Procedure analytics programs are used by health systems to help support a broader clinical integration initiative between the supply chain team and clinicians to drive value to patients in terms of quality care and outcomes. To create a successful collaboration and for the supply chain team to have solid conversations with clinicians, the health system needs reliable information around clinical products and constructs to fully comprehend the quality impact. Clinicians have high expectations for these teams to have a thorough understanding of how clinical products and components come together into the construct in any given case, and how it impacts the value equation and outcomes.
Through procedure analytics, health systems aspire to move beyond measuring practice patterns for savings and standardization opportunities. Instead, encouraging broader practice adoption across all clinicians, and be able to circulate accurate and relevant data on an ongoing basis to realize opportunities for utilization and operational gains. Furthermore, health systems want to introduce advancing technology into the patient value equation. As such, when clinicians are introducing advancing technology that has had a positive impact on a patient’s value equation, health systems should then share this information in order to gain trust and buy-in. Currently, health systems may be on any side of the continuum – either working on operational impact and price savings, focused on standardization opportunities, or in a more mature stage of focusing on utilization changes and adoption of advancing technology.
Before discussing decision criteria for vetting procedure analytics solutions, it is important to recognize why providers struggle with successful implementations. When teams initially invest in procedure analytics solutions, the data is often presented through appealing visuals and in a way that supply chain and clinical teams understand it as part of the organizational vision. However, once these teams begin to implement the solution, it often breaks.
For example, teams are realizing that the data is not classified in a way that is usable, which presents a significant data problem as this requires a significant amount of manual work for the solutions partner to organize data into meaningful insights. When these partners quote the health system, this quote only encompasses the software, when in reality, the software does not solve the clinical data problem. This poses a frustrating issue as the health system originally accounts for a software spend and expects to transition through the maturity curve and implement procedure analytics in their health system, but does not account for the spend in analyst resources that are required to fix these clinical product data problems. This issue is a huge opportunity cost as it either requires someone on the team to be pulled from other important projects to manually resolve these data issues, or health systems need to spend significant unbudgeted investments to solve the problem with external analyst or consultant resources. For this reason, it is exceedingly difficult for health systems to reach a future state with procedure analytics as it becomes cost prohibitive in terms of both time and money. Ultimately, due to this high cost and effort, health systems must abandon utilization tracking in major clinical categories and continue down the path of only focusing on large savings projects every 18-24 months, when the patient value equation has been so vastly impacted that it can no longer be ignored.
Health systems spend a significant amount of money trying to solve clinical product data accuracy challenges. Many GPOs and software vendors tend to distract with the promise of fancy visuals and clinical “experts” rather than directly solving the clinical product data accuracy with powerful classification and automation. As these data problems are such a costly problem, consider the following criteria:
Getting to the core of the problem and getting good data to earn trust among clinicians is key when vetting procedure analytics solutions for your health system to implement. Choose a partner and procedure analytics solution that can help your health system grow and achieve its broader goals of clinical integration and patient value. Do you have questions on your organization’s data analysis procedure? Put Curvo’s data to the test. Contact our team to schedule an instant match on an orthopedic vendor file, and schedule a demo of Curvo for free.