High-Performing Health Systems Prove Their Value in Responding to COVID-19

High-Performing Health Systems Prove Their Value in Responding to COVID-19

Medical group and health system members of AMGA deliver care to hundreds of millions of Americans. They provide routine health care, preventive screenings, as well as urgent and emergency care in both the outpatient and inpatient settings. They are organized in a specific manner to deliver care that is coordinated, high quality, and efficient. AMGA has defined the attributes of this type of care delivery model—a high-performing health system (HPHS). It is precisely these HPHS features that have positioned our members to quickly adapt to the challenge of COVID-19, serving their patients and communities in this evolving environment. Here are some examples of how these HPHS attributes have applied to the COVID-19 response:

Care Coordination: AMGA members have built a care model where physicians, nurses, and other health professionals work together as a team. When COVID-19 hit, the advantages of these cross-functional teams became evident. Many members, such as Sutter Health in California, have done the following: Deployed nurses to triage patients before they enter the offices to prevent COVID-19 patient from infecting others; assigned other team members to staff hotlines to answer the huge increase of incoming phone calls; and recruited physicians and advance care practitioners to inpatient duties to handle the surge of COVID-19 admissions. 

Use of Information Technology: AMGA members have been at the forefront of implementing information technology, including mobile capabilities and a unified electronic health record (EHR). In the past month, telehealth visits have exploded in these groups, increasing in some practices, such as Atlantic Medical Group in New Jersey, from 50 per month to over a 3,000 a day. Enabling all their physicians with telehealth capability has been a monumental task, yet the systems were able to rapidly deploy the technology because of their cumulative IT investments. In addition, because AMGA members had robust EHR adoption, patient care has moved seamlessly into the virtual world. 

Quality Improvement: AMGA members have a systemic approach to improving care, and these lessons have been applied to the COVID-19 situation. For example, at Crystal Run Healthcare in New York drive-through testing and screening tents were created in parking lots almost overnight, and through rapid-cycle improvement methodology, the group has been able to adapt and scale this service. Meanwhile, treatment algorithms have been embedded into the EHRs and are constantly updated, so every caregiver is following the most up-to-date guidelines.

Organized System of Care: Medical groups work in many settings, coordinating care in outpatient offices, ambulatory surgery centers, skilled nursing facilities, and other sites of care. As organized systems, they could swiftly consolidate practice sites to treat all patients with respiratory symptoms in specific centers when COVID-19 struck in their communities. Also, non-hospital beds are being repurposed to handle the surge of COVID-19 patients requiring hospitalization. The leadership structure of AMGA member groups, a dyad partnership of a physician and an administrator, is perfectly designed to comprehensively address both the clinical and operational aspects of the pandemic. 

Accountability: AMGA members have long held themselves accountable to their patients and communities. When COVID-19 struck, many members, including Ochsner Health System in Louisiana, Olmsted Medical Center in Minnesota, and Vancouver Clinic in Washington state, to name a few, immediately did the right thing by cancelling elective surgeries and procedures, preserving personal protective equipment, and postponing non-urgent office visits. These steps were taken to ensure better overall patient care and capacity for a COVID-19 inpatient surge, even though they have resulted in large financial losses for the practices. 

High-performing health systems have demonstrated remarkable resiliency and adaptability in the COVID-19 pandemic that is little over two months old in this country. This is not by accident, as these medical groups and health systems have spent years developing the structures and processes that deliver the best care. 

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Jerry Penso

  • Trends to Watch in 2024

    Trends to Watch in 2024

    The past year has proven to be difficult for many medical groups and health systems, yet I predict a stronger, more…

  • Increasing the Speed of the Move to Value

    Increasing the Speed of the Move to Value

    Is the move to value stalled? Or is it about to accelerate? If you ask providers, payers, or government regulators…

  • Will the Move to Value Accelerate the Move to Health Equity?

    Will the Move to Value Accelerate the Move to Health Equity?

    A large health system outreaches to local African American church leaders to encourage screenings and education for…

    1 Comment
  • No Quick Return to Normal for Providers

    No Quick Return to Normal for Providers

    In addition to shouldering the strain of testing and treating an unprecedented number of patients for COVID-19…

    3 Comments
  • The Value of Networking Has Never Been Greater

    The Value of Networking Has Never Been Greater

    “It is in challenging times such as this where the value of networking and interacting with experienced colleagues is…

    2 Comments
  • The New Normal

    The New Normal

    Health care delivery will look very different because of COVID-19. Patients will interact with their care providers in…

    2 Comments
  • Where Healthcare’s Best Find Answers

    Where Healthcare’s Best Find Answers

    Every day, a healthcare executive faces complex operational, management, and clinical decisions. A smart executive will…

  • To Everyone’s Advantage – MA is growing

    To Everyone’s Advantage – MA is growing

    AMGA’s annual survey of our medical group and health system members about their readiness for risk had a surprise this…

    1 Comment
  • Health Beyond Our Four Walls

    Health Beyond Our Four Walls

    If our aim is a healthier America, we must realize that just as much “health care” occurs outside the physician’s…

    6 Comments
  • Budget Act Good News for Chronic Care

    Budget Act Good News for Chronic Care

    Chronic diseases affect more than half of our AMGA members’ patients, many with two or more chronic illnesses, and the…

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics