What You Should Know:
– Apixio, a healthcare data and analytics company, and Vim, a point-of-care connection platform, have joined forces to significantly enhance patient care through a strategic partnership.
– The strategic collaboration focuses on improving the accuracy of capturing patient conditions during visits and empowering healthcare providers with real-time insights.
The Challenge of Prospective Risk Adjustment
The healthcare industry is undergoing a critical shift towards prospective risk adjustment models. This approach aims to assess patient health risks more precisely and proactively, allowing for improved care management and financial outcomes. However, seamless integration of these insights into electronic health record (EHR) systems and efficient delivery to clinicians remain significant challenges.
Apixio’s Prospective Point-of-Care Solution
This partnership introduces Apixio’s Prospective Point-of-Care solution, designed to overcome these challenges and exceed traditional EHR alerts. Here’s how it achieves this:
- AI-powered Insights: Apixio leverages its expertise in extracting valuable insights from both structured and unstructured patient data (including medications, labs, reports, and notes).
- Vim’s Bi-directional EHR Integration: Vim’s advanced technology seamlessly integrates these insights directly into the point-of-care workflow. This ensures up-to-date and accurate diagnoses are captured within the EHR, minimizing administrative burden for clinicians and promoting accurate coding.
"We're excited with our platform-to-platform partnership with Vim to advance toward an outcomes-based healthcare system. Integrating Apixio's AI insights and predictions into Vim's EHR point-of-care connections enables clinicians to spend more time on patient care and less on administrative work,” says Sachin Patel, CEO of Apixio. “This partnership goes beyond just technology integration – it signifies a pivotal change in minimizing provider friction in prospective risk adjustment, which is key to enhancing patient outcomes.”