CHIME Series: The Value of Having a Dedicated Data Analytics Team

This week, we continue to explore the results of our College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME) survey and the need for data-driven teams. Our survey asked the question: With the shift to value-based care, have you considered creating a department dedicated exclusively to analytics for the enterprise? The results show that many organizations already have (32 percent) or are considering creating an analytics department (43 percent), while the remaining (25 percent) of organizations have not considered creating an exclusive data analytics team.

As healthcare continues to move towards value-based care, more organizations will need to create teams that focus exclusively on data analysis. An elite data-driven team understands that analytics is more than a data warehouse, and can help organizations make sense of data using predictive models, analysis of gaps in care, quality measure calculations and payer expertise. Breaking down these data silos will shed light on actionable insights that can be delivered to key decision-makers. Below are three best practices to ensure data teams are making an impact throughout the organization:

  • Find departmental business leader and champions – data champions are the driving force that will integrate insight into their daily, monthly and/or quarterly management processes.
  • Build trust with data governance – it’s important to provide reliable data that business leaders and champions can use to empower physician and clinical teams to reach their goals. To ensure data trust, there needs to be proper governance, documentation and data mapping to help build trust and transparency throughout the organization.
  • Develop a data driven culture – data literacy and data democratization is the foundation for creating a data-driven culture. A key component in creating this is tapping data analysts whose sole job is to gather data and analyze it in a meaningful way to generate results. An example of this is with Presbyterian Healthcare Services (PHS), who gave their analysts the appropriate training and mentoring to ensure they were developing a consultative skillset that met the needs of their diverse organization.

With this strategy, healthcare organizations can ensure that their data-driven teams aren’t just understanding the data for their purposes but distributing it across the organization for success. To learn more about setting up a data-driven team, read more here. To get a better understanding of how PHS developed and made the best use of their data, click here. If you’re looking for guidance and assistance, make sure to contact us: https://medeanalytics.com/company/contact

Posted in

MedeAnalytics

MedeAnalytics is a leader in healthcare analytics, providing innovative solutions that enable measurable impact for healthcare payers and providers. With the most advanced data orchestration in healthcare, payers and providers count on us to deliver actionable insights that improve financial, operational, and clinical outcomes. To date, we’ve helped uncover millions of dollars in savings annually.

Leave a Comment





Get our take on industry trends

More Megatrends: Price Transparency, Telehealth, Individualized Medicine

January 16, 2020

By Scott Hampel, president of MedeAnalytics Now that we’ve dealt with Megatrends one through three, we’re approaching the next set.…

Read on...

2020 Megatrends: Consumerism, Data Privacy and Security, AI

January 14, 2020

With 2020 two weeks old, it’s becoming clear the data produced in the healthcare industry by providers, consumers and payers will power and propel our 9 megatrends. Healthcare data is the foundation on which we’re building everything from healthcare outreach for the underserved to new Internet of Things-based healthcare programs to treatments designed just for you.

Read on...

Why Unconventional Businesses Will Find Success in Healthcare: It’s the Data

January 7, 2020

It seems everyone is moving into healthcare. It’s a rapidly growing industry, historically dominated by large, well-embedded companies and organizations, and “pure tech” companies have had difficulty breaking in. That, however, is changing.

Read on...

Data and Social Determinants of Health

December 19, 2019

By Scott Hampel – I think a lot–and I’m not the only one–about how we can improve the ways we pull information from data. Data on its own is inert: just waiting to be understood and then used. And that’s a major challenge for many organizations. Data is often trapped in different applications with no easy or convenient way to extract it.

Read on...