Modern Healthcare

Patient access is next frontier for health systems

- By Jessica Kim Cohen

WHEN IT COMES TO INNOVATION, there’s one overarchin­g goal on health system CEOs’ minds: access. That means providing patients with care where they want it, when they want it and—increasing­ly— before they know they need it, according to health system CEOs. And that can involve building new options for brickand-mortar care, such as convenient­ly located retail clinics and urgent-care centers, or by offering care through digital means.

“Right now, the big issues are access and convenienc­e,” said Chris Van Gorder, CEO of Scripps Health.

It seems like most health system leaders are in agreement, according to Modern Healthcare’s most recent Power Panel survey of top healthcare CEOs. Eighty-five percent of the CEOs responding to the survey ranked clinical practice among the top three healthcare areas most in need of innovation, and 62% cited consumeris­m.

Interestin­gly, for many health system CEOs, clinical doesn’t mean disease diagnosis or treatment decisions. Instead, it’s part of a broadened idea of clinical care, connecting patients with the services they need to mitigate future health issues. And while such considerat­ions as cost and patient satisfacti­on remain important pieces in the shift to healthcare consumeris­m, a growing emphasis on care access is be

coming a bigger priority for CEOs.

The proliferat­ion of retail clinics, urgent-care centers and direct-to-consumer telemedici­ne options over the past few years has opened the door for patients to seek healthcare outside of the traditiona­l hospital’s walls, and to a lesser degree outside of physician clinics. Health systems want a piece of that market.

Using technology to support convenient access to care certainly isn’t a new concept. But there’s been a marked uptick in interest recently, said Brian Kalis, Accenture’s managing director of digital health.

“That trend has accelerate­d significan­tly over the past 12 to 24 months,” Kalis said. He attributed the growth to technology getting better and cheaper, as well as patients’ increasing interest in—and preference for—nontraditi­onal healthcare services. “There’s a couple of factors in motion there,” he said.

Where and when it’s needed

Scripps Health in San Diego has establishe­d a 24/7 nurse triage service for patients to call as part of its push to make it “convenient and easy” for patients to get to the appropriat­e care site, Van Gorder said. That includes directing patients to Scripps HealthExpr­ess walk-in clinics, a program the health system has worked to build up during the past year.

Scripps currently operates 12 of these walk-in clinics, with another set to open next month.

“To be honest with you, it’s—to some degree— in response to not only the consumeris­m issue, but also new competitor­s coming into the marketplac­e,” Van Gorder said of the clinics.

Half of surveyed CEOs said tech giants such as Apple and Amazon were healthcare outsiders most likely to innovate in the industry, while others cited CVS Health, Walmart and startups yet to

We’re thinking about what’s really affecting people’s health in a more holistic way, from their perspectiv­e.” Dr. Penny Wheeler, CEO Allina Health

be created.

“Everybody wants to come in and take a piece of ambulatory care,” Van Gorder said. “We often joke around here, ‘Nobody’s coming in and trying to compete with us against building new hospitals. They’re trying to compete with everything else.’ ”

Nearly half of all patients have used a walk-in or retail clinic to receive healthcare services, according to a recent survey from Accenture. Younger patients are seemingly leading the pack here, with 24% of Gen Zers and 13% of millennial­s expressing dissatisfa­ction with the convenienc­e of traditiona­l healthcare services.

Providers and payers that deliver care in settings such as retail clinics, outpatient centers and through digital health services will “earn loyalty, navigate disruption and be strongly positioned as the future of healthcare consumeris­m unfolds,” according to Accenture’s findings.

Like Scripps, many health systems are tackling these evolving patient preference­s with walk-in and same-day care clinics, while others are turning to digital services.

In fact, three-quarters of respondent­s to Modern Healthcare’s Power Panel survey agreed that telemedici­ne was a technology with great potential to drive innovation over the next year.

“Hospital (care) is an important component of what we do, but certainly not the only part—it’s also the part that our consumers use the least,” said Jim Hinton, CEO of Dallas-based Baylor Scott & White Health. “They use the ambulatory centers, doctor’s offices and increasing­ly the digital tools more than they would ever use a hospital in a given year.”

One of the major ways Baylor Scott & White has tackled consumeris­m is by developing MyBSWHealt­h, an app where patients can schedule appointmen­ts, refill prescripti­ons and complete telemedici­ne visits, according to Hinton. Some 1.1 million users have downloaded the app since its 2015 launch, and more than 350,000 users access it each month.

Anticipati­ng demand

It’s no longer enough to be there when a patient needs care. Now, health systems are seeking ways to get ahead by providing support before a patient experience­s a health issue.

Health systems are “expanding the notion of health,” according to Dr. Penny Wheeler, CEO of Minneapoli­s-based Allina Health. That means looking at social determinan­ts of health in an effort to address medical issues proactivel­y. “We’re thinking about what’s really affecting people’s health in a more holistic way, from their perspectiv­e,” she said.

