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How Data Transforms the Hospital Command Center to Pandemic Proportions

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How Data Transforms the Hospital Command Center to Pandemic Proportions

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Hospital command center leaders have never had to run an incident response on the scale of the COVID-19 pandemic. Whereas a typical emergency event (e.g., flooding, earthquakes, multivehicle collisions, or shootings) causes rapid patient influx with an identifiable starting and stopping point, the novel coronavirus has an ongoing, inestimable impact. The extensive duration, combined with high transmission risks and a massive scope of impact, demand that health systems prepare for complex facility, equipment, and staffing needs. Their best strategy is to leverage data-driven tools to scale their existing emergency response plans for COVID-19’s unprecedented proportions.

Hospital command center leaders have never had to run an incident response on the scale of the COVID-19 pandemic. Whereas a typical emergency event (e.g., flooding, earthquakes, multivehicle collisions, or shootings) causes rapid patient influx with an identifiable starting and stopping point, the novel coronavirus has an ongoing, inestimable impact. The extensive duration, combined with high transmission risks and a massive scope of impact, demand that health systems prepare for complex facility, equipment, and staffing needs. Their best strategy is to leverage data-driven tools to scale their existing emergency response plans for COVID-19’s unprecedented proportions.

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How Data Transforms the Hospital Command Center to Pandemic Proportions

