Press release

HIDI Selects Collective Medical to Upgrade Real-Time Predictive Alerts and Analytics Platform

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The Hospital Industry Data Institute (HIDI), the data company of the Missouri Hospital Association (MHA), selected Collective Medical, delivering the leading ADT-based solution for real-time care collaboration, to upgrade HIDI’s hospital-owned statewide platform to support delivery of predictive alerts and analytics to Missouri care teams. The project combines HIDI’s decades of hospital data program experience and analytic capacity with Collective’s outcomes-based tools to empower care teams with near real-time data to improve care coordination as well as to support COVID-19 patients.

The summer 2020 platform upgrade represents significant enhancements for HIDI participants, including the ability to identify, track and coordinate care for patients with COVID-19. The system will allow notifications to be pushed directly into existing workflows, in near real-time and at the point of care. This clinically relevant information will help care teams determine which of their patients may require additional resources, such as intensive care or isolation.

“Hospitals are investing in this system to improve the value of our state’s health care system, with an emphasis on the Medicaid program,” said Herb B. Kuhn, MHA President and CEO. “Under the leadership of Gov. Mike Parson and MO HealthNet Director Todd Richardson, the state is embarking on a major reform effort within the Medicaid program. The HIDI-Collective partnership will create critical infrastructure to help accelerate this reform — bringing value and cost reduction in the near and long term for Medicaid and, as the program expands, for all stakeholders.”

The project will apply analytics to identify risk and enable collaboration among providers to reduce emergency department utilization and inpatient readmissions—a hospital community priority. For example, in 2019 alone, more than 18,500 patients with patterns of high ED utilization—those with 10 or more ED and inpatient visits in a single year—accounted for less than 1% of all hospital patients in Missouri. However, these patients represented 8% of ED visits and inpatient utilization, resulting in more than $3.3 billion in hospital charges. Among this patient population, more than 45% had Medicaid coverage during the year, while another 32% were uninsured during at least one visit.

When fully implemented, HIDI’s analytic workbench will provide predictive “smart alerts” that preemptively inform health care providers about patients who most need their help. Via Collective’s tools, these alerts are surfaced appropriately within HIDI’s providers’ workflow. Analytic-informed alerts help with coordination throughout the continuum of patient care. For example, knowing that a patient is at higher risk of being readmitted at the time of admission empowers providers to make informed care decisions, and having a platform that facilitates collaborative coordinated care will help reduce avoidable excess readmissions.

“By facilitating the sharing of highly targeted, statistically significant predictive alerts with front-line providers who can immediately take action on behalf of a patient, and then by connecting those same patients with downstream primary and post-acute clinical resources, HIDI’s platform, in partnership with Missouri-area health information exchanges, ensures that stakeholders from different organizations can all operate as though they were on the same team, in some sense, with a crystal ball—because they are on the same team when caring for a shared patient,” says Chris Klomp, CEO of Collective Medical. “We’re proud to support HIDI and care teams across the country as they launch even better ways to care for patients in our shared communities.”

As part of a collaborative effort to build a thriving care coordination infrastructure for Missouri and beyond, HIDI is upgrading its platform to support providers by working in close partnership with state and regional health information exchanges. HIDI’s program is designed in the spirit of true interoperability and in alignment with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act.

“Rapid delivery of data about patients as they move through the health care system can help improve quality and safety,” said Jonathan Heidt, M.D., board member of the Missouri College of Emergency Physicians. “Data can enhance the health care system’s ability to build a team of providers and services around the patient, leading to better health outcomes.”

ABOUT THE HOSPITAL INDUSTRY DATA INSTITUTE

Founded in 1985, the Hospital Industry Data Institute (HIDI) is a not-for-profit organization founded by the Missouri Hospital Association that supports more than 2,000 hospitals and parent hospital associations nationwide make data-informed decisions for strategic planning, clinical performance improvement and resource management to improve patient experience in their communities. Headquartered in Jefferson City, Mo., HIDI is an acknowledged hospital industry research and analytics thought leader informing providers, state government agencies and others on issues to improve outcomes for both providers and patients.

ABOUT COLLECTIVE MEDICAL

Collective Medical is the nation’s leading ADT-based real-time care notification, activation, and collaboration platform. Proven to streamline care transitions, improve coordination, and reduce unnecessary length of stay and admissions, Collective helps improve patient outcomes and lower costs by closing communication gaps across care settings that undermine care. With a nationwide network of thousands of hospitals and health systems, primary, specialty, and post-acute clinics, health plans and ACOs, Collective integrates alongside EHRs and health information exchanges to empower decision making by highlighting essential insights and actions to take on patients a provider has already seen, is currently seeing, or should see. Collective is based in Salt Lake City. Learn more at www.collectivemedical.com.