Friday, May 20, 2011

Lyceum Roundtable Summit

SAVE THE DATE!

On July 14th in Washington DC, Lyceum will host a roundtable summit analyzing opportunities and challenges facing the care delivery system, related corporate strategy, and new business models such as ACOs and other care coordination platforms.

The event features three roundtable tracks of eight to 14 participants. Each track breaks down into two separate three-hour sessions. (See below)

View details here. Indicate your interest in participating here. Official enrollment will commence shortly.

"The Provider Business Model" 
 
Track One: "Leadership"

New delivery models featuring care coordination and integration threaten to destabilize the marketplace. Whether large systems or small practices, health care providers now more than ever require capable, business-minded leaders.
  • What defines a capable leader? 
  • How important are value, accountability and customer satisfaction as business goals? 
  • Over the next two to five years, which providers will gain economic share, and which will lose? 
  • How should leaders expect the relationship between physicians and hospitals to evolve?
Track Two: "Data/ Performance Measurement"

Many industry people expect data and performance measurement tools—such as e-prescribing and electronic health records—to enable economic gains for physicians and health care providers.
  • Are these expectations too optimistic? 
  • Should provider groups strive for data control? If so, what type of data? 
  • To what extent are payers, by diversifying into IT businesses, recasting the health value chain?
Track Three: "Risk Management"

Efforts to diminish or discard the fee-for-service payment system are accelerating. Replacement models may incorporate varying degrees of provider risk taking. At the same time, health reform threatens to eliminate competition in insurance underwriting.
  • How much risk and what type of risk will providers likely assume? 
  • How does the demand for risk management expertise alter market positioning among and between payers and providers?

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