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Analyze the Competitive Landscape
Anticipate Future Patient Needs
Identify Sites To Capture Demand
Drive Loyalty Across the Patient Journey
Leverage Price Transparency Insights
Retain Patients in Your Network
Match Provider Supply to Demand
Acquire Commercial Patients
Capture Outpatient Demand
Target High-Value HCPs
Strengthen Provider Networks
We collect and organize the industry’s most comprehensive healthcare datasets.
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Strategic guidance and commentary from our CEO, Hal Andrews
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An essential resource to survive healthcare’s negative-sum game
Develop Service Line Strategies
Analyze the Competitive Landscape
Anticipate Future Patient Needs
Identify Sites To Capture Demand
Drive Loyalty Across the Patient Journey
Leverage Price Transparency Insights
Retain Patients in Your Network
Match Provider Supply to Demand
Acquire Commercial Patients
Capture Outpatient Demand
Target High-Value HCPs
Strengthen Provider Networks
We collect and organize the industry’s most comprehensive healthcare datasets.
See demand, supply and yield across the U.S. health economy
Validated Data for 2.9M Practitioners
Episodes of Care for 300M Patients
Negotiated Rates for Any Service at Any Location
Flexible solutions to fit your specific needs and workflow
Answer Key Questions in Seconds
Custom Enterprise-Level Analyses
Exclusive Health Economy Insights
Free resources to help health economy stakeholders use our products and data
Health Economy Survival Strategies
Product Guides and Feature Releases
How We Tackle Technical Problems
Data-Driven Benchmarking Tool
Strategic guidance and commentary from our CEO, Hal Andrews
Annual fact-based analysis of trends shaping the health economy
An essential resource to survive healthcare’s negative-sum game
Women typically utilize more healthcare services than men according to the U.S. Department of Labor and make approximately 80% of the healthcare decisions for their families. As a result, it is commonly believed that if providers win the heart of Mom, they win the family.
In reality, women are slightly less loyal to provider networks than men (Figure 1). While the one-percentage point difference may seem inconsequential, the translation to an individual’s total share of care is significant.
The trend of women being less loyal to provider networks than men is consistent across markets and over time. Across the largest CBSAs, provider loyalty among women ranges from 51% to 67%, and the loyalty differential by gender is as much as three percentage points in CBSAs like Dallas and Phoenix.
As the number of provider options continues to grow, especially with the emergence of several brands like Tia and Maven Clinic specifically catering to women’s healthcare needs and preferences, we can expect to see women split their healthcare interactions across more provider networks.
Whereas health systems have historically believed that the Moms who deliver their children at their facilities will be more likely to lead to downstream care in pediatrics and primary care with affiliated providers, loyalty trends would indicate otherwise.
We know from our prior research that loyalty is highest (70%) among newborns to age 10, suggesting strong alignment to family pediatricians. But with women serving as the “Chief Health Officer” of their families, we must consider that just because a provider network earns some share of care for the Mom, that loyalty does not necessarily extend across the full continuum of care needs.
In recent decades, many health systems have invested significantly in hotel-like amenities for Labor, Delivery, Recovery and Postpartum (LDRP) suites based on the myth of the mother as the loyal “Chief Health Officer.” Learning from telehealth utilization trends during the pandemic, a more cost-efficient and effective strategy is to utilize demographic and psychographic insights to earn and influence loyalty, particularly among commercially insured women.
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