lehman. "I look forward to continuing to work with
the board and management team, and to leading the organization to
achieve our goals. I am dedicated to developing and implementing
strategies and action plans to further expand our business lines
worldwide.”
During his career, Lehman has served on a number of national boards and
committees including the Tennessee Guardian Advisory Council for the
National Federation of Independent Business, the American Society of
Association Executives, the National Patient Safety Foundation and the
Ethical Force Program of the American Medical Association. He is chair
of the Care Continuum Alliance’s quality and research committee and
serves on the organization’s executive committee of the board of
directors; the Care Continuum Alliance is a multi-stakeholder group
focused on population health management. Lehman is a frequent writer and
speaker on employer healthcare issues and employee health benefits.
For several years, Lehman has been involved with organizations that work
to prevent child abuse as well as the United Way. He volunteers his time
with the Purdue University School of Education and is a former chair of
the Purdue Alumni Advisory Council. In 2006, Lehman was named Purdue’s
Alumnus of the Year.
Lehman holds a Bachelor of Science in marketing and business management
from Indiana University, and Master of Science and Ph.D. degrees in
higher education administration from Purdue University.
About Angeion Corporation
Founded in 1986, Angeion
Corporation acquired Medical Graphics Corporation in December 1999.
Medical Graphics develops, manufactures and markets non-invasive
cardiorespiratory diagnostic systems that are sold under the MedGraphics
(www.medgraphics.com)
and New Leaf (www.newleaffitness.com)
brand and trade names. These cardiorespiratory diagnostic systems have a
wide range of applications in healthcare as well as health and fitness.
The Company’s products are sold internationally through distributors and
in the United States through a direct sales force that targets heart and
lung specialists located in hospitals, university-based medical centers,
medical clinics and physicians’ offices, pharmaceutical companies,
medical device manufacturers, clinical research organizations, health
and fitness clubs, personal training studios, and other exercise
facilities. For more information about Angeion, visit www.angeion.com.
Forward Looking Statements
The discussion above contains
forward-looking statements about Angeion’s future financial results and
business prospects that by their nature involve substantial risks and
uncertainties. You can identify these statements by the use of words
such as "anticipate,” "believe,” "estimate,” "expect,” "project,”
"intend,” "plan,” "will,” "target,” and other words and terms of similar
meaning in connection with any discussion of future operating or
financial performance or business plans or prospects. Our actual results
may differ materially depending upon a variety of factors, including:
(1) national and worldwide economic and capital market conditions; (2)
continuing cost-containment efforts in our hospital, clinics, and office
market; (3) any changes in the patterns of medical reimbursement that
may result from national healthcare reform; (4) our ability to
successfully operate our business, including converting our ongoing
research and development expenditures into new and improved
cardiorespiratory diagnostic products and selling these products and
services under our MedGraphics and New Leaf brand names into existing
and new markets; (5) our ability to complete our software development
initiative and migrate our MedGraphics and New Leaf software platforms
to a next generation technology; (6) our ability to maintain our cost
structure at a level that is appropriate to our near- to mid-term
revenue expectations and that will enable us to increase revenues and
profitability as opportunities develop; (7) our ability to achieve
constant margins for our products and consistent and predictable
operating expenses in light of variable revenues from our clinical
research customers; (8) our ability to expand our worldwide
international revenue through our distribution partners and our Milan,
Italy representative office; (9) our ability to successfully defend
ourselves from product liability claims related to our cardiorespiratory
diagnostic products and claims associated with our prior cardiac
stimulation products; (10) our ability to defend our existing
intellectual property and obtain protection for intellectual property
that we may develop in the future; (11) our ability to develop and
maintain an effective system of internal controls and procedures and
disclosure controls and procedures; and (12) our dependence on
third-party vendors; and (13) the ability of the new members of our
senior management team to make a successful transition into their new
roles and for all members of our senior management to develop and
implement a successful strategic plan. Additional information with
respect to the risks and uncertainties faced by the Company may be found
in, and the above discussion is qualified in its entirety by, the other
risk factors that are described from time to time in the Company’s
Securities and Exchange Commission reports, including the Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the year ended October 31, 2010.
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