Healthcare
The tracer methodology: a way of integrating the patient’s voice to optimize care pathways!
What is the tracer methodology? What is the interest for healthcare professionals and manufacturers? Alcimed deciphers this method for you.
For several years, the French healthcare system has faced considerable challenges: crises in emergency services, shortage of doctors, home support, an explosion in chronic diseases, concern over the environmental impact of health products and services, and more. Rethinking the organization of care pathways as a whole, in order to make them more efficient and adapted the current and future health challenges, is a common goal. Health industry players have a role to play to support these changes, which has already been put in practice by the creation of roles or missions in the field centered on the care pathway. Additionally, promoting innovation in an organized ecosystem is generally carried out by taking the local specific characteristics of each service, care center, or network to take the first step towards transformation at a larger level. In this regard, how can new ways of operating and innovative solutions be promoted? In this article, Alcimed develops 3 tips for supporting actors of a local health ecosystem in their organizational challenges around care pathways.
A care pathway is defined as the sequential treatment steps carried out by health professionals between the city, the hospital, and the patient’s home.
The challenge of efficiency to guarantee equal access to care and the quality of the care, all in the setting of economic sustainability for the healthcare system, is not new. However, the organization is still one of the main concerns of health insurance, of which increasing efficiency is around 50% of its risk management program for 2024 [1]. Optimizing and reinforcing the care and prevention pathways is therefore a priority for meeting the associated challenges.
Taking advantage of new facilities for care (multidisciplinary healthcare centers, care access services, home hospitalization, coordination support systems, distance health consultations, etc.) and urban players (general practitioners and specialists, pharmacists, paramedic professionals, patient associations, etc.) could help relieve the burden on hospital services. With these transformations will come new training requirements and enhanced coordination of healthcare professionals, as well as a larger involvement of the patients and their loved ones.
Today, equal healthcare access is undermined by tension in medical demographics of certain professions and the inequality of territorial distribution. In addition, innovations in organizations, therapies, and technologies, such as gene and cell therapies (CAR-T cell, etc.), e-Health, diagnostic help tools or medical devices for therapeutic usage, are important levers that will aid patients and healthcare professionals and change the care practices. To manage the implications linked to the arrival of these innovations and promote their integration in current practices, it will be essential to guarantee that they respond to the needs of the health ecosystem, and then build the associated modes of care.
Integrating the environmental component into the relative choices of therapies – whether it’s in the design of the pathway, the manner in which the care is given, or the choice of the intervention – will be key for reducing the carbon footprint of the healthcare system (which contributes 8% of the greenhouse gas emissions in France [2]). For example, nutritional and hygiene education programs that aim to reduce the occurrence of type 2 diabetes also have the potential to reduce more than 30% of the emissions linked to the patient pathway [3].
To face these challenges, it is necessary to understand them and imagine building new pathways, by starting from the context of each local ecosystem. Three tips can help healthcare professionals to contribute to this effort:
Organizing and leading multidisciplinary work meetings centered on the patient pathway and their associated challenges is a first step for questioning the current organization and imagining ways for improving it.
The starting point of these meetings is typically to identify the challenge(s) or the intuition of certain issues which hinder the quality of the therapy for patients, which could be improved and are agreed upon by all of the stakeholders in the ecosystem. These first observations could concern for example the need to develop a local management protocol to reduce the therapeutic inertia in regions which are difficult to access and which have trouble changing their practices.
Based on these findings, these meetings bring together the concerned stakeholders and create a setting conducive to exchanges, for example concerning:
These changes will not happen overnight. Such meetings should thus be modulated and viewed as the first step of a long-term process whose purpose is to build the foundation that will help implement concrete measures of optimization.
Capitalizing on the results of solutions that are already in place and putting them in the spotlight is an important step in inspiring and progressively deploying this transformation at a larger level. An example of this is the model of remote monitoring oncology patients in coordination between hospital teams and primary care physicians (such as the model of the Onco’Link project). This can also be accomplished in several ways:
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Finally, supporting the evolution of an organized ecosystem can involve the co-construction of a plan of action for improvement that is pragmatic and adapted to the constraints and resources of the local ecosystem. This approach involves two critical steps:
In order to guarantee the plan’s success, this approach requires the engagement of motivated and influential local players who position themselves as supporters of the initiative and motivate other stakeholders to follow suit.
Accompanying the changes linked to care pathways provides an opportunity for healthcare professionals to generate value for the health system and for health management players in addition to the therapies that they make available. These solutions reinforce the ecosystem knowledge and the engagement of stakeholders, create a differentiating experience in the interactions with healthcare professionals, and lay the foundations of an innovative and collaborative project with a strong societal impact. Further, it represents a unique opportunity to re-think the place and experience of the patient in their own treatment and to contribute to the solutions, at a time when the needs and desires of healthcare professionals are rapidly evolving.
With strong expertise in more than 60 projects in optimizing pathways related to multiple therapeutic and geographic areas, we can support you in your projects around patient pathways. Contact our team to learn more!
[1] Assurance Maladie (2023). Synthèse du rapport de propositions de l’assurance maladie pour 2024
[2] The Shift Project (2023). Décarboner la santé pour soigner durablement
[3] Health Systems Taskforce. Sustainable Markets Initiative. https://www.sustainable-markets.org/taskforces/health-systems-taskforce/
About the author,
Céline, Project manager in Alcimed’s Healthcare team in France