Strategic Technology Acquisition in the Era of Accountable Care
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- • greater involvement of radiologists, as consultants and educators, in determining appropriate treatment strategies and educating physicians on order appropriateness;
- • downward pressure on traditional demand drivers, with ordering physicians taking on greater responsibility for keeping costs low and ensuring order appropriateness;
- • increased relevance of outpatient imaging centers, due to lower costs and greater access; and
- • emphasis on the need for lower-cost, capacity-enhancing technology, as opposed to premium equipment for only niche applications and/or patient populations.
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Table 1.Potential Impact of Reform and Regulation This attention, however, has led to marked improvements in awareness within and outside the radiology community, with members of industry, regulators, and clinicians all focusing on reducing radiation dose for applicable exams. There is no shortage of novel dose-management techniques, from prospective ECG gating modes to iterative reconstruction algorithms, and more improvements are anticipated for the future. While it’s unclear to what extent federal, state, or other regulations will affect radiation-dose management and associated technologies, acquiring technology with low-dose capability now represents a significant step in providing high-quality—and safe—imaging services. Imaging technologies that seek to reduce unnecessary downstream interventions will also satisfy new quality imperatives. Hybrid PET/CT imaging is now fundamental to cancer treatment planning, based on its demonstrated ability to change the management of cancer patients to a more appropriate course of therapy. Similarly, breast tomosynthesis—though not yet commercially available—might reduce unnecessary downstream tests, given early results suggesting that it could produce lower recall rates and greater diagnostic confidence than traditional 2D digital mammography can. With each new innovation in technology, we will hope to see a direct correlation with improved safety and clinical outcomes.Improving access to care: Due to the passage of the PPACA, millions of newly covered lives will enter the health-care marketplace (most after 2014), and imaging providers will need to become more efficient to accommodate the anticipated moderate increase in volume. Technology that enables providers to handle greater throughput and that allows more exams to be performed (without considerable staffing or operational changes) will have a greater role, moving forward. For this and many other reasons, digital mammography is now considered requisite technology for institutions offering breast-health services. Providers using digital mammography can better accommodate more patients daily, owing to the significant reductions in exam time (often cited as 50% or more, compared with film mammography), allowing both more expedient imaging and greater per-unit capacity. Another imaging technology likely to have a significant impact on accessibility is wide-bore or high-field open MRI. Equipped with standard-of-care imaging capabilities, these systems allow a more accommodating patient experience, reducing anxiety and claustrophobic reactions that degrade optimal scanning conditions. For many organizations, wide-bore and open MRI scanners have reduced the need for time- and resource-consuming sedation, allowing more patients to be imaged by decreasing reliance on anesthesia delivery and by promoting better management of MRI schedules.
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Table 2.Procedure Mix for Advanced Modalities: 2009, 2014, and 2019 Wide-bore and open MRI scanners also permit bariatric patients to be imaged more comfortably, meeting an immediate market need. Though debate remains today regarding the ability of high-field vertical open scanners to serve as workhorse units, there is little doubt that more accommodating MRI scanners—either open or wide-bore, but more likely to be the latter—are becoming the industry (and market) standard.Bending the cost curve: The diagnostic-imaging industry has often been singled out as a major contributor to the escalating costs of health-care services. Imaging providers, however, can play an integral role in managing costs by ensuring that the most appropriate technology is used in the most appropriate setting. To that end, it is important to understand the incremental benefits afforded by technological innovations, relative to added costs. Though vendors have recognized the economic hardships of hospitals and imaging centers, offering price reductions on selected equipment classes, premium imaging systems still command premium prices. Despite the significant cost differential between premium systems and their standard-of-care counterparts, the incremental benefits of premium technology are commonly limited to advanced applications and/or niche populations (Figure 1). Moving forward, imaging providers will have greater options within modalities, but they must still be pragmatic when weighing premium versus workhorse technology. Emerging as a trend, across all imaging modalities, is the need for greater automation in imaging protocols. From start to finish, considerable opportunities exist to improve efficiency and reduce variability (which can lead to increased costs or alternatively, less revenue-generating scanner time). Providers can expect more productivity-enhancing features, especially in new MRI and ultrasound systems. Because many of these will be made available only with premium technology, however, there is still a price tag attached. In addition, administrators must not neglect the importance of training and of process efficiencies in determining whether a need for costly productivity-enhancing features exists. Looking to the future: Though standard-of-care functionality will still be highly desired for many years to come, radiology also must prepare for the dawn of personalized medicine, in which genomic information will be used to make individual, tailored care decisions based on a person’s genetic characteristics.
