Oracle provides comprehensive, end-to-end healthcare solutions to help improve patient care and outcomes while maximizing efficiency and containing costs. Their solutions include electronic health records, population health management, care coordination, and analytics capabilities. Oracle aims to help healthcare organizations improve operational efficiencies, enhance security and data sharing, and make more informed financial decisions through integrated platforms and applications.
Healthcare Business Intelligence for Power UsersPerficient, Inc.
The Healthcare industry is accustomed to volumes of clinical and administrative data. Business intelligence helps convert these large amounts of data into actionable insights to reduce costs, streamline processes, and improve healthcare delivery. Our first webinar, “An Introduction to Business Intelligence for Healthcare,” introduces business intelligence in healthcare and common concepts.
In the second of this series of two webinars, Health BI Practice Manager, Mike Jenkins addresses:
- The BI Maturity Level
- Examples of Levels 3 and 4
- Attaining Level 5
Combining Patient Records, Genomic Data and Environmental Data to Enable Tran...Perficient, Inc.
The average academic research organization (ARO) and hospital has many systems that house patient-related information, such as patient records and genomic data. Combining data from a variety of sources in an ongoing manner can enable complex and meaningful querying, reporting and analysis for the purposes of improving patient safety and care, boosting operational efficiency, and supporting personalized medicine initiatives.
In this webinar, Perficient’s Mike Grossman, a director of clinical data warehousing and analytics, and Martin Sizemore, a healthcare strategist, discussed:
-How AROs and hospitals can benefit from a systematic approach to combining data from diverse systems and utilizing a suite of data extraction, reporting, and analytical tools, in order to support a wide variety of needs and requests
-Examples of proposed solutions to real-life challenges AROs and hospitals often encounter
Extending Your EMR with Business Intelligence SolutionsPerficient, Inc.
The best business intelligence applications start with one part EMR, one part financial applications, and one part operational applications stirred into real insights. These slides show examples from speakers that have successfully extended EMRs into managing costs, transmitting information to disease registries and improving patient care.
Healthcare Business Intelligence & Analytics – A Dose of WellnessSPEC INDIA
As the Healthcare industry moves to the next level of offerings, data captured coupled with business intelligence & data analytics provides innovative solutions for this very dynamic industry relying heavily on contemporary techniques like mobile technologies, the Cloud and the IoT. Special solutions to cater to the mobile device management for healthcare too gain growing importance.
The need for cost optimizations all across, the requirements to gain insights into the very detailed parameters related to treatment plans and the administrative efforts to co-ordinate and keep these in sync is managed by Healthcare Business Intelligence solutions.
Get More Details on Business Intelligence for Healthcare Industry Here: http://blog.spec-india.com/healthcare-business-intelligence-analytics-dose-wellness/
ACO = HIE + Analytics - a Healthcare IT PresentationPerficient, Inc.
With the release of the Accountable Care Organization (ACO) regulations, healthcare providers must be able to identify, access, and seamlessly share patient information to drive efficiencies and enjoy a potential share in ACO program incentives. Additionally, more than half of the 93 draft National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) ACO measures are also Meaningful Use measures, which further elevates the need to achieve meaningful use stage 2 or higher.
Given these goals, success will ultimately depend on an organization’s ability to share patient data at the point of care and its ability to gain meaning from historical and longitudinal data for use in managing population health. Healthcare organizations will need to give focused attention to the IT strategies, appropriate architectures, and roadmaps they will use to move from desired state to reality.
We discuss the practical architectural approach for creating an ACO. As Health Information Exchanges (HIEs) evolve into their second generation, they are able to the support the functional ACO tasks of delivering and managing care for a defined population, accept payment, distribute savings to participants, and perform disease management with predictive modeling to improve outcomes. We will also discuss the need to achieve meaningful use stage 2 or higher and the data/analytics requirements for ACO participants.
Presenter Martin Sizemore is the Director of Healthcare Strategy for Perficient. Martin has been a consultant and trusted advisor to CEOs, COOs, CIOs and senior managers for global multi-national companies and healthcare organizations, and is a certified Enterprise Architect with specialized skills in Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).
How Northwestern Medicine is Leveraging Epic to Enable Value-Based CarePerficient, Inc.
Value-based care and payment reform are prompting hospitals and healthcare providers to more closely manage population health. Hospitals and health systems rely on technology and data to outline the characteristics of their population and identify high-risk patients in order to manage chronic diseases and deliver enhanced preventative care.
Our webinar covered how Cadence Health, now part of Northwestern Medicine, is leveraging the native capabilities of Epic to manage their population health initiatives and value-based care relationships across the continuum of care.
Our speakers:
-Analyzed how Epic’s Healthy Planet and Cogito platforms can be used to manage value-based care initiatives.
-Examined the three steps for effective population health management: Collect data, analyze data and engage with patients.
-Covered how access to analytics allows physicians at Northwestern Medicine to deliver enhanced preventive care and better manage chronic diseases.
-Discussed Northwestern Medicine’s strategy to integrate data from Epic and other data sources.
Healthcare Business Intelligence for Power UsersPerficient, Inc.
The Healthcare industry is accustomed to volumes of clinical and administrative data. Business intelligence helps convert these large amounts of data into actionable insights to reduce costs, streamline processes, and improve healthcare delivery. Our first webinar, “An Introduction to Business Intelligence for Healthcare,” introduces business intelligence in healthcare and common concepts.
In the second of this series of two webinars, Health BI Practice Manager, Mike Jenkins addresses:
- The BI Maturity Level
- Examples of Levels 3 and 4
- Attaining Level 5
Combining Patient Records, Genomic Data and Environmental Data to Enable Tran...Perficient, Inc.
The average academic research organization (ARO) and hospital has many systems that house patient-related information, such as patient records and genomic data. Combining data from a variety of sources in an ongoing manner can enable complex and meaningful querying, reporting and analysis for the purposes of improving patient safety and care, boosting operational efficiency, and supporting personalized medicine initiatives.
In this webinar, Perficient’s Mike Grossman, a director of clinical data warehousing and analytics, and Martin Sizemore, a healthcare strategist, discussed:
-How AROs and hospitals can benefit from a systematic approach to combining data from diverse systems and utilizing a suite of data extraction, reporting, and analytical tools, in order to support a wide variety of needs and requests
-Examples of proposed solutions to real-life challenges AROs and hospitals often encounter
Extending Your EMR with Business Intelligence SolutionsPerficient, Inc.
The best business intelligence applications start with one part EMR, one part financial applications, and one part operational applications stirred into real insights. These slides show examples from speakers that have successfully extended EMRs into managing costs, transmitting information to disease registries and improving patient care.
Healthcare Business Intelligence & Analytics – A Dose of WellnessSPEC INDIA
As the Healthcare industry moves to the next level of offerings, data captured coupled with business intelligence & data analytics provides innovative solutions for this very dynamic industry relying heavily on contemporary techniques like mobile technologies, the Cloud and the IoT. Special solutions to cater to the mobile device management for healthcare too gain growing importance.
