This blog is first installment of a two-part series and will explore the best ways for individuals to stay focused as a way to avoid creating a “data dumpster.” The second post will examine the data needs of key stakeholders within a provider organization, including executive leadership, research and industry experts, analysts, front-line staff and operational decision makers.
Analytics programs are becoming a huge priority for healthcare organizations, according to a recent industry survey. As such, we are seeing a pattern where healthcare professionals often try to extract as much data as possible from multiple sources. The purpose of having this information is to save time and avoid having to involve a whole slew of IT support folks. Yet, much of this data is often unused and prevented from entering an analytics engine. The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a paper on this trend, likening the data hoarding to the creation of “data dumpsters,” or repositories that lack metadata or documentation to put information into context.
To address this growing issue and to make the most of valuable data, it is important that providers focus and ensure that all stakeholders within the organization understand how they can use data analytics.
How to Avoid Diluting Focus
Understand that your managers already use up all of the time in their day (usually above and beyond the mythical 40 hour work week). Therefore, every minute looking at data and trying to interpret large tables comes at a cost. Although buried in each one of those data sets are plenty of fascinating “insights” and intriguing projects, they don’t move the needle on the important strategic priorities. To avoid diluting focus, consider the follow suggestions.
- Define what is important to you as an organization. Hold team members accountable to these numbers.
- Present “success” realistically using benchmarking and understand the 80/20 rule. Is it worth spending a lot of effort to lower your Days in AR when you are already at the 90th percentile nation-wide?
- Quantify “insights” in terms of bottom line impact. Work on the projects that have the “biggest bang for the buck.” Advanced analytics can help quantify the opportunity available in a number of areas. Direct your focus to areas where there is fat to be cut.
- Consider hypotheticals. Imagine that you discovered what you were looking for. Then what? If you don’t know how to translate your hypothetical insight into action, there is no chance that real insight from further analysis is worth your time.
For more details on understanding data consumers and their data needs within an organization, from executives to front line staff, tune back in to the second of this two-part blog series later this month
Get our take on industry trends
2022 Rx: Your new, post-pandemic prescription for success
By Dave Schweppe, Chief Analytics Officer, MedeAnalytics Despite the common use of the term “post-COVID,” most leaders across the healthcare…
Read on...Combating the opioid epidemic in North America with Nobel Prize winning research
American Researchers Dr. David Julius and Dr. Ardem Patapoutian from California were awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine for their path breaking work on the development of non-opioid painkillers, showing immense promise for combating the epidemic.
Read on...Why managed Medicaid/Medicare health plans need analytics to improve outcomes
Managed care organizations that provide healthcare services to Medicare/Medicaid members are dedicated to improving the health and wellness of these underserved populations, especially those living in rural areas.
Read on...Using consumer analytics to steer health-related decisions
Companies tap into what people like to eat and drink, how we purchase consumables, where we like to shop, what shows we might like to stream, whether we vote, and so on. If you have ever created a profile on a streaming application (think Netflix or Amazon), you will receive recommended books, movies and other items just as soon as you start surfing.
Read on...