Regardless of COVID-19 vaccine efficacy and how long it takes risk levels to fall into less threatening ranges, many effects of the pandemic are here to stay. One area that will remain fundamentally altered is the business of delivering healthcare—the strategies and ins and outs of healthcare finance. COVID-19 has fueled new delivery models and new competition, as patients and clinicians are drawn to more convenient, less costly care (e.g., virtual care) and less stressful, more productive work environments.
So, how can traditional providers adapt and thrive in this new healthcare landscape? They must start by recognizing the impending challenge as a business problem, not a technology or care problem. This means leveraging their CFOs and financial leaders to play a more collaborative role in empowering clinicians to make better decisions and operationalizing health systems’ key differentiator—data.
The question isn’t if COVID-19 will permanently alter the healthcare financial outlook—but how. Pandemic-fueled financial headwinds range from new competitors—including vertically integrated insurers, innovative care delivery providers, and large corporations (e.g., Amazon and Walmart)—to physician-hiring battles and more. These large healthcare ecosystems and new innovative models are growing faster than providers, driving a fundamental shift in the business landscape and putting health systems on the defensive.
As these new competitors target provider revenue, U.S. healthcare must face the impending challenge as a business problem—not a technology or care problem. This business-focused landscape will propel CFOs and other finance leaders to play a larger, more collaborative role in empowering physicians to deliver better care and operationalize previously underutilized or unrealized assets and advantages.
Providers today must shift their tactics from playing defense to playing to win. Making this transition requires healthcare leaders to understand the changing competitive landscape and define new roles and skills for their finance leaders and teams.
COVID-19 is driving fundamental shifts in healthcare finance, leaving many health systems unsustainable. Volumes, including adjusted discharge and patient days and emergency department visits, have dropped, while expenses, including per adjusted discharge, labor, and non-labor rise (Figure 1).
Meanwhile, new well-funded and consumer-centric entities in the healthcare space, such as the vertically integrated systems, new busines models, and large retail corporations mentioned above, are succeeding where the relatively small health systems are falling behind. Giants from other industries—the likes of Walmart, Amazon, and more—are dwarfing traditional health systems.
New entrants to the healthcare space attract more patients for many reasons, from cost to convenience. However, the competition isn’t just about patients—it’s also about clinicians. While clinicians at traditional systems report dissatisfaction and distress, including unacceptable levels of burnout (42 percent), burnout starting before the pandemic (79 percent), and suicidal ideation (one in eight), too many health systems aren’t taking action to improve the team member experience (Figure 2).
Innovators, on the other hand, are reinventing how they treat clinicians; they’re responding to the largely preventable contributors to burnout and poor experience, attracting clinicians from health systems to these new entities. Disruptive care delivery companies are addressing clinician concerns and well-being by aiming to reduce stress and administrative burden and increase support and flexibility. For example, one such innovator, ChenMed, promotes a practice model with the following vows:
With decreasing volume, increasing cost, and a rise in competitors, health systems must prioritize business to play to win in today’s landscape. More than technology or care, misaligned incentives and antiquated leadership styles, especially regarding CFOs, are relegating health systems to defensive, rather than competitive, roles.
Health systems traditionally silo their CFOs, keeping them inaccessible to clinicians and preventing collaboration. In COVID-19’s wake, however, mounting and shifting financial challenges require providers to view CFOs as part of clinical and operational team—as allies, not adversaries.
To shift to a collaborative role and support clinicians to deliver the best care, finance must develop the following new skills:
While there’s a lot stacked up against provider networks in the pandemic-driven new healthcare landscape, health systems have a unique superpower—data. Despite innovation and big-industry competition, data remains key to intelligent healthcare decision making and risk reduction.
With decades of cost and clinical data, health systems have significantly more of this mission-critical asset than the new competitors. These high-value data stores include patient satisfaction, revenue (more than just claims spend), geospatial, market, and social determinants (SDOH) of health and contain game-changing insights into business and clinical operations (Figure 3).
Data is providers’ key differentiator on healthcare’s new playing finance field and under its new rules. To play to win, health systems must continue to acquire and manage data and nurture data leadership and skillsets. This winning strategy will enable providers to make competitive changes and partnerships, including vertical integration, national remote patient monitoring, provider-sponsored health plans, and innovative care delivery.
With decades of deep data (e.g., clinical, cost, claims, and SDOH), traditional healthcare organizations have a strong advantage over their new competitors—but only if they use that data to make more strategic financial decisions. A successful strategy for the new healthcare business landscape will require understanding the evolving competition, as big corporations, insurers, and innovative care delivery will continue to take market share. Providers also must break down silos between finance and clinicians and operators, enabling collaboration across enterprises so that comprehensive data drives all decision making. By taking this business-centric, data-first approach, providers are ready to play to win with today’s healthcare financial outlook.
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