The need for cost optimizations all across, the requirements to gain insights into the very detailed parameters related to treatment plans and the administrative efforts to co-ordinate and keep these in sync is managed by Healthcare Business Intelligence solutions.
Get More Details on Business Intelligence for Healthcare Industry Here: http://blog.spec-india.com/healthcare-business-intelligence-analytics-dose-wellness/
ACO = HIE + Analytics - a Healthcare IT PresentationPerficient, Inc.
With the release of the Accountable Care Organization (ACO) regulations, healthcare providers must be able to identify, access, and seamlessly share patient information to drive efficiencies and enjoy a potential share in ACO program incentives. Additionally, more than half of the 93 draft National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) ACO measures are also Meaningful Use measures, which further elevates the need to achieve meaningful use stage 2 or higher.
Given these goals, success will ultimately depend on an organization’s ability to share patient data at the point of care and its ability to gain meaning from historical and longitudinal data for use in managing population health. Healthcare organizations will need to give focused attention to the IT strategies, appropriate architectures, and roadmaps they will use to move from desired state to reality.
We discuss the practical architectural approach for creating an ACO. As Health Information Exchanges (HIEs) evolve into their second generation, they are able to the support the functional ACO tasks of delivering and managing care for a defined population, accept payment, distribute savings to participants, and perform disease management with predictive modeling to improve outcomes. We will also discuss the need to achieve meaningful use stage 2 or higher and the data/analytics requirements for ACO participants.
Presenter Martin Sizemore is the Director of Healthcare Strategy for Perficient. Martin has been a consultant and trusted advisor to CEOs, COOs, CIOs and senior managers for global multi-national companies and healthcare organizations, and is a certified Enterprise Architect with specialized skills in Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).
How Northwestern Medicine is Leveraging Epic to Enable Value-Based CarePerficient, Inc.
Value-based care and payment reform are prompting hospitals and healthcare providers to more closely manage population health. Hospitals and health systems rely on technology and data to outline the characteristics of their population and identify high-risk patients in order to manage chronic diseases and deliver enhanced preventative care.
Our webinar covered how Cadence Health, now part of Northwestern Medicine, is leveraging the native capabilities of Epic to manage their population health initiatives and value-based care relationships across the continuum of care.
Our speakers:
-Analyzed how Epic’s Healthy Planet and Cogito platforms can be used to manage value-based care initiatives.
-Examined the three steps for effective population health management: Collect data, analyze data and engage with patients.
-Covered how access to analytics allows physicians at Northwestern Medicine to deliver enhanced preventive care and better manage chronic diseases.
-Discussed Northwestern Medicine’s strategy to integrate data from Epic and other data sources.
The New Health Catalyst 2.0 Platform and ProductsHealth Catalyst
Listen to Health Catalyst Co-Founder Tom Burton explain Health Catalyst 2.0 -- a new platform and application framework that significantly increases the scalability of the Late-Binding (TM) Data Warehouse and the number of Analytic Applications available from Health Catalyst.
In particular, see product demos and learn more about the specific suite of analytic products under the 3 main categories: Foundational Applications, Discovery Applications, and Advanced Applications
HIMSS Analytics, with a goal of helping healthcare organizations understand and advance healthcare analytics, has developed the Adoption Model for Analytics Maturity (AMAM) published here on www.SlideShare.net for healthcare industry reference.
This 8 stage international prescriptive analytics oriented maturity model offers an easy assessment and a detailed industry specific road map to help healthcare providers interested in analytics advance their capabilities.
For further information please see www.HIMSSAnalytics.org
Enabling the Future of Healthcare Through Integration and Interoperability: V...Rahul Neel Mani
Integration is about connecting two or more systems so that they can share data. Interoperability means that two (or more) systems work together unchanged even though they weren't necessarily designed to work together.
The Data Operating System: Changing the Digital Trajectory of HealthcareHealth Catalyst
In 1989, John Reed, the CEO of Citibank and the early pioneer for ATMs, said, “I can see a future in which the data and information that is exchanged in our transactions are worth more than the transactions themselves.” We are at an interesting digital nexus in healthcare. Few of us would argue against the notion that data and digital health will play a bigger and bigger role in the future. But, are we on the right track to deliver on that future? It required $30B in federal incentive money to subsidize the uptake of Electronic Health Records (EHRs). You could argue that the federal incentives stimulated the first major step towards the digitization of health, but few physicians would celebrate its value in comparison to its expense. As the healthcare market consolidates through mergers and acquisitions (M&A), patching disparate EHRs and other information systems together becomes even more important, and challenging. An organization is not integrated until its data is integrated, but costly forklift replacements of these transaction information systems and consolidating them with a single EHR solution is not a viable financial solution.
Harness Your Clinical and Financial Data with an Enterprise Health Informat...Perficient, Inc.
The importance of Enterprise Health Information Exchange (EHIE) as a key way to empower your physicians and patients and demonstrate meaningful use of electronic health records:
- Present the business case for EHIE as an important architecture that matters to progressive health systems
- Take a look at some of the market-leading EHIE architectures and products
- Provide real exam...ples of organizations that are using EHIE to improve their operations
How to Load Data More Quickly and Accurately into Oracle's Life Sciences Data...Perficient, Inc.
Sponsors and CROs know the value of having a consolidated and regulatory-compliant data warehouse, such as Oracle’s Life Sciences Data Hub (LSH), as well as the importance of consistently loading data into that warehouse quickly and accurately.
However, as data structures from the source files change over time, it can be very time consuming to modify the data structure in the warehouse itself. Additionally, for the large groups of SAS datasets that are typical for a clinical trial, the out-of-the-box load times can be quite long, as the data is loaded one set at a time.
Perficient has the answer. In this webinar, we discussed and demonstrated an autoloader tool that greatly simplifies the data loading process for LSH. We showed how the autoloader can automatically load files, detect metadata changes, upgrade target structures, and load data, all with no human intervention. In addition, we demonstrated how Perficient’s autoloader tool can load multiple datasets in parallel to minimize load times.
Going Beyond the EMR for Data-driven Insights in HealthcarePerficient, Inc.
Join Dr. Marcie Stoshak-Chavez, MD, FACEP, Director of Healthcare Strategic Advisory Services at Perficient and Mr. J.D. Whitlock, Director of Clinical & Business Intelligence at Catholic Health Partners to learn how analytics is being used to measure and monitor performance and provide service-line directors and financial administrators with reporting and analysis that enhances clinical care processes and business operations.
