Where healthcare organizations should focus to help secure their financial future
Summary
- The urgency for healthcare organizations to reduce costs and strengthen their financial outlook continues to increase as challenging market dynamics persist.
- To relieve immediate margin pressure and secure their financial future, healthcare organizations need both short- and long-term initiatives to make sustainable changes to their bottom line.
- Significant opportunities exist in five high-impact areas: workforce and culture, clinical operations, medical groups, cost and revenue, and business operations.
Growing expenses fueled by workforce challenges combined with supply chain shortages, payment constraints, payor challenges, and inflation are exacerbating the urgency for healthcare organizations to reduce costs and regain their financial foothold.
According to a recent American Hospital Association report, 33% of hospitals are operating on negative margins. Longer-term financial pressures, like the rising cost of capital and subsequent COVID-19 surges, will continue to stress health systems for the foreseeable future. How organizations respond now will be instrumental in shaping their financial future.
A combination of short- and long-term initiatives will be needed to relieve immediate margin pressure while simultaneously altering cost structures and business models that reposition organizations from incremental optimization gains to longer-term transformation for continued growth and improvement.
These five high-impact actions will provide healthcare organizations with the foundation to make significant, sustainable changes to improve their bottom line:
1. Confront Workforce Woes With Investments in Talent and Culture
After months of relying on agency nurses to fill vacancies, healthcare organizations must begin putting together an exit strategy and focusing on a more sustainable approach to address healthcare’s workforce crisis. With a projected shortage of 15 million healthcare workers by 2030 and employee engagement declining, organizations need a holistic talent strategy anchored by a people-focused culture.
While health systems will likely need to leverage agencies in some capacity in the short term to alleviate staff workloads, more strategic levers to attract and retain permanent talent are needed. As talent challenges persist, investing in culture is nonnegotiable.
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2. Redesign Clinical Operations to Enable Better, Patient-Centered Care
As organizations seek to provide a more seamless care experience, reduce costs, and generate revenue, forward-thinking leaders are re-imagining clinical operations and strategies to better support consumers’ healthcare needs and provide the most effective care possible.
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3. Shift the Mindset by Treating the Medical Group as a Growth Asset
Healthcare organizations can no longer afford to invest in clinics without a greater return on investment. Relying solely on downstream referrals is not enough. Organizations should be evaluating how to maximize their current assets to ensure every facility is financially stable on its own and has a clear pathway for strategic growth.
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4. Get Paid for What You Do
Building financial health through cost containment and revenue improvement is more vital than ever. To reach an ideal state, health systems need to move costs and revenue in balance. Breakthrough improvements in both areas will rely on technology, data, and analytics to drive efficiency and decision making.
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5. Create a Continuous Improvement Engine
To break the cycle of incremental improvement and reactive measures, organizations need to rethink how they operate. A foundation for continuous improvement is the best defense against the next major disruption. Creating an internal structure that continually incentivizes improvement and drives waste out of the system as the business evolves and new challenges arise will position organizations for long-term success and growth.
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