Six Steps to Success with Population Health

Shared accountability agreements create significant financial incentives for providers who capitalize on them. Doing so requires population health management initiatives that systematically improve clinical outcomes while reducing costs.

Collecting and analyzing data play a crucial role in population health management. With big-picture insight into patient populations and utilization trends, you can focus your care managers on the right patient interventions and seamlessly transition to accountable care—without disrupting clinical workflows.

Here are six actionable steps you can follow to create an effective population health management program.

  1. Aggregate your data. The first step toward achieving success in an accountable care environment is capitalizing on a solution that will aggregate all of your clinical and claims data so you can identify areas of opportunity. The data helps you understand how you’ve performed historically so you can focus on the areas where you are ready to take on risk rather than entering into contracts blindly.
  2. Analyze your data. Static reports and raw data by itself do little to enable clinical and cost improvements. Advanced, self-service data analytics give you the capabilities you need to easily design and measure population health initiatives.
  3. Communicate with patients. Once you’ve identified disease management opportunities and intervention initiatives, you can proactively communicate to those at-risk patient populations. Involving patients in their own care goes a long way toward improving patient engagement.
  4. Engage clinicians. To drive clinical improvement, it’s important to get physician buy-in and align physicians around the organization’s population health strategies and metrics. The key is to show physicians the facts, utilizing evidence-based practices.
  5. Measure success. Monitor your organization’s performance on your P4P and HEDIS quality measures in near real-time. This ensures that you will be able to focus on areas of improvement throughout the year prior to reporting your results.
  6. Start at home. Integrated delivery networks have practiced the concepts behind population health management long before the advent of accountable care. Follow their lead and start your population health initiatives with your self-insured populations.

To get started, learn more about MedeAnalytics Population Health or email us

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

Providers: Are you ready to be audited?

February 15, 2022

By Donna Kennedy In 2020, regular audits conducted by CMS and other payers were paused or significantly reduced as the…

Read on...

From Insights to Action – The Digital Transformation of Healthcare in the Post-Pandemic “New Normal”

February 10, 2022

In November, MedeAnalytics hosted the 2021 Impact Summit, an engaging and educational event held annually and designed exclusively for our…

Read on...
From Insights to Action – The Digital Transformation of Healthcare in the Post-Pandemic “New Normal”

2022 Rx: Your new, post-pandemic prescription for success

January 11, 2022

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 photo

Combating the opioid epidemic in North America with Nobel Prize winning research

October 12, 2021

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...