Understanding the Components that Influence Value in Healthcare
These days, “value” is all the rage. If you are a medical device or med-tech start-up, everyone is telling you how important it is to demonstrate the value of your solution
Initially, when thinking of how we would identify or quantify cost-savings, ROI, or the budget impact of a novel solution, we probably think of the care pathway like this:
If that were the case, estimating the potential impact
That is, the encounters or events we are interested in exist within a larger, more complex system of other encounters, events, disease states, environments, and human factors, and reside within a complex infrastructure with various payment and reimbursement mechanisms and care delivery structures. In short: it’s complicated.
When we zoom out and examine this process with a wider lens, we see that care delivery, patient outcomes, and the associated value is dependent on more than just a specific diagnosis, event, or procedure. And therefore, to be able to accurately describe the value that our novel solution provides we must fully understand all the components that influence value. Only then can we identify the value that can credibly be attributed to our solution.
While any model or description of the US healthcare system will inevitably be an oversimplification, I have found that the following informs much of what device and med-tech start-ups need to consider in order to be able to assess, quantify, and describe the value of their novel solution:
This figure identifies 5 major components that influence the value that can be quantified and attributed, and suggests specific activities one needs to pursue to uncover value. Specifically, the value that one can identify, quantify, and attribute depends on:
领英推荐
1.??????Its location in the care pathway. This includes whether it attempts to prevent/reduce the risk of a disease or event, is used at the point of care, is involved in rehabilitation/recovery, is relevant for chronic care management, or some combination. This informs which clinical settings are relevant
2.??????The relevant scope and perspective. This is essentially the answer to “what type of value” and to “whom”? If one is attempting to reduce in-hospital infections
3.??????The potential impact of change. This reflects both the size of the opportunity to improve care or efficiency and the amount of that opportunity your novel solution seeks to capture. I’ve written about both previously, but essentially, the size of opportunity involves things like the size of the potential patient population, the cost and intensity of care, the seriousness of complications or adverse events, and other similar things. The amount of potential value capture is informed by the extent to which your solution can address the gap, avoid various complications or adverse events, reduce care utilization or costs, etc.
4.??????The level of disruption. Harking back to the care pathway we described earlier, this component considers how much you are looking to change the way care is delivered, managed, or paid for. Large changes to established processes can require changes to policy as well as to human behavior and decision making. Essentially, this asks you to consider how difficult it will be for health systems or patients to implement and adopt your novel solution. Does it add steps to the care pathway? Does it require more infrastructure or technology? Does it change the setting or care or who is accountable for quality and patient outcomes?
5.??????The existence of barriers and amount of uncertainty. Before novel solutions are implemented and adopted into care systems, it is impossible to know for sure how things will go. This component involves potential barriers to adoption
Addressing these components involves gathering information, specifying details, and considering the full picture of patient care. In the figure above I list four activities: mapping the care pathway
Once these have been completed, the following will hopefully be true:
But, before we get there, we need to back up and talk in more detail about the individual activities. In the next article we will explore the first one: mapping the care pathway. ?Keep an eye out or sign up below to make sure you don’t miss it!
If you liked this article, consider subscribing to receive regular thought leadership.