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Curaspan seeks low-hanging savings on re-admissions

By | March 29, 2010, 5:05 AM PDT

The search is on for health care savings.

One place to find them is by tracking and reducing re-admissions. When the doctor says “out patient, out” he doesn’t want to be seeing you again.

Reducing re-admissions by just half-a-percent per year, says Curaspan, can save serious money.

It doesn’t sound like a heck of a lot, but do the math. Figure $7,200 on each patient, 15 patients every month. That’s $108,000 per month, nearly $1.3 million in a year. Run that figure across the whole hospital system in the U.S. and you’re talking $7.3 billion.

This is not a pie-in-the-sky number. They aggregated year 2009 data from 137 hospitals, most with 100 beds or more. Regularly reviewing a monthly report on re-admissions starts doing the job after just six months.

Curaspan is offering this in the form of Software as a Service (SaaS), meaning hospitals don’t have to buy new gear to make this happen. Just run your data through Curaspan eDischarge, institutionalize the analysis as a discipline, and start saving today.

Curaspan runs your data through what it calls its Clinical Intelligence Data Bank which tracks it by post-acute provider, placement, diagnosis and admitting physician. The reports come through as PDF files, as Excel spreadsheets or as Crystal Report files — the last is an existing business intelligence program.

Want a webinar on this? Of course you do. April 15 at 2 PM EDT. Sign up here.

This is a great example of how health IT actually works. We are not talking here of killing grandma. We’re talking about saving her. Keep her from bouncing in-and-out of hospital like a yo-yo and she’ll be happy, you’ll be happy, and the hospital will be happy too.

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Dana Blankenhorn

About Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Contributing Editor, Healthcare

Dana Blankenhorn has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement and founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media. He holds degrees from Rice and Northwestern universities. He is based in Atlanta.

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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a technology reporter since 1982, a business reporter since 1978, and a writer for as long as he can remember. His Schwab IRA has a few tech stocks in it, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials bought over 10 years ago. But the vast majority of his tiny fortune (emphasis on the word tiny) is invested in mutual funds. He presently writes for no one else but ZDNet, SmartPlanet and himself. But if you've got an opportunity let him know. If he takes the gig he"ll first add it to this disclosure page.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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