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Docker is an open-source project to easily create lightweight, portable, self-sufficient containers from any application. The same container that a developer builds and tests on a laptop can run at scale, in production, on VMs, bare metal, OpenStack clusters, public clouds and more.
Docker is an open-source project to easily create lightweight, portable, self-sufficient containers from any application. The same container that a developer builds and tests on a laptop can run at scale, in production, on VMs, bare metal, OpenStack clusters, public clouds and more.


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of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum
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More than 7 million households moved to a new county during the pandemic. Huge numbers of Americans deciding to escape busy urban centers is one unexpected side-effect of COVID-19 that’s hitting healthcare providers hard. According to a Pew Research Center study, more one in five relocated during the pandemic or know someone who did. More recent research suggests that just over half of Americans plan to move in 2021! While fears around the risk of infection and the knock-on effect of rising unemployment prompted some to seek out quieter and more affordable areas early on in the pandemic, motivations for moving in 2021 are driven by new perspectives on what’s important in life. After a year of uncertainty, many are relocating in search of a better quality of life, remote working opportunities, or adventures someplace new. High turnover calls for better local healthcare marketing Whatever the reason, relocating brings significant upheaval: new jobs, new schools, a new community – and potentially a new healthcare provider. There’s a huge opportunity for providers who can make it easy for new residents to take “find a healthcare provider” off their relocation to-do lists. As the “for sale” signs go up, the geography of healthcare use is changing. Some providers are seeing a dip in their consumer population, while others are gaining new consumers. Providers must think differently about attracting new patients to minimize the risk and impact of this high turnover. How do they find them and communicate in the most engaging way? Here, we look at how healthcare marketing strategies can help providers maintain a pipeline of new patients and inspire lasting loyalty in their existing consumer base. Smart marketing when there’s a surge in new residents Traditionally, providers looking to draw in new patients might rely on “new mover lists” and mailshots. But these lists don’t reveal much about who these new movers are and what they care about, which leads to generic, one-size-fits-all marketing messages. With the right data, providers can access more meaningful insights about these newcomers’ lifestyles, interests, incomes, and preferences, for a more sophisticated marketing strategy. For example, one in ten people aged 18 to 29 are affected by pandemic-related house moves. As a healthcare provider in an area with a growing young population, it would make little sense to send mailshots that promote retirement health checks. A more relevant option might be an email or text with information about a new easy payment app or telehealth service. The more providers understand about potential new patients, the more they can customize their patient engagement strategy. Mindy Pankoke, Senior Product Manager at Experian Health, says: “The heavy movement patterns we expect this year mean providers must double down on acquisition strategies to maintain a healthy pipeline of new patients as consumers move into their service areas. If multiple health systems are trying to attract the same new patients, you need a clear message to differentiate your services. What’s going to resonate most? How do new patients want you to communicate with them? With the right data insights, you can reach them first with a tailored engagement experience and get the competitive edge.” ConsumerView aids this by combining hundreds of millions of data points to reveal how patients spend their time, how they spend their money, and how they think. This includes demographic attributes, communication preferences, credit and financial information, plus insights on how individuals may be affected by the social determinants of health. Using consumer insights to keep existing consumers happy For regions that experience a net loss in patient numbers, retention marketing will be more important than ever. Patients have more choice now, and as providers compete to attract new members, existing patients may spot competitors’ healthcare ads and be tempted to switch too. Consumer data powers retention in much the same way as acquisition, by allowing providers to segment patients to offer personalized communications and point them towards relevant services. For example, new research shows that patient loyalty in pediatrics tends to hinge on quality, while choice of adult care is driven by convenience. Segmenting people with young children from those without means you can focus your messaging on what matters most to them. With a supportive patient experience already available to them, those consumers will have no reason to look elsewhere. Providers shouldn’t rule out marketing to existing patients who have moved. Though they may be in a new area, they can still access services via telehealth. Since convenience is a key motivator, reminding them of remote and virtual offerings could be a great way to retain their business. Focusing on a specific niche not widely available elsewhere is another strategy to retain clients even as they relocate. ConsumerView is one way to leverage consumer insights to improve the customer experience through targeted outreach, regardless of location. This specialty list of consumer data from a trusted original source compiler draws together everything providers need to attract and retain patients and offer a personalized patient experience as communities adjust to life beyond COVID-19. Contact us to find out how consumer data could help your organization market to new and existing residents more effectively in 2021.

