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Physician Survey-9 elements to providing value-based care

As the market continues down the path of value based care and reimbursement, more studies and survey’s will be conducted to serve as reference points for us in our toolbox and to help define VBC.  Most recent being from Deloitte Health Solutions citing what their survey of 560 physicians found as the nine most important needs to support this movement.  Below is a summary of the survey and link to the details.

Expanded clinical support was ranked highest among physicians’ needs as they shift to value-based care and seek new resources and capabilities to support the change, according to a recentsurvey (http://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/us/Documents/life-sciences-health-care/us-lchs-value-based-world-121814.pdf) from Deloitte Center for Health Solutions.

Information technology and access to non-physician staff also ranked high among the resources and capabilities on which physicians depend in the value-based care model.

Listed below are the nine most important work-provided resources/capabilities to support value-based care, as ranked by the more than 560 physicians from various specialties surveyed by Deloitte.

  1. Expanded clinical support capabilities — 40 percent
  2. Information technology tools — 31 percent
  3. Access to non-physician staff — 29 percent
  4. Access to the latest medical equipment and facilities — 25 percent
  5. Ability to negotiate third-party payer contracts — 24 percent
  6. Access to more patients — 22 percent
  7. Access to capital — 14 percent
  8. Administrative capabilities — 11 percent
  9. Governance — less than 10 percent

To learn about how physicians ranked their concerns regarding value-based care, click here.

 

 

 

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