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Make your operations excellent with predictive analytics. Not tomorrow or next week. Take the first step towards unlocking hospital capacity and increasing patient access—today.

$100k

 

per OR/year in ROI

$10k

 

per Bed/Year in ROI

$20k

 

Infusion Chair/Year in ROI

2-5%

 

Improvement in EBITDA

Awards and Recognition

We’re honored that distinguished media and professional organizations have recognized us as the leader in capacity management and optimization.

Explore iQueue

Put down your pencil and paper. Close out Excel. Our Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning-based products are easy to use, eliminate operational bottlenecks, generate revenue, and increase access to care.

Improve OR access to grow market share

Free up capacity during prime time hours and establish a credible, surgeon-centric, and transparent system to improve open time and surgical block utilization.

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Take the first step towards unlocking capacity, generating ROI, and increasing patient access.

Chapter 1: The Looming Challenge

If you work in the healthcare industry, or even if you’re just an interested observer, you don’t need a book to tell you that the financial pressure is on as never before. A perfect storm of circumstances is swirling together, one that will make survivability, not to mention profitability, a greater challenge for healthcare companies than we’ve seen in the modern era.

As with banks, retailers, and airlines, which had to rapidly enhance their brick-and-mortar footprints with robust online business models—it is the early movers eager to gain new efficiencies that will thrive and gain market share. The slow-to-move and the inefficient will end up being consolidated into larger health systems seeking to expand their geographical footprints.

The pressures on healthcare

Let’s look at just a few of the looming challenges healthcare must meet head-on.

An aging population

By the year 2030, the number of adults sixty-five years of age or older will exceed the number of children eighteen years or younger in the United States. We are living longer than our parents did. Positive news for sure, but problematic for several reasons.

The older we get, the more medical help we need. Older people have more chronic diseases. By 2025, nearly 50 percent of the population will suffer from one or more chronic diseases that will require ongoing medical intervention. This combination of an aging population and an increase in chronic diseases will create a ballooning demand for healthcare services.