By leveraging the patent-pending Vizient Vulnerability Index™, healthcare organizations focused on mission and margins can act upstream to directly address SDOH to help reduce preventable admissions in high-needs communities.
Karyl Kopaskie PhD
Vizient Principal, Sg2
Intelligence
Madeleine McDowell, MD, FAAP
Vizient Senior
Principal, Sg2
Intelligence
As healthcare organizations face unprecedented workforce and financial challenges, much emphasis is
placed on capacity constraints with rising acuity and regulatory scrutiny as powerful underlying trends.
Many systems struggle to find the right balance between their margins and their missions, and often see
their capacity realities outweigh their community's health equity needs.
Or, if they've launched health equity initiatives, they flounder without the capability to identify and
measure disparities effectively to sustain their initiatives.
To solve for this, in a recent study, we used the patent pending, publicly available Vizient Vulnerability
Index™ — a quantitative
assessment of social drivers of health (SDOH) that influence a person's overall health by providing a
geography-based method for evaluating disparities that impact health down to the census tract level. We
cross-walked the index by zip code with a combined five-state — Arizona, Florida, New York,
Pennsylvania and Texas — all-payer 2021 inpatient dataset to identify geographical differences in
hospitalization rates by social risk score for diseases and procedures.
In doing so, we were able to correlate social needs to inpatient utilizations so that healthcare
executives can leverage the index to align initiatives addressing SDOH for communities with hospital
challenges such as capacity constraints and accurately plan for inpatient bed demand.
- 116 conditions were identified as "SDOH-sensitive conditions," which have a strong positive
correlation (R2>0.7) between increased hospitalization rate and Vizient Vulnerability Index score.
- Patients residing in zip codes with high or very high social needs had significantly greater
hospitalization rates (20% or more) for the 116 SDOH-sensitive conditions, which span chronic
diseases, trauma, behavioral health, obstetrics and infectious disease.
- Collectively, the conditions represented 71% of total hospitalizations, but the proportion increased
sharply to 83% in high, and 94% in very high social needs zip codes.
Utilizing this approach, we took a close look at diabetes, one of the 116 SDOH-sensitive conditions
studied. It became clear that organizations could make an impact by acting upstream to directly address
SDOH to reduce preventable admissions in communities with needs. Here's what we know:
Diabetes demand and acuity are rising: By 2026, there is a projected 12%
growth for
diabetes inpatient discharges and an 8% increase in average length of stay according to the Sg2 Impact
of Change Forecast.
SDOH is correlated to higher rates of inpatient discharges for diabetes: 14%
of
diabetes patient discharges came from zip codes with high social needs in our sample, and the inpatient
discharge use rate for diabetes was 70% percent above the five-state average from those high social
needs zip codes or 144% above the five-state average in very high social needs zip codes. The R2
Correlation between social needs score and diabetes admission rate was 0.97, signifying that 97% of the
variance observed in diabetes admission rates by community was due to the level of vulnerability.
Acting upstream with prevention: Taking the high expected growth and high
impatient
use rate for patients in these communities, we can imagine a scenario where a Diabetes Prevention
Initiative is launched, with a goal to reduce diabetes inpatient use rate by 20% in high community zip
codes. Tactics could include targeting food insecurity and increasing diabetes self-management training
— documented solutions for success — in communities of need. If successful, the initiative
would yield an 8% decrease in the bed days for the market, which translates to $126M in potential bed
day cost savings nationwide.
As with the Diabetes Prevention Initiative, healthcare executives can build a business case and develop
targeted initiatives to address specific social needs at the zip code level to target capacity
constraints related to conditions strongly correlated to social need in their markets. The following
steps can help organziations take action on strategic decisions to make utilization improvements for
diabetes patients — as well as for other conditions — by addressing SDOH:
- Align the initiative with organizational goals: Reduce capacity
constraints in
hospital inpatient setting by preventing inpatient discharges correlated to social needs in high-needs
communities.
- Select disease target based on community needs: For 116 conditions,
inpatient use
rate is strongly correlated with the Vizient Vulnerability Index score.
- Select relevant tracking metrics: Identify an appropriate data collection
mechanism
in collaboration with community stakeholders to track effects on patient populations.
- Select a program or tactic to meet your goal: Collaborate with the
community to
select a program that impacts the selected and improves patient outcomes, such as community health
worker-led diabetes self-management programs.
- Evaluate and iterate: Analyze collected data and discuss impacts with key
stakeholder groups. Iterate on tactics or metrics as necessary to maintain alignment with goals.
Utilizing the Vizient Vulnerability Index to identify root causes for patient hospitalization pattern
differences allows healthcare organizations to prioritize targeted investments to address disparities.
These investments are not only a win for the patients and community, but for the organization's bottom
line.
Learn more about this study at Kopaskie and McDowell's poster presentation at the
Institute for Healthcare
Improvement (IHI)
Forum Dec. 10-13.
Explore the patent-pending Vizient Vulnerability
Index™, a public-facing resource for healthcare organizations
to assess social determinants of health that impact health equity in communities they
serve.
Authors
Karyl Kopaskie, PhD,
principal at Sg2, a Vizient company, is a healthcare strategy expert and leader who helps Sg2
providers
succeed in strategic prioritization, program development and projecting healthcare demand. She has
deep
content knowledge in strategic planning, service line strategy for women’s health and pediatrics,
health
equity and social determinants of health. Future focused and adept at leveraging data insights and
collaboration, Kopaskie supports health systems and children’s hospitals by finding new pathways
to
achieve their goals in an uncertain and rapidly evolving landscape. In 2021, Kopaskie was accepted
into
the Disparities Leadership Program, offered through the Disparities Solutions Center at
Massachusetts
General Hospital, for her work on a health equity solution for Vizient and its members. She earned
a
Ph.D. in microbiology and an A.B. in physics from the University of Chicago.
As senior principal
at Sg2,
Madeleine McDowell, MD,
FAAP, leverages a decade of clinical experience in leading the
development and application of Sg2’s data analytic tools and providing clinical insight for all
Sg2
research — service line, strategic planning, performance strategy and clinical technology. She
provides thought leadership in quality in collaboration with experts across the Vizient and Sg2
organization, and she partners with member health systems as a strategic