Across North America and beyond—the pace of merger activity shows no signs of slowing due to a host of reasons from financial pressures to a staffing crisis among clinicians. Even for smaller provider groups, the increasing regulatory burden over the past few years is making it more difficult for practices to remain independent.
One often overlooked aspect of a merger is a realistic assessment of the implications of new IT systems (e.g. EHRs, RevCycle, LIS) on clinicians.
This common oversight is somewhat surprising, given the central role these systems now play in the everyday delivery of care and the management of the revenue cycle, but time and again one sees a merger falter on the rocks of disparate systems, workflows, and practices.
And yet, even as a small consultancy, we have seen more than one instance where the overriding focus of the merger negotiations, usually centering on finances, was all but complete before clinical IT personnel were even consulted to weigh in on the ramifications.
DELAY, DERAILMENT, OR DELIGHT?
How wiser planning can prevent lurking EHR and RevCycle disasters
The problems with looping in your clinical IT resources later in the process boils down to two critical issues that can have significant implications:
About S&P Consultants
If your IT group is struggling to perform under remote-only conditions or due to resource losses (from budget cuts or illness) we welcome you to contact S&P Consultants for help. Our people have the kind of real-world experience that allows for hyper-efficient interventions—often performed remotely—with broad expertise across dozens of installations like yours. Our dedication to doing right by our clients has earned us recognition by KLAS including a 2021 “Best in KLAS” Award for Implementations requiring eight or fewer resources. Learn more
End of Messages