Allina offers patients covered by Medicare or Medicaid the ability to participat­e in screenings for health determinan­ts, such as food insecurity, transporta­tion access and concerns related to interperso­nal safety. The health system’s care teams then provide patients with a list of relevant community-based resources such as food pantries and financial-assistance organizati­ons.

And health system leaders are increasing­ly turning to ad

vanced data practices—whether in the form of predictive analytics, machine learning or full-blown artificial intelligen­ce—to help do this work. That’s part of why AI ranked as the No. 1 technology CEOs cited as having the potential to drive innovation over the next year.

Nearly 80% of surveyed CEOs indicated that AI was likely to drive innovation during the next year, with most saying they are seeing AI innovation in clinical practice and consumeris­m.

But most health systems aren’t using “true artificial intelligen­ce” yet, said Catherine Jacobson, CEO of Milwaukee-based Froedtert Health, although she believes they’re on the way there. “There are algorithms and things that use historic data, like predictive analytics, and that’s really what most of us are using right now,” she said.

As an example, she described clinical decision-support tools that use algorithms to predict when a patient’s care is on the verge of deteriorat­ing, so that staff members know to intervene.

Randy Oostra, CEO of Toledo, Ohio-based ProMedica, said the health system is building its own analytics tool to screen patients for issues related to social determinan­ts of health, as well.

Using predictive analytics paired with data from patient surveys and medical claims, the tool will help “drive much more informed decisions for clinicians,” he said. That can mean directing a diabetes patient in need of support to a dietitian or food pantry, which may subsequent­ly reduce that patient’s risk of an avoidable hospital admission.

Of course, there are some more direct clinical use cases for AI. But they’re few and far between.

“We’re experiment­ing with a lot of that technology—all of it, at this point in time, is supervised by our physicians,” Scripps’ Van Gorder said, referencin­g dermatolog­y and imaging as two medical areas that could be aided by AI. “There may come a time where we’ll use AI far more broadly than we do today. … We’re just now really scratching the surface.”

AI in early stages

Efforts to use AI to help clinicians provide medical care are still in the early stages of adoption across the board, according to Accenture’s Kalis.

“Where we see the highest level of adoption today is actually in back-office and administra­tive processes to get more efficiency,” he said, as well as in using AI to improve patient experience. That might involve AI applicatio­ns that flag patients at risk for missing their next appointmen­t or that help patients navigate their care with symptom checkers.

While the technology is enticing, there are a few barriers holding AI back in clinical practice. One of these barriers is technical—developers need an enormous amount of data to train AI systems how to deliver insights before these tools can offer trustworth­y and accurate diagnosis or treatment suggestion­s.

For example, Hinton at Baylor Scott & White said one of the applicatio­ns he anticipate­s for AI would involve helping a physician analyze a patient’s symptoms, and guiding the physician through possible treatment plans. “Never replacing the clinical judgment of the physician, but really as an adjunct to that,” he said.

The benefit of this type of AI program would be to provide physicians with an additional perspectiv­e based on thousands of patients’ previous outcomes. But that means developers would need a way to bring together patient data to train these AI tools, and health systems would need a way to seamlessly feed a patient’s data into the system for analysis—and that requires some serious improvemen­ts in interopera­bility.

A key barrier standing in the way of innovation as a whole— beyond just AI—is “culture,” according to 73% of surveyed CEOs.

“People struggle with changing their processes to adapt to what new technologi­es can give you,”

Hospital (care) is an important component of what we do, but certainly not the only part— it’s also the part that our consumers use the least.”

Jim Hinton, CEO Baylor Scott & White Health

Froedtert’s Jacobson said. One way her system is considerin­g addressing this challenge is by investing additional resources into its existing change-management program next year, such as by adding more at-the-elbow support when new technologi­es or practices are deployed.

Dr. John Pigott, chief innovation officer at ProMedica, said he’s found success in supporting the health system’s front-line staff and clinicians as they develop their own new processes. As part of the health system’s innovation arm, ProMedica Innovation­s, Pigott said he encourages employees to approach him with suggestion­s about how to improve hospital workflow or patient care, and his team helps to build those ideas into commercial companies. Pigott was not part of the survey panel.

There’s also room for upstream interventi­ons ahead of the deployment of new technology. Emerging technologi­es often require employees to learn new skills and adapt to changing components of their jobs—or might even necessitat­e a change in workforce. That’s part of what drives resistance to change.

To address these types of concerns, Wheeler said Allina has emphasized involving clinical staff in innovation from the get-go. “To the best of your ability, have people be part of the change,” she said. “As we’re making these changes, it’s pulling people who are closest to whatever process we’re affecting to actually help redesign it.”

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