Learn how clinicians and administrators armed with the data-driven insights from the EMR and beyond can:
Derive meaningful insights for care delivery by analyzing clinical, financial and operational data
Collaborate more effectively and improve quality of care by securely sharing insights among providers
Meaningfully measure and understand performance across key Federally mandated measures and take prescribed action
Stay on top of shifts in regulatory policy that impact reimbursements and quality requirements
Healthcare Integration | Opening the Doors to CommunicationBizTalk360
Integration plays the central role in connecting health systems to effortlessly communicate and share data, ultimately improving the quality and outcomes of health services. With an integration system in place, healthcare organizations can improve communication within their enterprise, connect to external entities, such as HIEs, laboratories, and long-term care facilities, and to patient platforms, such as Microsoft HealthVault. With established and evolving standards, such as HL7 v2 & v3, CDA, XDS, and FHIR, healthcare organizations now more than ever need a robust interoperability solution to meet and support these requirements.
Leveraging Technology to Empower Patients and Reduce Healthcare CostsPerficient, Inc.
Telehealth, once reserved for the chronically ill, is now being used to drive increased revenue by creating services that scale beyond traditional geographic boundaries.
Perficient and KP OnCall discussed how telehealth is impacting healthcare and how the nation’s leading telehealth provider is leveraging innovative technologies to:
-Reduce patient visits and lower healthcare costs
-Empower patients through self-treatment
-Deliver alternate methods of patient/provider communication
-Manage symptoms and medical conditions for the patients and populations they serve
-Generate data-driven insights
Microsoft: A Waking Giant In Healthcare Analytics and Big DataHealth Catalyst
In 2005, Northwestern Memorial Healthcare embarked upon a strategic Enterprise Data Warehousing (EDW) initiative with the Microsoft technology platform as the foundation. Dale Sanders was CIO at Northwestern and led the development of Northwestern’s Microsoft-based EDW. At that time, Microsoft as an EDW platform was not en vogue and there were many who doubted the success of the Northwestern project. While other organizations were spending millions of dollars and years developing EDW’s and analytics on other platforms, Northwestern achieved great and rapid value at a fraction of the cost of the more typical technology platforms. Now, there are more healthcare data warehouses built around Microsoft products than any other vendor. The risky bet on Microsoft in 2005 paid off.
Ten years ago, critics didn’t believe that Microsoft could scale in the second generation of relational data warehouses, but they did. More recently, many of these same pundits have criticized Microsoft for missing the technology wave du jour in cloud offerings, mobile technology, and big data. But, once again, Microsoft has been quietly reengineering its culture and products, and as a result, they now offer the best value and most visionary platform for cloud services, big data, and analytics in healthcare.
In this context, Dale will talk about:
His up and down journey with Microsoft as an Air Force and healthcare CIO, and why he is now more bullish on Microsoft like never before
A quick review of the Healthcare Analytics Adoption Model and Closed Loop Analytics in healthcare, and how Microsoft products relate to both
The rise of highly specialized, cloud-based analytic services and their value to healthcare organizations’ analytics strategies
Microsoft’s transformation from a closed-system, desktop PC company to an open-system consumer and business infrastructure company
The current transition period of enterprise data warehouses between the decline of relational databases and the rise of non-relational databases, and the new Microsoft products, notably Azure and the Analytic Platform System (APS), that bridge the transition of skills and technology while still integrating with core products like Office, Active Directory, and System Center
Microsoft’s strategy with its PowerX product line, and geospatial analysis and machine learning visualization tools
Business Intelligence Solution in the Health Insurance CompanyThuy Tran
It is the small project of the subject Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence of the course Business Consultant Master in Hochschule Furtwange. The purpose of this project is helping students understand more about Data Warehouse and Data Analytics, able to use SAP BI-DW and Qlik View to create dashboard, reports
Developing a Strategic Analytics Framework that Drives Healthcare TransformationTrevor Strome
About the presentation.
Based on Chapter 3 of my book "Healthcare Analytics for Quality and Performance Improvement", this presentation describes the key components of a strategic analytics framework that can enable your healthcare organization to leverage data from source-systems to achieve its quality, safety, and performance improvement goals.
What is an analytics strategy?
Analytics is currently a very “trendy” topic. The internet is scattered with many buzzwords, marketing angles, white papers, and opinions on the topic of healthcare analytics. With all this “noise”, it is easy to get distracted from what is actually required, from an analytics perspective, by your organization. An analytics strategy helps cut through the noise and keep focus on what is important for the organization. Regardless of what the latest “buzz” is, your analytics strategy will enable your organization to Invest now for what is required now, and invest later for what is required in the future.
An analytics strategy helps ensure that analytics development and capabilities are in alignment with enterprise quality and performance goals and helps avoids the “all dashboard, no improvement” syndrome. Furthermore, a well formed strategy document helps to achieve optimal use of analytics within a healthcare organization and can mean the difference between a “collection of reports” versus a high-value information resource.
An analytics strategy can rarely stand on its own. In general, the analytics strategy should use as input an organization’s Quality Improvement (QI) strategy and should be used to inform an organization’s Business Intelligence (BI) or Information Technology (IT) strategy. The analytics strategy is an important input to technical strategies because analytics, after all, can involve a sophisticated use of data and technology. Requirements for analytics may trigger a cascade of enhancements throughout other components of IT and BI (i.e., reporting, data storage, ETL, etc)
The document is intended to accompany Chapter 3, “Developing an Analytics Strategy to Drive Change”, so please refer to the chapter for further information about developing an analytics strategy.
A seminar topic which was created for the first time easy to understand and easy to explain.
any queries related to this topic can ask to me. and be free to connect to me.
to connect me to fb search mykeel vineeth thelakat.
Epic EMR - Root Cause Fault Detection in complex Healthcare Records systemsDennis Redwine
Very few HealthCare IT vendors understand how to deliver Root Cause Analysis. In this presentation from AI4Cloud we discuss how Artificial Intelligence can be used to address this challenge.
Epic EMR is a perfect example for our discussion because of its complexity and ubiquity in Medical Records missions.
The New Health Catalyst 2.0 Platform and ProductsHealth Catalyst
Listen to Health Catalyst Co-Founder Tom Burton explain Health Catalyst 2.0 -- a new platform and application framework that significantly increases the scalability of the Late-Binding (TM) Data Warehouse and the number of Analytic Applications available from Health Catalyst.
In particular, see product demos and learn more about the specific suite of analytic products under the 3 main categories: Foundational Applications, Discovery Applications, and Advanced Applications
HIMSS Analytics, with a goal of helping healthcare organizations understand and advance healthcare analytics, has developed the Adoption Model for Analytics Maturity (AMAM) published here on www.SlideShare.net for healthcare industry reference.
This 8 stage international prescriptive analytics oriented maturity model offers an easy assessment and a detailed industry specific road map to help healthcare providers interested in analytics advance their capabilities.
For further information please see www.HIMSSAnalytics.org
Enabling the Future of Healthcare Through Integration and Interoperability: V...Rahul Neel Mani
Integration is about connecting two or more systems so that they can share data. Interoperability means that two (or more) systems work together unchanged even though they weren't necessarily designed to work together.