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Figure 1. The incremental benefits of premium technology are commonly limited to advanced applications and/or niche populations, despite significant cost differentials; source: The Advisory Board Company.
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Figure 2.A practical approach to prioritizing planned acquisitions can improve return on investment for imaging technology; source: The Advisory Board Company. Diagnostic imaging will increasingly be involved in aspects of translational medicine, helping scientists to identify genomic and proteomic biomarkers for cardiovascular diseases, cancer, neurodegenerative conditions, and many other clinical processes. Leading the way will be the molecular-imaging modalities of hybrid PET/CT, SPECT/CT, and (in the next several years) PET/MRI. While these modalities, and the accompanying targeted radiotracers that they will require, might not be widely adopted into clinical practice for many more years, imaging specialists must still consider the untapped potential of these modalities to contribute to new scientific and clinical discoveries in the personalized-medicine field.Adding RigorAs the radiology community embarks on a new era of health-care delivery, having regimented processes to evaluate new imaging technologies and assess their respective impact on different clinical services will be imperative. These processes should solicit the perspectives of many key stakeholders, both within and outside the radiology department, and should be well grounded in robust data to support the business case for the technology in question. Paying particular attention to the needs of ordering physicians will be more important. For example, if little interest exists among neurologists, orthopedic surgeons, or oncologists for a 3T MRI system to support their respective needs, now and into the future, then deciding to acquire a 3T scanner might not be prudent at this time. While it is still important to recognize advanced imaging services as a revenue-generating opportunity, accountable-care models emphasize imaging’s role as an ancillary service—and as a result, new imaging-technology needs must be matched with the overall strategic needs of the organization. Research from The Advisory Board Company indicates that institutions are mobilizing efforts to match technologies with discrete service-line growth opportunities and overall vision for the organization, with some setting limits on the level of technology for tertiary-care centers, community hospitals, and outpatient imaging centers. For a smaller institution to acquire premium equipment, such as a 320-slice CT scanner or a 3T MRI system, a very compelling and data-backed business case must be made. To accomplish this, it will be imperative for radiology administrators to evaluate current and projected inventory needs continually and to develop methods for assigning priorities to both replacement technologies and those that are new to the institution. Regularly collecting information on the level and functional status of technology; on utilization statistics for discrete pieces of imaging equipment, relative to maximum capacity levels; and on market-growth forecasts is a requirement for determining when it is necessary to purchase incremental units. Further, staying abreast of the latest technology developments and innovation will improve future decision making. A comprehensive imaging-technology evaluation can be burdensome for the radiology administrator. A considerable return on this investment exists, however, because such an evaluation helps eliminate shortsighted purchases, identify strategies for optimal equipment use, avoid temporal spikes in capital-budget needs, and identify bulk-purchasing opportunities (Figure 2). As radiology reaches a crossroads in the new era of accountable care, both challenges and opportunities will exist in planning for new diagnostic-imaging technologies. Developing regimented technology-evaluation processes and ensuring that due diligence is undertaken for each investment will ensure that the right technologies are deployed, at the right place, and at the right time. Brian C. Maher, MPH, is a consultant with The Advisory Board Company (Washington, DC), a health-care research and consulting company.