Learners will obtain foundational knowledge and insights to begin to identify potential targets for innovation in healthcare. This course provides an overview of the healthcare ecosystem, which is comprised of diverse stakeholders, including hospitals and non-hospital entities within various healthcare value chains. The course will also introduce the healthcare innovation process and value creation. Emphasis is placed on key concepts and principles essential for efficiently designing and managing healthcare delivery systems.
Overview
Syllabus
- Course Introduction and Module 1: Introduction to the Healthcare Ecosystem
- This module introduces the healthcare ecosystem, focusing on its structure and the dynamics among the various constituents. The module begins with an overview of the healthcare system, highlighting significant issues, gaps, and emerging trends. It underscores the roles of various stakeholders, including physicians, nursing staff, hospitals, and the extensive supply chain, including pharmaceutical firms, biotech companies, medical device manufacturers, IT companies, regulators, and patients. The module addresses the relationship between healthcare spending and GDP growth, highlighting sustainability concerns and the difficulty in achieving multiple goals regarding cost, quality, and access. It discusses the demographic and policy challenges of the uninsured population in the U.S. It briefly reviews the changing healthcare ecosystem and invites learners to explore what is happening in other industries. By laying this foundational knowledge, the module prepares learners for a deeper exploration of the healthcare ecosystem's intricate and evolving landscape in subsequent modules.
- Module 2: The Market for Healthcare and Organizational Forms
- This module examines the complexities and opportunities within healthcare systems, focusing on how variations and integration play crucial roles. The module begins by examining the market for healthcare from a hospital's perspective, highlighting how variations in demand and supply drive the unique nature of hospital management. The Dartmouth Atlas is referenced to understand micro-area variations, shedding light on how different regions exhibit diverse healthcare dynamics. The module then delves into recent trends in costs and revenues and the interactions between providers, producers, and payers. These interactions create various forms of integration, influenced by regulatory changes and policy shifts. The discussion extends to matching organizational forms with their intended functions, presenting three prototypical approaches—asset-oriented, disease-oriented, and super-focused. Each approach is analyzed for its applicability and effectiveness in different healthcare contexts. We also explore how these forms dictate the type of innovation and the rate and direction of change. The module discusses opportunities to innovate by going beyond the producer-provider-payer system boundaries. Overall, the module underscores the importance of adapting to variations, embracing integration, and fostering innovation to improve healthcare systems. Learners are encouraged to think critically about these concepts and consider how they can be applied to address contemporary challenges in healthcare.
- Module 3: Innovation in the Process
- In this module, we will focus on the interdependent relationship between innovation and processes. Innovations change how tasks are performed, while processes guide these changes to ensure they are beneficial, measurable, and actionable. The module uses examples, including emergency rooms and telekiosks in remote areas, to illustrate these dynamics. We will also discuss key process metrics: flow rate and flow time. Understanding these metrics helps to improve patient flow and system efficiency and, thus, are ripe targets for innovation. We will emphasize integrating innovations into workflows, reducing unnecessary actions, reducing variability, and enhancing the quality and accessibility of healthcare services.
- Module 4: Innovation in the Supply Chain
- In this module, we will examine the supply chain, its organization, the players, the processes, and the key challenges, as well as opportunities to innovate. Many ideas are brought in from supply chain management in other industries, including the role of retailers, distributors, and wholesalers in matching demand and supply. The challenges discussed include coping with the huge variability in volume and variety in the healthcare system. The manufacturer's key problem is planning capacity when the approval process is uncertain and volumes are hard to predict. We study how the R&D cycle adds several more years to the length of the supply chain. We will discuss the important role of information technology (IT) and how it connects participants using platforms, enables other forms of communication, and propels change for healthcare systems by implementing a digital transformation strategy. In summary, the module presents the essential tension between maintaining momentum through innovation and containing cost and the mediating role of IT.
Taught by
Sridhar Seshadri