The FINANCIAL — KPMG report offers a transformation plan to help achieve coordinated and accountable care.
Health needs are changing fast, and healthcare organizations must transform to provide more coordinated and accountable care in order to keep pace, according to a new report published by KPMG International, What works: Paths to population health. The report describes the steps health organizations need to go through to reshape themselves and their services in order to achieve coordinated care, according to KPMG.
“Healthcare organizations I meet with around the world are struggling to convert the theory of coordinated and accountable care into practice,” says Dr Mark Britnell, Chairman and Partner Global Health Practice and Partner, KPMG in the UK. “Our report provides a practical, step-by-step guide to the process. By systematically addressing complexities such as governance, funding, and infrastructure, the report helps to simplify the issues that need to be managed while providing a powerful rationale for the transformation of the entire care process.”
The report leads health organizations through eight key questions that need to be answered to put a coordinated health system in practice, with case studies that show how organizations are having success today:
The report also includes a ‘Coordinated care maturity matrix’ that enables organizations to evaluate their progress in implementing the actions required to achieve accountable and coordinated care.
According to the report’s lead author, Joe Kuehn, Partner, KPMG in the US, “Developing a truly coordinated system cannot be a single ‘big bang’ change project. It is a journey that requires health systems to take time to develop the necessary capabilities, infrastructure and development across a wide range of activities to achieve the goal of a coordinated care model that works to benefit the health of the entire population.”
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