  1. 1. How Data Transforms the Hospital Command Center to Pandemic Proportions David Grauer, MBA, MHSA David Gardiner, MBA, MHA, MPH
  2. 2. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Transforming the Hospital Command Center With typical hospital command center planning, organizations and teams prepare for short- and mid-term emergency responses. Major weather-related events, such as flooding, earthquakes or hurricanes, or even multivehicle collisions and shootings all have the potential to cause rapid patient influx and require significant hospital response.
  3. 3. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Transforming the Hospital Command Center But, events like these usually have an identifiable starting and stopping point, mostly requiring only basic data and analytics for impact forecasting. The COVID-19 pandemic, however, is driving the need for a command center strategy to handle a mid- or long-term event with no known endpoint, calling for unique planning and advanced data and analytics support.
  4. 4. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Transforming the Hospital Command Center The long duration, high transmission risks, and massive scope of impact of the novel coronavirus are driving more complex facility, equipment, and staffing needs than U.S. hospitals have ever addressed. With no roadmap or recent events on which to base a pandemic-ready command center strategy, health systems need to leverage data-driven tools to scale their existing emergency response plans to COVID-19 crisis proportions.
  5. 5. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Transforming the Hospital Command Center Patient care, disease control, and, eventually, recovery will rest on health systems’ ability to address a bigger, more fluid situation than leaders and team members have trained in or experienced. Scaling the response will necessarily focus on the areas of highest impact: clinical capacity, equipment, and staffing and rely on comprehensive, accurate, and accessible data.
  6. 6. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. A New Command Center Anatomy: Scaling for Mid- and Long-Term Events In the shift from short- to mid-/long-term emergency response, the service orientation and data projection needs change over time to forecasting extended capacity implications, equipment utilization, and staffing needs. The command center focus transitions from the immediate action of, “who’s here now, what do we expect over the next few days, and how are we going to staff and provide equipment and supplies?” to a prolonged and more comprehensive look at the same essential elements.
  7. 7. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. A New Command Center Anatomy: Scaling for Mid- and Long-Term Events Due to the sustained duration of a mid- to long-term event, the emergency response requires more complex management than its short-term counterpart. Extended demands and a steady flow of critically ill patients require the command center to move to a virtual platform and demand complex analytics.
  8. 8. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. A New Command Center Anatomy: Scaling for Mid- and Long-Term Events Care shifts from urgent/emergent to more chronic and more extended-term needs— for example, moving the focus from trauma surgery and Emergency Medical Services- related rescue care to ventilated patients and ICU-related acuity.
  9. 9. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Regardless of scale, the right information and data is operational currency for hospital command centers. Emergency planners use projections and sophisticated algorithms to continuously project what’s coming next, how to respond best, and how to prioritize actions and resources. Because inaccurate information leads to incorrect estimations, a command center response, and the eventual outcome, is only as good as the data behind it.
  10. 10. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Emergency response leaders can plan to scale their typical command centers to meet pandemic needs by leveraging tools that derive insight from predictive models (e.g., disease progression, services and supply utilization, and identification of at-risk populations). These insights assess the impact and help the organization plan for longer-terms needs related to capacity, equipment, and staffing.
  11. 11. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Reliable data and analytics in the following key areas support command center scaling for COVID-19 needs: Capacity Planning Patient and Staff Contact Tracking Analytics Response Disease Surveillance COVID-19 National Registry Analytics Accelerators
  12. 12. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Capacity Planning COVID-19 has created intense pressures on hospital capacity, and the overflow has pushed patients to hallways, tents, hospital ships, convention centers, and more locations beyond the typical care setting. In the meantime, health systems must still register all patients, and track distributed patients to properly document patient care, monitor the disease as well as recover costs or lost revenue (e.g., to obtain federal recovery funding).
  13. 13. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Capacity Planning An epidemiologically-driven capacity planning tool (Figure 1), such as the Health Catalyst® Capacity Planning Tool, part of the organization’s COVID-19 response, forecasts community-level pandemic-related demand in the context of a system’s capacity, supplies, and staffing—and the subsequent impact of infection rates on care delivery capacity. Command center leaders can use this insight to set expectations and inform an overflow mitigation strategy.
  14. 14. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Projected number of available COVID-19 beds, accounting for admits and discharges KEY Total COVID-19 Beds exhausted on Apr 27 ICU COVID-19 Beds exhausted on Apr 22 COVID-19 Ventilators exhausted on Apr 16 Figure 1 : A sample visualization of a capacity planning tool.
  15. 15. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Patient and Staff Contact Tracking With the high contagion rates of COVID-19, understanding contact history among patients and hospital staff (i.e., who may have risked exposure to the virus) is a vital component of a response strategy, informing testing, quarantine efforts, and decontamination activities. Health systems can use a monitoring tool (e.g., the Health Catalyst® Patient and Staff Contact Tracker) to access reports that track the location and interactions of patients and staff with confirmed or suspected COVID-19.
  16. 16. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Analytics Response An effective pandemic response requires timely, accurate data to generate quick insights for critical decision making. The Health Catalyst® Rapid Response Analytics Solution™ for COVID-19 features quickly accessible prebuilt, curated, reusable data content (DOS™ Marts), including continually updated COVID-19 codes and value sets.
  17. 17. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Analytics Response Command center teams can add new data to their source systems via the Instant Data Entry Application (IDEA). They can then leverage the Population Builder™: Stratification Module to build COVID-19 disease registries swiftly and create, visualize, share, and monitor COVID-19 dashboards using the Leading Wisely® application.