The Data Operating System: Changing the Digital Trajectory of HealthcareHealth Catalyst
In 1989, John Reed, the CEO of Citibank and the early pioneer for ATMs, said, “I can see a future in which the data and information that is exchanged in our transactions are worth more than the transactions themselves.” We are at an interesting digital nexus in healthcare. Few of us would argue against the notion that data and digital health will play a bigger and bigger role in the future. But, are we on the right track to deliver on that future? It required $30B in federal incentive money to subsidize the uptake of Electronic Health Records (EHRs). You could argue that the federal incentives stimulated the first major step towards the digitization of health, but few physicians would celebrate its value in comparison to its expense. As the healthcare market consolidates through mergers and acquisitions (M&A), patching disparate EHRs and other information systems together becomes even more important, and challenging. An organization is not integrated until its data is integrated, but costly forklift replacements of these transaction information systems and consolidating them with a single EHR solution is not a viable financial solution.
Harness Your Clinical and Financial Data with an Enterprise Health Informat...Perficient, Inc.
The importance of Enterprise Health Information Exchange (EHIE) as a key way to empower your physicians and patients and demonstrate meaningful use of electronic health records:
- Present the business case for EHIE as an important architecture that matters to progressive health systems
- Take a look at some of the market-leading EHIE architectures and products
- Provide real exam...ples of organizations that are using EHIE to improve their operations
How to Load Data More Quickly and Accurately into Oracle's Life Sciences Data...Perficient, Inc.
Sponsors and CROs know the value of having a consolidated and regulatory-compliant data warehouse, such as Oracle’s Life Sciences Data Hub (LSH), as well as the importance of consistently loading data into that warehouse quickly and accurately.
However, as data structures from the source files change over time, it can be very time consuming to modify the data structure in the warehouse itself. Additionally, for the large groups of SAS datasets that are typical for a clinical trial, the out-of-the-box load times can be quite long, as the data is loaded one set at a time.
Perficient has the answer. In this webinar, we discussed and demonstrated an autoloader tool that greatly simplifies the data loading process for LSH. We showed how the autoloader can automatically load files, detect metadata changes, upgrade target structures, and load data, all with no human intervention. In addition, we demonstrated how Perficient’s autoloader tool can load multiple datasets in parallel to minimize load times.
Going Beyond the EMR for Data-driven Insights in HealthcarePerficient, Inc.
Join Dr. Marcie Stoshak-Chavez, MD, FACEP, Director of Healthcare Strategic Advisory Services at Perficient and Mr. J.D. Whitlock, Director of Clinical & Business Intelligence at Catholic Health Partners to learn how analytics is being used to measure and monitor performance and provide service-line directors and financial administrators with reporting and analysis that enhances clinical care processes and business operations.
Learn how clinicians and administrators armed with the data-driven insights from the EMR and beyond can:
Derive meaningful insights for care delivery by analyzing clinical, financial and operational data
Collaborate more effectively and improve quality of care by securely sharing insights among providers
Meaningfully measure and understand performance across key Federally mandated measures and take prescribed action
Stay on top of shifts in regulatory policy that impact reimbursements and quality requirements
Healthcare Integration | Opening the Doors to CommunicationBizTalk360
Integration plays the central role in connecting health systems to effortlessly communicate and share data, ultimately improving the quality and outcomes of health services. With an integration system in place, healthcare organizations can improve communication within their enterprise, connect to external entities, such as HIEs, laboratories, and long-term care facilities, and to patient platforms, such as Microsoft HealthVault. With established and evolving standards, such as HL7 v2 & v3, CDA, XDS, and FHIR, healthcare organizations now more than ever need a robust interoperability solution to meet and support these requirements.
Leveraging Technology to Empower Patients and Reduce Healthcare CostsPerficient, Inc.
Telehealth, once reserved for the chronically ill, is now being used to drive increased revenue by creating services that scale beyond traditional geographic boundaries.
Perficient and KP OnCall discussed how telehealth is impacting healthcare and how the nation’s leading telehealth provider is leveraging innovative technologies to:
-Reduce patient visits and lower healthcare costs
-Empower patients through self-treatment
-Deliver alternate methods of patient/provider communication
-Manage symptoms and medical conditions for the patients and populations they serve
-Generate data-driven insights
Microsoft: A Waking Giant In Healthcare Analytics and Big DataHealth Catalyst
In 2005, Northwestern Memorial Healthcare embarked upon a strategic Enterprise Data Warehousing (EDW) initiative with the Microsoft technology platform as the foundation. Dale Sanders was CIO at Northwestern and led the development of Northwestern’s Microsoft-based EDW. At that time, Microsoft as an EDW platform was not en vogue and there were many who doubted the success of the Northwestern project. While other organizations were spending millions of dollars and years developing EDW’s and analytics on other platforms, Northwestern achieved great and rapid value at a fraction of the cost of the more typical technology platforms. Now, there are more healthcare data warehouses built around Microsoft products than any other vendor. The risky bet on Microsoft in 2005 paid off.
Ten years ago, critics didn’t believe that Microsoft could scale in the second generation of relational data warehouses, but they did. More recently, many of these same pundits have criticized Microsoft for missing the technology wave du jour in cloud offerings, mobile technology, and big data. But, once again, Microsoft has been quietly reengineering its culture and products, and as a result, they now offer the best value and most visionary platform for cloud services, big data, and analytics in healthcare.
In this context, Dale will talk about:
His up and down journey with Microsoft as an Air Force and healthcare CIO, and why he is now more bullish on Microsoft like never before
A quick review of the Healthcare Analytics Adoption Model and Closed Loop Analytics in healthcare, and how Microsoft products relate to both
The rise of highly specialized, cloud-based analytic services and their value to healthcare organizations’ analytics strategies
Microsoft’s transformation from a closed-system, desktop PC company to an open-system consumer and business infrastructure company
The current transition period of enterprise data warehouses between the decline of relational databases and the rise of non-relational databases, and the new Microsoft products, notably Azure and the Analytic Platform System (APS), that bridge the transition of skills and technology while still integrating with core products like Office, Active Directory, and System Center
Microsoft’s strategy with its PowerX product line, and geospatial analysis and machine learning visualization tools
Business Intelligence Solution in the Health Insurance CompanyThuy Tran
It is the small project of the subject Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence of the course Business Consultant Master in Hochschule Furtwange. The purpose of this project is helping students understand more about Data Warehouse and Data Analytics, able to use SAP BI-DW and Qlik View to create dashboard, reports
Developing a Strategic Analytics Framework that Drives Healthcare TransformationTrevor Strome
About the presentation.
Based on Chapter 3 of my book "Healthcare Analytics for Quality and Performance Improvement", this presentation describes the key components of a strategic analytics framework that can enable your healthcare organization to leverage data from source-systems to achieve its quality, safety, and performance improvement goals.
