More Related Content Similar to Linking Clinical And Financial Data: The Key To Real Quality And Cost Out (20) More from Health Catalyst (20) Linking Clinical And Financial Data: The Key To Real Quality And Cost Out1. Linking Clinical and Financial Data: The
Key to Real Quality and Cost Outcomes
By Bobbi Brown
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2. Linking Clinical and Financial Data
Health systems weren’t concerned with
achieving high-value care until accountable
care took the industry by a storm in 2010.
Health systems had a predictable revenue
stream from the fee-for-service payment
model. Patient volumes their revenue.
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On my desk there is a copy of “Show Me
the Money.” As a finance person I
embrace its concepts of achieving high
value results because it’s applicable to
today’s healthcare environment.
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3. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
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While the switch to value-based
purchasing will ultimately improve
both quality and cost outcomes,
health systems now need the
capability of tracking and
analyzing many other metrics
before they can comply with the
government’s new mandates.
These metrics include:
Throughput Quality Readmissions
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Mortality
rates
Patient
Satisfaction
Cost per
Episode of Care
4. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
Throughput
The time it takes to complete a
process, such as shortening the
average wait time in the ER or
reducing the time between cases in
the OR, now translates directly into
money and greatly affects quality.
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Improving throughput will benefit the
organization by reducing cost and
increasing patient satisfaction.
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5. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
Quality
With value-based purchasing,
hospitals are required to assess
and report measures of quality
relative to defined benchmarks.
If hospitals don’t report their
quality metrics, they’ll receive a
penalty, further impacting their
bottom line.
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Were patients given discharge instructions?
Did the care manager schedule follow-up visits?
How many falls occurred in the hospital?
How many hospital-acquired infections?
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6. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
Readmissions
Quality will also be assessed
based on the rates of
readmissions for all causes
within a certain time period for
specific patient populations.
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For example, what are the rates
of heart failure, pneumonia and
AMI readmissions within a 30-
and 90-day period?
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7. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
Mortality Rates
What are the hospital’s mortality
rates for pneumonia, heart
failure and acute myocardial
infarction (AMI) among its
patient populations?
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High mortality rates in
pneumonia, health failure and
AMI will result in loss of
incentives beginning in 2014.
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8. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
Patient Satisfaction
Patient satisfaction is now tied
directly to payment models.
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How satisfied are patients with their care experience?
Was the room satisfactory?
Was the family comfortable?
Would they recommend the hospital?
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9. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
Cost Per Episode of Care
Containing costs is now more
important than ever as value-based
purchasing systems strive to keep
treatment consistent and expend-itures
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appropriate and predictable.
Reducing clinical process with
variations will improve the cost
structure.
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10. Metrics for Value-based Purchasing
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11. Clinical & Financial Data Challenges
As though health systems
weren’t already dealing with
enough concerns with all of the
new metrics they need to
capture and analyze, there’s
one more challenge they’re
dealing with — accessing linked
clinical and financial data from
within their systems to provide
the right metrics in this new
world of value-based
reimbursement.
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12. Clinical & Financial Data Challenges
But the two data systems were
not integrated because there
wasn’t a need.
Today, data from both clinical
and financial systems can be
leveraged to drive concrete,
timely quality improvements
while also lowering costs.
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Traditionally, health systems
housed their financial and
clinical data in separate
systems.
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Achieving High Value Results
Achieving high value results for
health systems is achievable.
The organization must
understand where it is in
relation to clinical quality
measures and financial costs
associated with delivering care.
The right tools and teams are
necessary to liberate clinical
and financial data and link it
together to provide a full picture
of trends and opportunities.
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Achieving High Value Results
Enterprise data warehouse
A late-bindingTM enterprise
data warehouse (EDW)
provides the ability to
aggregate data from a wide
variety of sources allowing a
sophisticated analytics system
to leverage the data and drive
timely quality improvements.
Late-binding brings the data
together just-in-time.
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Achieving High Value Results
Multi-disciplinary teams
In addition to the EDW,
permanent multi-disciplinary
teams of frontline staff can help
drive sustainable improvement.
The team constantly monitors to
ensure they’re focused on
sustaining quality and financial
improvements as well as clinical
and operational outcomes.
Once data and best practices
reveal improvement they work to
gain buy-in from the clinicians.
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Achieving High Value Results
The “aha” moment
By using easy-to-use dashboards
along with a late-binding data
warehouse, then clinicians can
visualize their own progress.
The “Aha!” moment comes when
they can see how the clinical
decision they made two days ago
affected the bottom line today.
Example: A provider focused on
appendectomy as a key
opportunity for quality and
financial improvement.
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Late-Binding™ EDW
The Key to Linking Clinical and Financial Data
Quality and cost improve-ments
require intelligent
use of linked financial and
clinical data coupled with
multi-disciplinary teams
who are driving process
improvements.
The Late-Binding™ Data
Warehouse offers the ideal
type of enterprise data
warehouse architecture for
healthcare because of its
flexibility to bind data late or
just in time.
Late BindingTM Data Warehouse
Data Acquisition and Storage
Source Mart Designer IDEA
Source Marts:
EMR, Patient,
Billing, Costing,
General Ledger,
Patient satisfaction
Source Marts:
Clinic EMR,
Professional,
Billing, Time Card,
HR, AR, Supply
Chain, Claims
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Source Marts:
Additional
Source Marts
as necessary
Catalyst Analytics
Platform
Atlas
EDW Console
Security and Auditing
Meta-Data Engine
Advanced Analytics
Data Marts
Content Repositories
SAM Designer
18. Surviving Value-Based Purchasing: Connecting Clinical and Financial Data for the
Best ROI
Bobbi Brown, VP Financial Engagement
How to Drive ROI in Your Healthcare Improvement Projects
(a free, on-demand webinar, transcript, and slides)
Bobbi Brown, VP Financial Engagement and Leslie Falk, VP Executive Engagement
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More about this topic
Both Financial and Clinical Data Are Required for Meaningful Population Health
Management (white paper)
Bobbi Brown, VP Financial Engagement and Luke Skelley, Vice President
5 Ways to Improve Hospital Revenue Cycle Management
Bobbi Brown, VP Financial Engagement
The Key to Transitioning from Fee-for-Service to Value-Based Reimbursement
Bobbi Brown, VP Financial Engagement and Jared Crapo, VP
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For more information:
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20. Other Clinical Quality Improvement Resources
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Bobbi Brown is Vice President of Financial Engagement for Health
Catalyst, a data warehousing and analytics company based in Salt Lake
City. Ms. Brown started her healthcare career at Intermountain Healthcare
supporting clinical integration efforts before moving to Sutter Health and,
later, Kaiser Permanente, where she served as Vice President of Financial
Planning and Performance. Ms. Brown holds an MBA from the Thunderbird School of
Global Management as well as a BA in Spanish and Education from Misericordia
University. She regularly writes and teaches on finance-related healthcare topics.