  18. 18. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Disease Surveillance Emergency response to the novel coronavirus makes the complete data story for the disease more significant than ever. By monitoring COVID-19 infections beginning at the initial point of contact within the healthcare organization (e.g., ED registration), providers can identify and flag unusual symptom/clinical test patterns that could represent illness.
  19. 19. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Disease Surveillance A public health application that leverages a comprehensive analytics platform can perform enhanced biosurveillance monitoring and analytics, enabling a quick and effective public health response. With a tool such as the Health Catalyst® Patient Safety Monitor™ Application: Public Health, hospital epidemiologists and infection control personnel can perform local, rapid, and preliminary assessments of patient-level clinical data.
  20. 20. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center A COVID-19 National Registry A national COVID-19 registry enables a deep understanding of COVID-19 treatments and outcomes, making a critical part of a long-term emergency response. The Health Catalyst® Touchstone™ COVID-19 National Data Sets and Registry (Figure 2), for example, consists of three patient types: high-risk patients; patients suspected of being infected, but not confirmed; confirmed COVID-19 patients.
  21. 21. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center A COVID-19 National Registry Touchstone Dataset In the next few months data from clients will grow to include: • ~100M Patients • ~500 Hospitals • ~1000 Health Plans Touchstone includes 3rd party data from ~150M patients, including national surveillance datasets related to COVID-19. Figure 2 : The Touchstone COVID-19 Dataset.
  22. 22. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center A COVID-19 National Registry Organizations can use the registry to derive insights about surveillance, testing, capacity planning, and treatment response to deepen and accelerate their understanding of the outbreak. With registry-driven insights, health systems can inform care pathways for patient management and outcomes improvement during recovery, as well as identify indicators to inform clinical trial design, feasibility, and recruitment.
  23. 23. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Analytics Accelerators Analytics accelerators, tools that health systems can implement and configure quickly, help organizations meet the clinical, operational, and financial challenges of COVID-19.
  24. 24. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Analytics Accelerators Analytics accelerators, tools that health systems can implement and configure quickly, help organizations meet the clinical, operational, and financial challenges of COVID-19. By providing decision-making insights, the following types of accelerators help organizations prepare for and respond to, as well as recover from, COVID-19:
  25. 25. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The Principle Data Needs of the COVID-19 Hospital Command Center Analytics Accelerators By providing decision-making insights, the following types of accelerators help organizations prepare for and respond to, as well as recover from, COVID-19: Practice Management: Patient Access. Readmissions Explorer. Blood Utilization. Supply Chain Explorer. Infection-Related Analytics Accelerators. > > > > >
  26. 26. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. An Outsized Crisis Requires an Outsized Data-Driven Response Health systems’ best emergency response to the novel coronavirus pandemic is to take what they know in the form of their customary command centers and scale them to unprecedented levels. Organizations can meet these new volume and impact challenges by fully leveraging data and expanding their insight and analytic competencies.
  27. 27. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. An Outsized Crisis Requires an Outsized Data-Driven Response With advanced analytics-driven COVID-19 response tools and informed decision making, health systems can transform their emergency frameworks for the outsized proportions and agility a pandemic requires.
  28. 28. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. For more information: “This book is a fantastic piece of work” – Robert Lindeman MD, FAAP, Chief Physician Quality Officer
  29. 29. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. More about this topic Link to original article for a more in-depth discussion. How Data Transforms the Hospital Command Center to Pandemic Proportions Rapid Response Analytics Improves COVID-19 Incident Management Effectiveness Health Catalyst Success Story COVID-19 Dashboard Enables Effective Incident Command Health Catalyst Success Story Analytics Accelerates COVID-19 Elective Surgery Restart Health Catalyst Success Story Responding and Recovering in Clinic Operations with Advanced Analytics Health Catalyst Success Story Health Systems Share COVID-19 Financial Recovery Strategies in First Client Huddle Health Catalyst Editors
  30. 30. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. David Grauer comes to Health Catalyst after 23 years in executive leadership positions at Intermountain Healthcare, a Utah-based, not-for-profit system of 22 hospitals, 185 clinics, and 1,400 employed physicians that is widely recognized as a leader in clinical quality improvement and in efficient healthcare delivery. For the last nine years, Grauer served as CEO/Administrator of Intermountain Medical Center, a 502-bed hospital in suburban Salt Lake City that is both Utah’s largest hospital and the flagship of Intermountain Healthcare. Previously, he was CEO/Administrator of two other Intermountain hospitals: Cottonwood Hospital and TOSH—The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital. Other Clinical Quality Improvement Resources Click to read additional information at www.healthcatalyst.com David Grauer, MBA, MHSA
  31. 31. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. David Other Clinical Quality Improvement Resources Click to read additional information at www.healthcatalyst.com David Gardiner, MBA, MHA, MPH
  32. 32. © 2020 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Other Clinical Quality Improvement Resources Click to read additional information at www.healthcatalyst.com Health Catalyst is a mission-driven data warehousing, analytics and outcomes-improvement company that helps healthcare organizations of all sizes improve clinical, financial, and operational outcomes needed to improve population health and accountable care. Our proven enterprise data warehouse (EDW) and analytics platform helps improve quality, add efficiency and lower costs in support of more than 65 million patients for organizations ranging from the largest US health system to forward-thinking physician practices. Health Catalyst was recently named as the leader in the enterprise healthcare BI market in improvement by KLAS, and has received numerous best-place-to work awards including Modern Healthcare in 2013, 2014, and 2015, as well as other recognitions such as “Best Place to work for Millenials, and a “Best Perks for Women.”

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