The future of digital health part 4: Convergence of AI and analytics for healthcare payers

Part 4

This post is the fourth and final of our Digital Health series, featuring healthcare visionary and thought leader Andy Dé. In this series, Dé has been discussing how COVID-19 has triggered remarkable digital transformation and uncovers five long-term innovation implications that providers, healthcare leaders, and payers need to consider.

To catch up on the previous three posts, navigate to the following links:

Innovation implication #1: Advanced analytics for vaccine administration

Innovation implication #2: Digital patient engagement and virtual healthcare delivery

Innovation implications #3: Artificial intelligence and machine learning for operations, revenue cycle and supply chain innovation and #4: Medical robotics

Then, read on to explore today’s topic: Artificial Intelligence and analytics.


Innovation implication #5: Convergence of AI and analytics for healthcare payers

Healthcare payers are experiencing tremendous, pandemic-driven cost pressures as well as unprecedented changes to their reimbursement mixes (thanks to the explosive growth of telehealth and similar services). To stay successful, I predict payers will extensively leverage advanced descriptive, spatial, predictive and prescriptive analytics driven by a convergence of analytics and artificial intelligence comprising machine learning, natural language processing, and deep learning.

In this post, I’ll follow the strategy framework laid out in the below graphic and detail each high value area of potential investment in advanced analytics.

1. Innovate with new products and services for new segments of customers

The COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting economic catastrophe has caused millions of Americans to be laid off or furloughed – usually losing employer provided health coverage as a result.

Simultaneously, 32.8 million Americans have been infected by COVID-19 as of today and many will suffer long-term physical effects of the virus. COVID-19 has become a “pre-existing condition” for these afflicted patients.

Deploying advanced analytics and AI will help payers identify the changing needs of their customers and respond to their evolving needs with newer products and services that will enable new revenue streams to compensate for lost revenue.

2. Minimize customer churn through value-added programs

Advanced predictive and prescriptive analytics have helped large healthcare payers to better understand their customer behavior, address dissonance with their products and services and deploy value-added programs to minimize customer churn. These steps have helped protect millions in revenue, which would otherwise have been lost.

3. Improve process efficiencies

Healthcare payers are also challenged with several administrative processes which are manual, inefficient, onerous and can negatively impact employee morale (e.g., claims administration and management).

I foresee industry leaders deploying best practices like analytics- and AI-enabled Lean Six-Sigma for value stream mapping to stratify current processes in terms of value-add vs. non-value-add process steps from the customer’s perspective. This will enable them to eliminate non-value-add processes or steps, enhancing process efficiency, customer satisfaction and employee productivity – and saving millions in costs.

4. Minimize fraud, waste and abuse for millions in cost savings

Fraudulent claims filed on behalf of patients by unscrupulous physicians, providers and predatory pharmacies is a significant challenge, which costs healthcare payers billions in leakage every year.

Deploying advanced machine learning and natural language processing algorithms with analytic automation will help payers to proactively flag and detect fraud, identify waste and abuse pertaining to claims administration, management and reimbursement – and save them millions in leakage and cost savings each year.

This concludes our series on the future of digital health. Thank you for following along!

I hope you’ve learned key insights and gained actionable takeaways that can be incorporated into your strategic plans and preparation pathways. To discuss any of these implications further, reach out to start the conversation. Let’s innovate together!

Andy Dé

Andy Dé is the Chief Marketing Officer. Andy joined MedeAnalytics in March 2021 bringing more than 20 years of enterprise software product marketing, product management and industry strategy experience. In his role, Andy oversees the company’s go-to-market (GTM) strategy and marketing. He is passionate about healthcare innovation and is recognized as an industry thought leader in healthcare.

Get our take on industry trends

Pandemic devours hospital revenue; these ideas can help get it back

Pandemic devours hospital revenue; these ideas can help get it back

June 3, 2021

There’s no way around it. The coronavirus pandemic has created a perfect storm that, even as we progress through the…

Read on...
The Real Payback of Healthcare Analytics: Key Questions from Healthcare Leaders Around the Nation

The Real Payback of Healthcare Analytics: Key Questions from Healthcare Leaders Around the Nation

May 25, 2021

MedeAnalytics hosted a Fierce Healthcare webinar featuring key senior leaders from three preeminent healthcare organizations in the U.S: At the…

Read on...
The future of digital health part 4: Convergence of AI and analytics for healthcare payers

The future of digital health part 4: Convergence of AI and analytics for healthcare payers

May 12, 2021

This post is the fourth and final of our Digital Health series, featuring healthcare visionary and thought leader Andy Dé. In this series, Dé has been discussing how COVID-19 has triggered remarkable digital transformation and uncovers five long-term innovation implications that providers, healthcare leaders, and payers need to consider.

Read on...
Use SDOH + Analytics to power better outcomes for underserved population

Use SDOH + Analytics to power better outcomes for underserved population

May 11, 2021

Whether you’re a payer, provider or patient, on the front lines of care, sitting in front of a computer or receiving treatment, you’ve been affected by the pandemic. Of all the groups who participate in healthcare in one way or another, perhaps no single group has suffered more over the last year during the pandemic than the underserved— those people without ready access to needed healthcare services.

Read on...