What is an analytics strategy?
Analytics is currently a very “trendy” topic. The internet is scattered with many buzzwords, marketing angles, white papers, and opinions on the topic of healthcare analytics. With all this “noise”, it is easy to get distracted from what is actually required, from an analytics perspective, by your organization. An analytics strategy helps cut through the noise and keep focus on what is important for the organization. Regardless of what the latest “buzz” is, your analytics strategy will enable your organization to Invest now for what is required now, and invest later for what is required in the future.
An analytics strategy helps ensure that analytics development and capabilities are in alignment with enterprise quality and performance goals and helps avoids the “all dashboard, no improvement” syndrome. Furthermore, a well formed strategy document helps to achieve optimal use of analytics within a healthcare organization and can mean the difference between a “collection of reports” versus a high-value information resource.
An analytics strategy can rarely stand on its own. In general, the analytics strategy should use as input an organization’s Quality Improvement (QI) strategy and should be used to inform an organization’s Business Intelligence (BI) or Information Technology (IT) strategy. The analytics strategy is an important input to technical strategies because analytics, after all, can involve a sophisticated use of data and technology. Requirements for analytics may trigger a cascade of enhancements throughout other components of IT and BI (i.e., reporting, data storage, ETL, etc)
The document is intended to accompany Chapter 3, “Developing an Analytics Strategy to Drive Change”, so please refer to the chapter for further information about developing an analytics strategy.
A seminar topic which was created for the first time easy to understand and easy to explain.
any queries related to this topic can ask to me. and be free to connect to me.
to connect me to fb search mykeel vineeth thelakat.
Epic EMR - Root Cause Fault Detection in complex Healthcare Records systemsDennis Redwine
Very few HealthCare IT vendors understand how to deliver Root Cause Analysis. In this presentation from AI4Cloud we discuss how Artificial Intelligence can be used to address this challenge.
Epic EMR is a perfect example for our discussion because of its complexity and ubiquity in Medical Records missions.
Scenario:
Midwest Regional Health is one of Wisconsin's largest and most sophisticated hospitals, is Implementing a new EHR system that will better their services to their internal and external customers. They are asking ITMC (I-Tech Medical Consortium) to help them navigate through this long term project, thereby improving their commitment to their surrounding community.
eBook - Tools, Resources, and Expertise for your ACO/Collaborative Care JourneyNextGen Healthcare
Learn how NextGen Healthcare can equip you with the tools, resources, and expertise needed to reach your Accountable Care Organization (ACO), Meaningful Use (MU), and Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) goals.
Read how NextGen® solutions can handle multiple diagnoses data from all of your critical channels and help you achieve true interoperability through our integrated solution.
Running Head HEALTH INFORMATION SCIENCETECHNOLOGY VENDOR 1 H.docxcowinhelen
Running Head: HEALTH INFORMATION SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY VENDOR 1
HEALTH INFORMATION SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY VENDOR 2
Health Information Science/Technology Vendor
Application of IT in Healthcare Administration
OVERVIEW OF OUR COMPANY
Centered Health Systems is keenly aware of the need healthcare providers have to simplify their workflow processes, which is why our organization has provided customized technologies to individual providers, group practices, and mid to large scaled healthcare organizations for over 20 years. We are a national eHealth provider with a comprehensive suite of cutting-edge IT solutions for the healthcare industry. Our goal is to improve the quality, accuracy, and timeliness of care patients receive with our custom-tailored, highly interoperable, intuitive certified electronic health record (EHR) system-Clinical Acumen EHR.
At Centered Health Systems, our primary mission to ensure you have access to your data at anytime and across all platforms which explains why we have taken an integrative approach to the design of our EHR systems, customizing to the users needs for best-fit practices.
In addition to our EHR platform, Centered Health System supports healthcare entities via innovative practice management solutions and revenue cycle management (RCM) to assist practices in realizing their full potential.
Our unique approach to healthcare management has proven effective for the 8,900 practices and 32,000 practitioners daily utilizing our award winning product. We pride ourselves on delivering a product that is flexible, efficient, with ease of use, and wholly centered on you!
Our dedicated team consistently delivers innovative products and services keeping the customer positioned at the forefront of every action we take. We are not simply in this space to demonstrate how effective we are in our business IT acumen, but are driven to provide you with the critical tools needed to focus on healing the patients you serve.
Centered Health Systems has a rich legacy of meeting each an every government certification and regulatory mandate for over 20 years, helping our clients achieve maximum revenues and avoid burdensome penalties.
We are committed to the success of your practice and are driven to ensure practitioners can deliver optimal care at a reasonable price. Centered Health Systems is confident in its ability to help your company succeed as demonstrated by our 98% client retention rate for the previous 15 years. We would love nothing more than to bring our value-added tools to your organization!
OVERVIEW OF OUR PRODUCT
Centered Health Systems have developed a technology platform that enhances quality, promotes efficiency, and drive productivity, by streamlining workflow processes for University of Maryland University College Medical Center (UMUC-MC). The technology product is a cloud-based Electronic Health Record (EHR)-Clinical Acumen EHR. Clinical Acumen EHR is for providers, physician offi ...
Leveraging smart technologies to transform the new challenging healthcare ind...AIMDek Technologies
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The #healthcare sector is encountering a huge wave of changes in healthcare policies and regulations which in turn are modifying the environment for payers, care providers and other life-science companies.
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Illustration of Hospital IT Management System Software InterfaceHospi Product
The illustration showcases the user interface of a sophisticated Hospital IT Management System Software. The screen displays a modern dashboard with intuitive icons and data visualizations.
A definition of the term “smart hospitals” may thus be: “A smart hospital is a hospital that relies on optimised and automated processes built on an ICT environment of interconnected assets, particularly based on Internet of things (IoT), to improve existing patient care procedures and introduce new capabilities”.
In the ever-evolving landscape of healthcare, one thing remains constant: the need for efficient, accurate, and integrated electronic health records (EHR) solutions. With the rise of patient-centric care and the demand for improved patient outcomes and provide best billing module in hospital management system, healthcare providers must adapt to these changes.
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3. Healthcare providers and payers are con
fronting the hard reality that the current
pace of cost escalation is not sustainable.
In response to this challenge, Oracle deliv
ers powerful solutions that address critical
areas in the healthcare industry.
In nearly every developed economy, healthcare costs are rising faster than GDP
and reimbursement payments are reduced or uncertain. However, the demand
for patient engagement, business and clinical analytics, enhanced resource
utilization, and infrastructure development has never been greater.The industry
is responding with new healthcare IT systems that support the delivery of high-
quality care and improved patient satisfaction, as well as enable streamlined
workflow processes, data integration across the enterprise, and secure infor
mation exchange. These systems address a variety of factors and challenges,
including U.S. government mandates for implementing meaningful use of elec
tronic health records (EHR), improving patient information access, and delivering
accountable care.
