Demystify Healthcare Analytics

“Our healthcare system is designed to address medical ‘fires’ versus ‘fire’ prevention.” Dave Chase, co-founder of Health Rosetta, speaks of the need for reform in traditional fee-for-service U.S. healthcare.1 While industries such as manufacturing have long understood the need for preventative maintenance, realizing that proactive equipment maintenance is far cheaper than loss of production and more expensive logistics, most of healthcare continues to operate by waiting until our bodies are ‘broken’. “We spend far more to get far less,” continues Chase. U.S. spending on healthcare has held pace with peer countries while lagging behind in improvements to life expectancy and disease burden.2 So while it may be more accurate to say the U.S. has spent the same to get less, many would agree with Chase’s sentiment that “a more proactive care model is needed that prioritizes preventive and chronic care.”

 

Chronic Diseases, such as heart failure, diabetes, asthma, and others, have been a large focus in recent years due to continued growth in the cost of treatment. A diabetic patient, for example, has medical expenditures approximately 2.3 times higher than a patient with the absence of diabetes.3 In 2015, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented the Chronic Care Management program, focusing on preventative care for those with two or more chronic disease conditions. While the CCM program has made great strides, waiting until one already has multiple diagnosed illnesses to begin preventative maintenance has shown limited success. Dr. Joshua Joseph, an endocrinologist and assistant professor at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, says, “using prevention strategies from the very beginning is key.”4

Unfortunately, a recent study revealed that only 8% of adults age thirty-five and older receive all the highly recommended preventative services needed.5 With more than fifty preventative metrics published, each with different relevancies for age, gender, medical history, and social determinants, it has become apparent that technology is needed to assist in ensuring the right preventative care is prioritized.

Commenting on the above study, Amanda Borsky, with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, says, “the health care system needs to work together to encourage innovation on how care is delivered, how we can use new technology, and how we can tailor improvements to meet the needs of local communities.”

Preventative Care

This statement may sound dated, given that Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) have been around for years, finding their beginning as the solution to a similarly stated problem – the need for innovation in medicine. However, EMRs now find themselves as the accounting systems of healthcare, tracking historical and transactional health encounters rather than providing insight into needed care. To utilize Hume’s law, EMR systems provide what ‘is’. What is needed is the ‘ought’ of proactive patient care.

 

The solution lies in being able to offer real-time patient screening for personalized medicine, with actionable insights at the point-of-service. The benefit of EMRs is that they provide most of the patient data needed for such a task. It can be argued that the largest untapped asset of any healthcare organization is the data contained within their own EMR. The question is are they utilizing it effectively, turning data into information with which to drive decisions. Visualization platforms such as Microsoft Power BI, Tableau, and others make this a much less intimidating, and much more affordable endeavor. For most health systems, the issue is not knowing where to start. Analysis Paralysis leaves them hesitant to take a step and, instead, they turn back toward their EMR accounting system for population health and preventative care. To reference Chase from above, this assures one will pay far more and receive far less. With minimal technical resources, patient data can begin to be extracted from a provider’s EMR and used to identify care opportunities. By utilizing elements such as patient demographics, lab results, transactional charge code history, vital signs, and a handful of others, most preventative care metrics can be mapped and identified proactively.

Data Continuum

For instance, utilizing a diagnosis code history, all diabetic patients can be identified. By combining that with patient lab results, all diabetic patients who did not receive a Hemoglobin A1C test in the last year can be identified. This happens to be an extremely relevant metric for diabetic patients. This process can be repeated for the approximately thirty measures that most value-based payer contracts are built upon, ensuring quality patient care. Visualizing these into actionable dashboards can offer real-time screening and, taken a step further by integrating into the patient schedule, care gap closure can happen at the point of service.

 

While this may be a simplistic example, it does not take many metrics, built in this manner, to begin making an immediate impact on patient care. Many health systems have entire Quality Departments dedicated to monitoring these patient metrics and working manually with payers to close ‘care gaps’. Much of the time, they are working with payer data that is six to nine months past the patient’s date of service. By utilizing EMR data, with real-time screening built into the patient schedule, the positive downstream impacts can be exponential.

 

First and foremost, first-class preventative patient care can be offered. With metrics built in the proper manner, a predictive quality can be achieved, and a health system can proactively engage patients at high risk. Quality scores will increase due to increased preventative medicine being offered and care gaps closed. Population Health and Quality Departments will work much more efficiently with tools in place to easily identify target patients, offering personalized medicine rather than a shotgun approach toward chronic disease management. For the system concerned about the unpredictability of revenue, most preventative care services are covered at 100% by the payor, knowing that when preventative care is offered, patients are better managed and emergency room utilization and hospitalizations decrease. With these goals being aligned in any value-based provider contract, payer savings are easily achieved, and gainsharing can take place – the definition of success in any ACO or risk-based arrangement.

Known as the domino effect, a simple domino can knock down another domino 1.5 times its size. Beginning with a normal two-inch domino and knocking down successive 1.5x dominoes, the 25th domino would knock down the Eiffel Tower and the 31st domino would knock down Mt. Everest. The key is to knock down the first domino. Instead of being paralyzed by incomplete information, a health system can start with EMR data and knowledge of payer contracts, combining them to affect change. Just like the dominos, adding automation around preventative medicine can have exponential impacts in any care environment. By raising preventative medicine coverage from the 8% referenced above, chronic disease can be better managed and healthcare costs could actually begin to decrease, rather than just slowing the rate of growth. It is possible to pay far less and receive far more.

Richard Queen

About the Author

Richard Queen is CEO of DignifiHealth, a healthcare solutions company focused on closing gaps in preventative patient healthcare by utilizing real-time, personalized patient screening and actionable insights from existing medical records. Learn more at https://dignifihealth.com.

Sources:

  1. Palmer, J. (2018, October 3). Study: Most Adults Don’t Receive Preventive Care. Retrieved from https://www.psqh.com/analysis/study-most-adults-dont-receive-preventive-care/

  2. Selberg, Sawyer, Cox, Ramirez, and Levitt (2018, December 6). A generation of healthcare in the United States: Has value improved in the last 25 years? Retrieved from https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/a-generation-of-healthcare-in-the-united-states-has-value-improved-in-the-last-25-years/

  3. Green, C. (2018, December 4). The Cost of Diabetes Care – And How to Help Patients Lower It. Retrieved from https://www.managedhealthcareexecutive.com/article/cost-diabetes-care%E2%80%94and-how-help-patients-lower-it

  4. Wexner Medical Center Media Relations. (2019, January 16). Ohio State Study Finds Following Heart Health Guidelines Also Reduces Diabetes Risk. Retrieved from https://wexnermedical.osu.edu/mediaroom/pressreleaselisting/study-finds-following-heart-health-guidelines-also-reduces-diabetes-risk

  5. Lehman, S. (2018, June 11). Most Americans miss out on preventive healthcare. Retrieved from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-prevention/most-americans-miss-out-on-preventive-healthcare-idUSKBN1J72JG

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