Innovation in public delivery systems: How one safety net hospital implemented new heart monitoring technology

This case study examines how a public delivery system hospital implemented a heart monitoring patch in place of existing electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring by pursuing a holistic value proposition. For example, leaders identified opportunity costs embedded in the existing ECG monitoring staffing. St...

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Veröffentlicht in:Healthcare : the journal of delivery science and innovation 2024-03, Vol.12 (1), p.100732, Article 100732
Hauptverfasser: Knox, Margae, Huang, Beatrice, Willard-Grace, Rachel, Su, George
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This case study examines how a public delivery system hospital implemented a heart monitoring patch in place of existing electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring by pursuing a holistic value proposition. For example, leaders identified opportunity costs embedded in the existing ECG monitoring staffing. Stakeholders also rallied around values such as patient safety, patient experience, and quality of care. Implementation also benefited from external philanthropic and industry partnerships, which facilitated a pilot period to implement new workflows, demonstrate proof-of-concept, and evaluate process improvements. Despite implementation success, ongoing procurement and reimbursement challenges demonstrate the messiness of innovation, even after reaching a “maintenance” phase. Availability of patient-facing material in multiple languages is one example of an implementation gap in safety net settings. New policies by health systems, payers, and others are needed to establish pathways for future high-value innovations.
ISSN:2213-0764
2213-0772
DOI:10.1016/j.hjdsi.2023.100732