Oracle is unique in its ability to deliver powerful solutions to all critical areas of
challenge in the healthcare industry. Oracle’s wide range of integrated, industry-
specific software and hardware solutions are optimized to improve operational
efficiencies and deliver performance levels that are unmatched in the industry.
And because Oracle systems are built on open standards, they can be deployed
in the data center as individual components or as complete solutions that are
integrated from applications to disk. This deployment flexibility is important in
many healthcare settings, because hospitals, health systems, and related health
care partners and contractors frequently exchange data from disparate systems
beyond hospital walls.
Oracle’s healthcare solutions are designed to help you elevate your level of care
and your profitability. You can accelerate the adoption of more-efficient health
delivery systems and increase your ROI using Oracle’s secure, performance-
driven platforms for the rollout of EHR and other informatics applications. The
Oracle Health Management Platform Solution, Oracle Health Resources Manage
ment Solution, connected health solution, and health insurance applications and
payer solutions help meet the challenges facing provider and payer organizations.
3
4. FaCt: Texas Children’s Hospital saves US$400,000 annually through increased
operational efficiency and visibility using Oracle’s PeopleSoft applications.
ConneCt. Collaborate. Care.
Oracle provides comprehensive,
end-to-end healthcare solutions
to support best practices and
decrease costs. Oracle offers
• An integrated solution capable
of aggregating clinical data
meaningfully across disparate
systems to create detailed,
holistic views of the enterprise
• A complete, semantically
interoperable HIE solution
based on open standards
• A comprehensive talent
solution—from recruitment
to succession planning
• A single set of controls for
enterprise access and compli
ance management across
contracting and finance
• Secure provider collaboration
with an integrated enterprise
solution that supports the
“Integrating the Healthcare
Enterprise” initiative
Realign Care Delivery from Reactive to Proactive
Care provided in response to an acute patient health event is often the most expensive
component of healthcare delivery.Therefore, to best control costs, providers should seek
to reduce the need for acute care. A shift in focus must occur from reactive medical man
agement to a more active disease-management approach.The goal is to proactively main
tain population wellness and support the self-care of patients with chronic conditions.
Current records-based systems are not designed to proactively manage long-term patient
relationships or help patients navigate complex healthcare environments. The Oracle
Health Management Platform Solution supports care delivery within and beyond hospital
walls. It is highly scalable and based on commercial-off-the-shelf products that help
you deliver patient-centric services. The solution consists of three core components.
• oracle’s Siebel Healthcare solutions—Multichannel patient relationship manage
ment solutions that provide a 360-degree view of patient activities to help you deliver
services, from health promotion through case management of long-term conditions.
• oracle Policy automation—A protocol generator for healthcare professionals that
uses natural-language-based rules to ensure patients are accurately and consistently
treated at every stage of care. It also facilitates easy treatment documentation.
• oracle WebCenter Portal—A comprehensive and contextually relevant content
management system that gives healthcare consumers easy, multichannel access
to personalized information. Oracle WebCenter Portal enables telehealth monitoring
and device-to-device communications between patients and providers.
Because it is based on proven products, the Oracle Health Management Platform
Solution inherits all the security, integration, reliability, and open standards that
Oracle customers depend on. And because it ensures that the appropriate level
of care is delivered with the most effective timing, it helps prevent the need for
expensive acute services.
the oracle Health Management Platform Solution in action
The best case scenario in managing a disease is prevention. However, when patients
do develop chronic illnesses, the Oracle Health Management Platform Solution
helps you deliver more cost-effective treatment. The comprehensive, flexible
platform delivers benefits across the entire patient-care continuum.
Health system relationship management—Attract, retain, and enhance relationships
with patients and other stakeholders
• Educate consumers on the benefits that are available, so they can take full advantage
of their coverage and service options
• Refer consumers to providers and facilities based on cost and quality outcomes
• Offer portals and Web services that patients can use to access up-to-date, relevant
content from a variety of sources, in addition to options to join online self-help groups
4
5. Population health programs—Develop and administer programs such as health
screenings, vaccinations, and outreach campaigns for defined populations
• Identify subsets of the managed-care population by condition and offer these
patients discrete programs ranging from health promotion campaigns to full
disease management support
• Collate data from disparate systems and accurately match it to an individual’s
medical record, so an analysis baseline is established using risk algorithms
active long-term care—Manage patients with long-term conditions, as well as
deliver new ways to engage them in their health
• Facilitate patient outreach through services such as interactive channels and
home medical devices
• Support informed choice by patients and their caregivers to enable self-care wherever
possible, and fully coordinated care in their home when their condition requires it
• Implement an outbound resource to remind patients of appointments
Care transition management—Coordinate patient care across organizations
• Provide a personalized, single-source platform for wellness and treatment
support, as well as a vehicle to connect the care team, patients, and caregivers
• Deliver fully interoperable information to facilitate collaborative care
• Refer and coordinate care from multiple medical management programs and
escalate referrals as necessary
Substantial benefits can be gained by offering your patients a streamlined way to
interact with your organization, including increased use of less costly in-home care
monitoring, improvements in hospital discharge and readmission rates, and better
outcomes due to improved patient compliance with treatment plans.
Deploy Systems That Drive a Patient-Centric Enterprise
A patient-centric environment requires an infrastructure that provides real-time data
integration, uninterrupted availability, and access to complete patient data at the point
of care. As the backbone of this environment, an electronic health record (EHR) solution
integrates patient data from multiple sources and makes it available to those who need
to view it. Oracle technology solutions support an EHR system that eliminates informa
tion gaps, protects patient privacy, and drives continuity of care.
Securely assemble a Complete Patient History
An EHR system must deliver secure yet rapid access to all important clinical data
elements, including a complete patient treatment history, medication history, test results,
and more.This means your EHR solution must store and manage large amounts of data
gathered from within and outside of your organization. Oracle delivers the solutions you
need to handle these challenges.
“Oracle’s industry-leading
technology has been critical
to our success in building
a highly ambitious people-
management solution for
7 percent of the working
population in England and
Wales, delivering it on time
and to budget, and helping
the [U.K.’s National Health
Service] exceed business
case savings targets by
more than 30 percent.”
Frank rutley
Vice President
UK Workforce Solutions
McKesson Information Solutions UK
5
6. FaCt: Cancer Care Ontario has increased colorectal screening rates from approximately
20 percent to nearly 50 percent in three years with the help of Siebel CRM.
