The face of healthcare facilities has shifted massively in the 21st century, with even greater changes happening in recent years. Major trends are transforming how healthcare organizations deliver patient care and manage facilities. As the healthcare industry shifts toward value-based population health, mergers and acquisitions (M&A) continue to accelerate, creating mega-sized, nontraditional health systems. Meanwhile, the industry continues to grapple with rigid compliance regulations and increasing costs.
As a disruptor in the field of capital planning, facilities management, and the built environment, we know the value of staying on top of developing issues. Here, we discuss How Changes in Healthcare Impact Facilities Management.
The accessibility of data—and the means to store, process, and analyze it—drives decisions that everyone makes in business today, particularly those in healthcare facilities operations management. In a recent Oracle study of 333 C-level executives (30 of whom are healthcare executives), 94% say their company is collecting and managing more business information today than they did two years ago.
While it is critical that all healthcare facilities are prepared to gather, store, and interpret this information, 40% of the healthcare executives surveyed gave themselves a "D" or an "F" rating in terms of their preparedness to handle the onslaught of data.
In the same Oracle study, 93% of executives surveyed said their company is losing revenue—on average, 14% annually—as a result of not being able to fully leverage data. Often, the biggest challenge is to find the most efficient, cost-effective ways to capture and report on data for the facility's day-to-day operations.
This often involves a data-driven facility management solution that can help managers effectively leverage data to track required compliance-based inspections, inspect physical assets, report on facility maintenance issues, and continuously update plans and budgets for accurate spending projections.
An integrated assessment, capital planning, and facility management tool, such as The FOUNDATION Solution, can help healthcare finance and facility managers effectively analyze data and manage operations budgeting and capital planning.
Although progress has been made in preventing healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), the Center for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that one in 25 hospital patients acquires at least one HAI.
According to the CDC, the physical environment is fourth on the list of HAI causes. While HAIs from treatment-related causes are decreasing, HAIs resulting from the environment of care may not be. Hospitals and healthcare facilities must consider how they can improve the design, maintenance, and management of facilities—from ventilation systems to room décor—to reduce infection risks.
Yet, preventing HAIs can become significantly more complicated when multiple sites and assets are involved. Further, not all organizations have means of ensuring communication and transparency between the facility’s lead infection preventionist and its facilities management director. With customized viewing for a variety of roles, automated rules, configurable reports, and transparency from end-to-end, an integrated facilities solution can become vital to preventing HAIs.
Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) are creating mega health systems, cross-industry collaborations, and new approaches to CRE. Hospital consolidation has steadily increased in recent years. Mergers, as well as never-before-seen cross-industry collaborations with pharmaceutical companies, faith-based organizations, and nontraditional healthcare players, continue to impact the healthcare industry.
Learn more about Mergers and Acquisitions in Healthcare Facilities Management.
Further, many large healthcare systems are creating their own insurance companies to combat the reduction of reimbursements from large insurance companies. Consolidation is creating some of the largest systems in the country, along with new kinds of healthcare organizations involving healthcare providers, payers, retailers, pharmaceutical and device companies, and other players.
Interested in learning more about how Intellis can help you manage healthcare facilities more efficiently?