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Mount Auburn Hospital / MAPS / MACIPA One IS Journey to an Integrated Database October 2014 1
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2 Journey to an Integrated Database Phase I –Assessment FY13-15 Assessment of various information systems: Surveys, Demos, System Reviews Market Assessment Total Cost of Ownership Scope of Project Evaluate options for financing Approvals Phase II Planning and Preparation FY 14-15 Phase III Implementation FY 16-17 Phase IV Optimization FY 17- 2
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3 Journey to an Integrated Database Phase I –Assessment FY13-15 Phase II Planning and Preparation FY 14-15 Contracts for software (Epic and 3 rd party) Determine hosting Determine staffing needs Determine legacy system strategy 3 rd Party Application implementation Determine data conversion/archiving strategy Begin hiring/training Phase III Implementation FY 16-17 Phase IV Optimization FY 17- 2
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4 Journey to an Integrated Database Phase I –Assessment FY13-15 Phase II Planning and Preparation FY 14-15 Phase III Implementation FY 16-17 Data conversion, archiving “Big bang” go-live Implement practices in several waves Legacy Strategy Phase IV Optimization FY 17- 2
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IS Assessment Process Press Ganey – 2011 CMIO Hire – Feb 2013 User Survey – March 2013 RFP – May-July 2013 Demo Evaluations – August 2013 One IS Summit – September 2013 Epic Visits – November 2013 TCO Development – September – December 2013 ROI Development – February 2014 Private Practice Assessment – July – September 2014 End-to-end Functional Assessment – July – September 2014 3
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IS Assessment Multiple systems, multiple instances, multiple data sources Currently 130 software applications in MAH 50+ instances of eCW 3
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IS Assessment
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Strong Dissatisfaction with current systems Strong Desire to share records more efficiently Many systems need immediate replacement 3
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IS Assessment Strong desire for integration Strong willingness to switch to a new platform 3
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IS Assessment Epic Clear winner in RFPs in every category 3
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IS Assessment Fragmented Network Complex IS Service Delivery System Multiple Helpdesk Communication challenges Limited training Desire for more physician involvement Excitement for a new IS system 3
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Market Assessment Epic dominant platform in the United States (54% of population) Epic late to market in Boston but will become dominant EHR in Boston market 3
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Market Assessment Epic interoperability capabilities has become standard of health information interchange Care Elsewhere - Information can come from a non-Epic EMR that complies with industry standards, or directly from the patient. Care Epic - Epic system is on both sides of the exchange, a richer data set is exchanged and additional connectivity options, such as cross- organization referral management, are available. 3
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Physician referrals to MAH MACIPA, Atrius, CHA, etc.
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276,500 EHR physicians 158M-188M patients, 50% to 59% 54% of the U.S. population 173M people will be cared for by EpicCareRED > 40% of patients are or will be covered by EpicCarePINK 1-40% of patients are or will be covered by EpicCareGREY Non-Clinical Customers
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TCO Modeling Examining true IT costs of combined costs at MAH, MACIPA, Caregroup and non-IT departments Software licensing, hardware, labor, etc. Includes back-end replacement and 3rd party software associated with Epic, legacy costs EVERY department analyzed 5 year modeling Does not account for possible discounts from negotiating Does not include potential revenue and expense improvements Examined: Status Quo: Meditech 5.66 + eCW v9 Meditech 6.1 eCW v10 Epic (hosted by self) Epic (hosted by Epic) Epic (hosted by 3rd party) 3
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5 Year Cost Scenario 1: Status Quo (MEDITECH Magic + eCW + Athena) Scenario 2: MEDITECH 6.x + eCW.v10 Scenario 3a: Epic (on-premise) Scenario 3b: Epic (partner-hosted) Scenario 3c: Epic (vendor-hosted) Total Capital Expenses$6,377,978.65$39,396,731.49$63,080,705.22$69,361,254.12$61,151,382.62 Total Operating Expenses$62,266,165.72$74,294,253.95$65,584,337.49$64,794,816.29$70,697,311.29 TOTAL$68,644,144.37$113,690,985.44$128,665,042.71$134,156,070.41$131,848,693.91 15% Contingency$78,940,766.03$130,744,633.26$147,964,799.11$154,279,480.97$151,625,997.99 Back-end Financials$0.00 $9,195,222.07 Legacy System Support & Sunsetting$0.00$25,433,439.28 GRAND TOTAL$78,940,766.03$156,178,072.54$182,593,460.46$188,908,142.32$186,254,659.34
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TCO Findings Continuing current state non-sustainable—high degree of dissatisfaction with current systems, does not meet future needs for population management, quality, reporting, coordination of care Costs to maintain status quo with no improvements is expensive ($80M) Costs to upgrade to Meditech 6.1 are very expensive and new platform brings risks Costs to implement Epic similar to Meditech but will be implementing top rated product ROI not included in TCO modeling 3
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Why Epic? Alignment with business strategy/improve communications Within MAH/MACIPA With other providers Atrius (22% of volume) CHA Lahey Partners Best strategic product for MAH/MACIPA needs RFP/demo winner Best product by KLAS ratings Superior Performance/Quality reporting Superior Patient Engagement (Patient portal) Integrated Data for business/clinical intelligence and data mining Standardize workflows Superior Clinical Decision Support Superior Population Management Capabilities Improve Efficiencies Platform for Performance/Quality Improvement Other expense/revenue improvement
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Questions?
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