Managing PatientS For liFe
The Oracle Health Management
Platform Solution helps you
effectively engage with your
patients throughout the entire
healthcare process, so you can
• Delay or prevent chronic
diseases by encouraging
healthier lifestyles
• Identify the onset of conditions
earlier, leading to timelier inter
vention and better outcomes
• Ensure that patients receive
appropriate treatment inside
and outside clinical settings
• Empower individuals to take
greater control of their health
needs through self-care
• Improve adherence to medica
tions and therapies to prevent
recurrent acute episodes
• Boost patient satisfaction and
loyalty by actively improving
quality of life
• Significantly reduce the costs
of delivering medical care and
processing claims
ensure Continuous Data availability
The majority of the information used by healthcare organizations is unstructured
data such as documents, multimedia content, location information, medical
images, and Web content. With Oracle Database 11g, you can handle unstruc
tured data that in the past had to be stored in a separate file system. Moving
large amounts of unstructured data into a database lets you more easily incor
porate it into EHRs, as well as better track, secure, and audit this data.
Oracle GoldenGate 11g—a component of Oracle Fusion Middleware 11g—delivers
low-impact, real-time data acquisition, distribution, and delivery across heterogeneous
systems for improved business insight, lowered integration costs, and continuous
system availability. This technology lets you reduce risk by performing system inte
gration with minimal infrastructure impact, and the solution can fall back, or reverse
changes, if necessary. These capabilities ensure the reliability and accuracy of your
EHR system, so it can be counted on to support high-quality patient care.
access and Secure Data with an Hie Solution
A health information exchange (HIE) makes it possible to securely compile an accurate
and complete EHR by accessing patient information from integrated delivery networks,
labs, providers, payers, and others. Oracle’s health information exchange solution
reduces the complexity of setting up an HIE with a comprehensive and preintegrated
portfolio of products. The solution delivers prebuilt healthcare-specific functionality
such as patient consent management, data-access auditing, a clinical data and document
repository, and medical terminology services. Further, Oracle’s health information
exchange solution delivers support in three vital areas: complying with governmental
regulations; realizing a higher level of personalized healthcare; and in the U.S., meeting
“meaningful use” requirements.
Two key components of Oracle’s health information exchange solution become
increasingly important as healthcare organizations grow, merge, and form affiliations.
• A master person index provides a single point of reference for information about
patients, payers, and others when consolidating data between systems—ensuring
that data regarding patient “John Smith” refers to the correct John Smith.
• A record locator improves your EHR management and reduces information gaps
by identifying the location of multiple health records for each patient, even those
stored in other data centers.
Oracle’s health information exchange solution helps you securely manage and share
health data to improve patient care, comply with regulations, and reduce costs.
Deliver access to Data at the Point of Care
Medical professionals switch from desktop to desktop as they move between facilities,
and they need secure and rapid access to patient data. Oracle Virtual Desktop Infrastruc
ture delivers always-on, mobile, and point-of-care access—optimizing time with patients
by reducing data-access time. It does this by virtualizing complete desktop environments
and installing them in the data center where they can be secured, maintained, and
tracked for compliance purposes.
6
7. The solution also delivers secure, smart card access to virtual desktops from Oracle’s
Sun Ray Clients, traditional PCs, and other devices. Oracle’s virtual desktop solution
for healthcare enables
• The ability to halt a desktop or application session on one device and resume
it on another, with no interruption to the session or loss of data
• Mobile application access, reducing rekeying and associated human error
• The use of a smart card instead of a mobile device, reducing injuries and fatigue
• The management of a few servers rather than numerous desktop devices, reducing
costs and dramatically lowering power consumption
enhance Security to Protect Privacy and Minimize risk
Protected health information (PHI) must be treated with utmost care. However, it must
still be readily available to patients, providers, and payers in order to facilitate meaningful
use and extend the power of personalized healthcare to the consumer. Oracle security
solutions are designed to help you deliver authorized access to sensitive healthcare data
by creating automated, best-practice-based processes. For example, Oracle Identity and
Access Management enhances security through user single sign-on capabilities, central
authorization procedures, and access privileges that are automatically synchronized
and audited with personnel changes for fraud detection. With Oracle’s comprehensive
security solutions, you can demonstrate your commitment to your patients, as well as
lower your corporate and clinical risk.
Increase the Value of All Your Resources
It is essential that key stakeholders and decision-makers have access to integrated
financial, operational, and clinical data to make informed, timely decisions that
balance cost impact with optimal patient care and outcomes. Oracle Health Resources
Management Solution delivers a trusted and dynamic single source of truth that can
integrate all your resource utilization and performance data. By standardizing on best
practices for human resources, finance, purchasing, inventory, and more; automating
performance management monitoring; and thoroughly examining all your operations,
you get better, more-informed resource utilization and management.
tie Your enterprisetogether with integrated Processes
Interoperability is one of the greatest challenges facing healthcare enterprises. Service-
oriented architectures (SOAs) enable you to integrate disconnected applications, legacy
platforms, and community, state, and national health information exchanges. Oracle
SOA Suite for healthcare integration jumpstarts your integration initiatives by providing a
technology platform that includes built-in support for common standards for healthcare
messaging and data exchange. Building on the legacy of Sun Java Composite Application
Platform Suites, Oracle’s SOA Suite for health integration enables you to move from
transactional systems to comprehensive SOA-based architectures in one step. You can
collaborate and share resources more efficiently and at lower cost, increasing
the benefits you gain from electronic health information.
“Oracle products, such as
Oracle Real Application
Clusters and Oracle BPEL
Process Manager, enabled
us to use SOA to integrate
systems without the need
for major programming.
As a result, we were able
to make critical healthcare
information available to
medical staff in real time.”
tomohiro Sawa, Chief Information
Officer, Department of Anesthesia,
Teikyo University Hospital
7
8. FaCt: University of Pennsylvania Health System slashed budgeting and planning time
by 25 percent by moving away from a spreadsheet-driven system to an integrated
budgeting and planning solution based on Oracle Hyperion Financial Reporting and
Oracle Hyperion Planning.
A SOA also helps your organization rapidly deploy highly adaptable business applications.
These applications enable cross-entity processes that share information, orchestrate
services and workflows, and provide unified service delivery.They can also provide
• The ability to add external services offered by payers to your applications
• Transparent access to multiple applications or services, so caregivers can
easily complete a complex workflow using a single application interface
• Automated processes that help monitor enterprise events, with notifications displayed
on dashboards to create real-time insights—letting you rapidly solve problems
increase operational Consistency and efficiency
The need for better-informed decisions affects the entire healthcare enterprise. State-of
the-art enterprise resource planning (ERP) solutions can help you implement realistic
strategies that optimize costs. Oracle is the #1 healthcare ERP solution vendor and offers
many prebuilt healthcare capabilities. Oracle’s ERP solutions deliver support for finance
and accounting, human capital management, manufacturing, sales and service, customer
relationship management, and more.They improve the flow of information between
internal business areas and manage connections to outside stakeholders.
Moreover, you can use ERP applications to implement shared services that drive benefits
across lines of business through lowering the cost of transaction processing, streamlining
business processes, and improving data quality. Oracle’s ERP applications help boost
performance in all areas of healthcare delivery.
