Implementation Operational Plan
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DRAFT
Ensure strong understanding of referral patterns including primary-secondary, secondary-secondary, ambulatory-acute, and ancillary care (particularly lab, rad). Ensure there is a value proposition for key stakeholders (increased quality, smoother referral paths, lower cost).
General Considerations
Provider Types/Geographies
Across all implementation geographies, we should showcase a diverse set of providers:
- Geography/patient population
- Rural
- Urban/suburban commercial
- Urban/suburban Medicare
- Urban underserved (Medicaid)
- Military
- Veteran
- Practice size
- Small practice (< 5)
- Medium (5-25)
- Large
- Acute care
- Specialty type
- Primary, family practice, pediatric
- Specialty
- Tertiary and acute
- Ancillary (lab, rad, etc.)
Success Metrics
- Number of addressed endpoints
- Providers
- Patients
- Others
- % of providers served by addressing and routing
- % of patients with access to electronic delivery
- Number of transactions
- Absolute
- Per address type
- Per address (by type)
- MU achievement
- Provider satisfaction
Particular Implementations
Key Stakeholders
- Key provider organizations (referral anchors and catchment area)
- Key ancillary service providers (lab, rad)
- Key technology enablers (EHR vendors, HIE vendors)
- Public organizations
- State HIE entities
- Regional HIOs
- RECs
- Key interest groups
- State medical societies
Referral patterns
Ensure strong understanding of referral patterns including primary-secondary, secondary-secondary, ambulatory-acute, and ancillary care (particularly lab, rad). Ensure there is a value proposition for key stakeholders (increased quality, smoother referral paths, lower cost).