Knowing that clinical care accounts for only a portion of health outcomes, understanding how patients are affected by social determinants of health (SDOH) continues to gain attention as a critical factor in care delivery. COVID-19 has thrust the issue even further into the spotlight, with socially and economically vulnerable groups hardest hit by the pandemic. At the same time, the expansion of telehealth services over the last year has benefited some marginalized groups, who may feel uncomfortable visiting health facilities or may, for example, sometimes face challenges finding transportation to and from their visits. What’s clear is that when it comes to mitigating the impact of COVID-19’s lingering effects, patient identities based on clinical data alone simply won’t cut it. Providers need a holistic view of patients – both clinical and non-clinical. Many providers do not have updated contact information for the patients they want to engage, in addition to missing patient-level insights such as housing, food, access to technology, transportation and financial stability data that could help better engage patients. Given the many complicated personal and structural barriers that may exist to accessing healthcare, providers lacking SDOH data in patients’ records are risking avoidable readmissions, unnecessary ED visits, poor care quality ratings and denied reimbursements. Understanding patient needs and preferences via lifestyle factors – like occupation and technological knowledge – helps providers improve engagement, outreach and access. The results can be game-changing. The benefits of an enriched, more robust patient record with SDOH Improved certainty of patient needs to achieve healthy outcomes Whether it’s missed appointments, lack of engagement, deferred treatment, or failure to comply with care instructions – if SDOH is the cause, providers need to know. An enriched patient record that includes clearly defined SDOH risks and insights to those risks is invaluable. For example, if a patient record includes recommended engagement strategies suggesting medication delivery, or ensuring medications are with the patient at discharge, due to the patient’s difficulty accessing a pharmacy, negative outcome risk is reduced. Significant provider blind spots that might otherwise interfere with desired health outcomes can be eliminated or extensively mitigated with access to this kind of data. Consumer data gives additional insight useful in risk stratification efforts, allowing care teams to get granular and proactive if, for example, a patient’s lifestyle makes office-hour calls impossible, or if a lack of transportation requires the patient be informed that telehealth is available. Additionally, the data can flag if the patient prefers reminders by text, voice message or email. These considerations make a difference; 80-90% of modifiable contributors to healthy outcomes for a population are regularly attributed to the social, economic and environmental factors that comprise SDOH. Connecting the dots can improve care coordination SDOH data doesn’t just help flag general access issues; it can also help providers dig into specific challenges that may warrant referrals to community programs or additional staffing support. SDOH data may lead to the discovery that a patient is struggling to access healthy, affordable food and prompt a conversation about getting referred to an in-network nutritionist or local food partnership. Patient-specific information can be merged with consumer databases covering a range of socio-economic data, initiating proactive conversations with patients that can solve non-clinical gaps in care. Clarity of the “why” behind patient insights, for better communication and engagement Someone experiencing financial instability as a result of pandemic-related unemployment will expect a different financial conversation than someone who has lived in poverty for their whole life. Further, two patients with high readmission risk can have completely different social determinants of health impacting that risk. Knowing that patients are affected by SDOH is only one piece of the puzzle. Understanding the bigger picture helps create a whole picture and enables personalized, sensitive, and helpful communication. A turn-key SDOH solution that helps define the “why” behind the score avoids analysis paralysis and enables a quick, effective engagement strategy based on what really matters to patients. Supplementing patient surveys with consumer data is also important, as it provides deeper insights and recommendations for engagement strategies. Of course, a connected system only works when the patient identity is accurate and tracks them from service to service. With a universal identity manager, you can have confidence that your teams are all working from a complete, current and insights-rich view of each patient. Find out more about how Experian Health can help your organization make sense of SDOH data for better patient identity management and a more personalized patient experience.

Thanks to the global pandemic, providers were forced to re-imagine how healthcare is delivered beyond the four walls of a physical care setting. As they closed their doors to non-emergency and elective care, a massive shift in innovation, acceleration and adoption of patient engagement technology occurred, serving as a much-needed catalyst for digital transformation. As industries like retail, banking, food, and airlines embrace digital experiences, healthcare should be no exception. The renewed focus on a digital front door strategy allows patients the flexibility, personalization and convenience they’ve grown accustomed to. It’s the beginning of a new age in healthcare where quality patient information is fundamental to delivering and exceeding patient expectations. The New Age of Patient Information Patient identity is the backbone of everything in healthcare, providing the fuel for healthcare consumerization and the keys to the digital front door. As organizations focus on improving the patient experience, enabling patient access, and measuring and reporting performance, a patient identity strategy is core to enabling these enterprise-wide initiatives. As patients seek care across multiple settings, both in-person and virtual, care coordination challenges increase without a single view of the same patient. Enter patient identification—paramount to ensuring patients receive safe, accurate, and personalized care. According to one estimate, matching within facilities can be as low as 80% — meaning that 1 out of every 5 patients may not be matched to all his or her records when seeking care at a location they’ve already received care from in the past. The vision of an integrated, interoperable healthcare ecosystem starts with consistently and correctly linking disparate clinical and non-clinical data across silos to generate the single best, most accurate patient record. Having and maintaining a single, accurate view of the patient — the “golden record” — is critical to close gaps in care at the individual level, address patient safety concerns and revenue leakage associated with incorrect patient matching. The vision of an integrated, interoperable healthcare ecosystem starts with consistently and correctly linking disparate clinical and non-clinical data to a single person. In AHIMA’s 2020 Patient Identification Survey, 22% of respondents reported they achieved a 1% or less duplicate error rate in their electronic health record (EHR). How does an organization successfully get there? It starts with resolution, enrichment and protection — the three pillars of identity management that are foundational to achieve the most accurate, comprehensive and secure view of today’s healthcare consumer. Resolution – Confidently identify and match patient records & ensure accurate patient demographic data Enrichment – Update and enhance patient information for the most current, accurate, holistic patient view Protection – Authenticate a patient identity before sharing sensitive information Enabling Digital Transformation Patient identity management can prevent medical identity theft, optimize the revenue cycle, reduce denied claims, prevent duplicate record creation and enhance patient safety – leading to improved financials and boosting bottom lines in the process. In today’s vastly connected world, consumers expect a seamless patient experience based on accurate and secure data. If other industries have long accomplished this undertaking, why not healthcare? In the New Age of Patient Information — a single, best patient view is required. Download our latest guide to understand where your organization stands within the three pillars of patient identity management and how to develop a roadmap for ensuring you have the most accurate, comprehensive and secure view of today’s healthcare consumer.
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typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum.