• Workforce—By fostering a stimulating, collaborative workplace with continuous
learning and development and automated business processes, you reduce
absenteeism, increase productivity and improve employee morale.
• Medical supplies and goods—By leveraging automated and cost-efficient “requisi
tion to pay” processes, including mobile-enabled, stock-management features, you
can exploit economies of scale and gain value from enhanced buying power.
• buildings, equipment, and information/computer technology—By establishing
a coordinated maintenance regime that results in more availability with less cost,
you gain better visibility into mobile asset use and prevent theft.
• Financial—By implementing streamlined transaction processing, you get maximized
income from patient billing, grants, and other funding sources, as well as faster,
more-effective management and statutory reporting.
Make More-informed Cost Decisions
Healthcare providers and payers must develop cost-effective, sustainable business
operations and manage ongoing enterprise performance to remain competitive.
Oracle’s healthcare costing and performance management capabilities integrate
planning, budgeting, costing, and reporting.They include
• A healthcare costing data model designed to deliver seamless data integration
• Easy-to-apply, multiple costing methodologies that allocate costs to clinical services
or case types, and integrate these costs directly into the planning process
8
9. -
• Business intelligence (BI) technology that allows customized, role-based performance
metrics and analytics
You can calculate costs and better understand your total profitability based on overall
case mix and other factors. With this information, optimizing all service-line costs is
possible, leading to increased operating efficiency and an improved bottom line.
reduce Clinical operating Costs and improve Performance
With the push for shared-risk healthcare delivery models in the U.S., using your resourc
es to ensure the greatest patient-care improvements is mission-critical. Oracle Health
Resources Management Solution helps your organization deploy and manage resources
effectively and set meaningful performance goals to achieve operational efficiency. Oracle
Health Resources Management Solution helps drive economies of scale and complete
faster transaction processing at lower cost through collaboration to obtain better buying
decisions and waste reduction by supporting lower stock-holding.
As a provider, it is now critical to your survival to understand your resource utilization
by service line, and to have reliable insight and intelligence on administrative and care
delivery costs. Oracle Health Resources Management Solution supports ad hoc analysis
by combining service delivery costs and patient revenues by service line and enabling
accurate analysis of costs and margins, delivering a single source of truth. Reports
deliver historical data, trend data, or drill-down data through customized dashboards.
Oracle Health Resources Management Solution provides benefits that help your organi
zation advance its strategic and operational objectives and drive value through resource
utilization planning, budgeting, costing, and analytics. The solution consists of Oracle
Supply Chain and Order Management Analytics; Oracle Financial Analytics; Oracle
Human Resources Analytics; and Oracle Procurement and Spend Analytics.
Keep Up with Changes in the Healthcare Payer Market
achieve operational excellence
As healthcare payers, you want to improve operations in ways that help you provide
better service and also increase your competitiveness. With Oracle’s health insurance
applications and payer solutions, you can better understand your administrative costs
and automate your business processes. For example, you can monitor your business
operations using Oracle’s analytics solutions with prebuilt healthcare key performance
indicators, and consolidate multiple ledgers for accurate financial reporting. In addition,
Oracle Insurance Claims Adjudication for Health lets payers
• Easily configure business rules to process complex claim scenarios automatically
• Achieve more-accurate first-pass adjudication of claims, lowering administrative costs
• Accelerate payments to providers and members, improving service levels
• Automatically detect and flag potential errors, avoiding payment adjustments
“With Oracle Hyperion
Planning, we have standar
dized institutional parameters
for budget development
and planning in all hospitals,
clinics, and rehabilitation
centers. Now we have
a single application that
allows directors and
managers to forecast
revenues and expenditures
on a monthly basis.”
Hector ipiña Sifuentes
Assistant Director of Administrative Systems
Grupo Christus Muguerza S.A.P.I de C.V.
9
10. FaCt: 70 percent of the top multihospital systems
in the U.S. run Oracle technology.
“Today, consumers and
health plan sponsors
have many choices, so
plans must provide
optimum service.
Oracle's Siebel solution
enables us to provide
informed, efficient
service, while also
streamlining
regulatory reporting.”
Leonard Rosignoli
Director of IT,
The University of
Arizona Health Plans
Under the U.S. Affordable Care Act, states will need to create state-run health insurance
exchanges in which millions of Americans and small businesses can obtain information
to evaluate plans and purchase affordable coverage. Oracle’s solutions for health
insurance exchanges (HIX) offer the only enterprise software that provides a complete
platform for integrated program delivery.These solutions can help state agencies trans
form their legacy IT systems into enterprisewide platforms that can support multiple
programs, be deployed more rapidly and cost-effectively, and deliver a comprehensive
view of provided services. Oracle’s best-of-breed solutions allow states to leverage
existing infrastructure investments, while providing the ability to move to a state-of
the-art architecture and a truly scalable solution.
beat the Competition with innovative Services
Oracle solutions don’t simply help you operate more efficiently. Because they are flexible,
they promote an agile business environment that supports product development, release,
and administration. You can manage the entire product lifecycle in a cost-effective and
timely manner, ensure new products adhere to regulations, and easily monitor product-
line profitability. Oracle’s health insurance applications and payer solutions support you
as you enhance your portfolio by rolling out innovative products and services to keep
pace with a dynamic, rapidly changing healthcare environment.
improve relationships with Patients and Partners
Excellent service and compliance with agreements helps retain members. Oracle’s
Siebel Healthcare solutions are industry-specific CRM solutions that let you more
effectively manage relationships between payers, providers, brokers, and members.
With Oracle’s business intelligence tools you can monitor your environment to keep
your relationships with stakeholders on track, compile benchmark information
for providers, determine the profitability of products, and more. Oracle’s health
insurance payer solutions help enhance your reputation for providing superior service.
The Oracle Healthcare Advantage
Oracle brings unmatched resources, top-to-bottom industry support, and decades
of experience to the challenge of improving healthcare globally. Oracle is the #1
worldwide software vendor in not only healthcare, but also in many areas vital
to your success, including customer relationship management, human capital
management, middleware, and enterprise performance management.
The Oracle Health Management Platform Solution, Oracle Health Resources
Management Solution, connected health solution, and health insurance applications
and payer solutions make it easy for you to benefit from Oracle’s healthcare industry
investments. They provide enterprisewide visibility and many tools to enhance opera
tional efficiency—letting you deliver improved quality of care with lower costs.To start
gaining these benefits, join the more than 350 leading healthcare providers
and all of the top 20 U.S. health insurers that run Oracle Applications.
10
11. ContaCt US
For more information about
Oracle’s solutions for healthcare,
please visit oracle.com/healthcare,
or call +1.800.oraCle1 to speak to
an Oracle representative.
oUtSiDe nortH aMeriCa
Visit oracle.com/corporate/contact/
global.html to find the phone
number for your local Oracle office.