Empowering Patient-Centered Care With a Complete View of the Medical Record
Sponsored by
EMC
September 3, 2015
Even as the move to electronic health records (EHR) progresses in earnest, there are a myriad of challenges involving legacy data systems. Chief among these challenges is the cost of maintaining obsolete systems solely for the patient information they contain. When up to 70% of a typical IT budget is spent on maintaining the current IT infrastructure and application portfolio, organizations have little left to invest in much-needed innovation. According to a recent HealthLeaders Media Survey, many organizations are still adjusting after their migration to a new EHR system. Hospitals need to get a better grasp on all forms and sources of data that they have—and the data they don’t yet have—so that the right information can be delivered to the right individual, and in the right context, at the point of care.
Results from a recent HealthLeaders Media Council survey of 126 senior leaders indicate a shift taking place as workforce management initiatives are expected to deliver more than reduced labor costs. Now, hospitals and health systems are seeking to find ways to better develop and deploy their workforce to improve the patient experience, including both clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction.
Join executives from Anderson Regional Medical Center and an industry acuity-based staffing expert as they discuss the shift toward strategies that improve patient outcomes and the success factors necessary to achieve this.
Targeting Better Outcomes & Patient Satisfaction Through Workforce Management Initiatives
Sponsored by
API Healthcare
April 24, 2015
Workforce management and the pursuit of productivity have formed a consistent pain point for hospitals for several years. The Affordable Care Act has only exacerbated the problem, increasing the demand on providers as the number of insured grows and the bar continues to rise on quality of care. According to a recent HealthLeaders Media Council survey, workforce productivity and acuity-based staffing will continue to be top priorities this year. Karlene Kerfoot, PhD, chief clinical integration officer at API Healthcare, says the survey results indicate a shift taking place as workforce management initiatives are expected to deliver more than reduced labor costs.
The ripple effect of healthcare reform is beginning to impact care delivery strategies as care management now falls increasingly to providers.
According to a recent HealthLeaders Intelligence survey, hospital leaders are making progress with care management efforts, but more robust tools will be needed if hospitals want to scale up.
Eight years ago, executive and board leaders at Sentara Healthcare in Norfolk, Virginia, threw down a strategic gauntlet: It was time to make a big shift and focus on new growth. Since then, the nonprofit health system has been ramping up its presence in its home state of Virginia and continues to evaluate opportunities for partnerships in other states. “Sentara’s evolution as an IDN is similar to many other health systems nationally in that our delivery system was largely centered in one geographic region,” says Megan Perry, corporate vice president of mergers and acquisitions. “In 2006, as we looked at the national landscape, we realized that in order to meet the needs of the current communities we served, as well as make the necessary investments in technology and innovation, that we needed to continue to grow.” Between 2010 and 2014, Sentara merged with five hospitals and has entered into new partnerships with Ohio Health, in Columbus, Ohio, as well as with Huntsville Hospital Health System in Alabama. Today, Sentara encompasses more than 100 sites of care, including 12 acute care hospitals, five medical groups, and a health plan; it offers postacute, outpatient, and urgent care services, among others.