New Study: Optimizing Workforce Management Through Data and Analytics

Insights from Leading Health Systems on Workforce Intelligence Solutions

The Health Management Academy (The Academy) has released a new study, sponsored by Axuall, detailing various insights from leading health systems on workforce intelligence solutions. Below are some key findings:

Addressing workforce challenges requires reassessing the existing talent management model: Exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and long-term trends, total employment in the industry has declined, with 30% of LHS reporting reduction in job applications and record levels of provider burnout. Yet misaligned strategic workforce planning, old school hiring methods, and limited internal mobility opportunities impede employee recruitment and retention.

Workforce intelligence powers strategic workforce plans: Strategic workforce planning is growing across healthcare, with 45% of health systems having an active workforce strategy to proactively manage current and future workforce needs. LHS can use insights from workforce intelligence—data and artificial intelligence-powered solutions—to address workforce challenges.

Investing in workforce data and analytics helps LHS move forward: Leveraging myriad of data sources enables leaders to spot trends and analyze performance, shifting workforce planning from an annual endeavor to one that is integrated into the culture and operating model of the organization. New analytics and technology can also streamline data mining and analysis. Evaluating partnerships can bring in the right technology investments to drive workforce intelligence at scale.

The Academy’s take: Addressing workforce challenges is difficult work. Simply put—we can do more than we think. As health systems continue to make progress, workforce intelligence will supply executives with the data they need to back up creative solutions to create a sustainable workforce.

To read the report in full detail, please download it below:

Edouard Valla Joins Axuall as Chief Product Officer

CLEVELAND, Aug. 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Axuall, Inc. announced today that seasoned healthcare technology and former Phreesia executive Edouard Valla has joined the team as Chief Product Officer. Valla will be responsible for Axuall’s product strategy and execution, including product research, design, and roadmap.

Valla is an accomplished product management leader with more than 20 years of product development experience for high-growth Software as a Service (SaaS) companies. Most recently, he served as Vice President of Product Management at Phreesia, where he led his team in revolutionizing the patient registration space.

“We are thrilled for Edouard to join our team and look forward to what his leadership will bring as we continue to scale our workforce intelligence solutions,” said Axuall Chief Executive Officer Charlie Lougheed. “His leadership in large-scale SaaS innovation, product lifecycle development, and go-to-market strategies will accelerate our mission to address one of healthcare’s most pressing issues.”

“I am very excited to join Axuall and contribute to its mission of delivering workforce intelligence to leading healthcare systems,” shared Valla. “At a time when clinician shortages impact patient’s access to care, it is important to help scale health organizations’ capacity and reduce administrative burdens for providers. I look forward to working with such a talented team to expand Axuall’s product offering and continue to develop its impressive network.”

University Hospitals Journey to Automate its Clinician Onboarding Process

vol:31 | Issue 7

Credentialing Resource Center Journal

It seems like a paradox: As credentialing becomes more complex, MSPs are asked to credential practitioners even faster. Yet this is the case in most hospitals and health systems across the country. So how can MSPs reduce the number of days to process a credentialing file (also known as application turnaround time) while not rushing through the process and letting problem practitioners slip through the cracks? One way is to automate steps of their credentialing process.

Take University Hospitals, for example—a study conducted between University Hospitals and the Healthcare Management Academy in 2021 identified that by streamlining its credentialing process, University Hospitals reduced its onboarding time by 16 days, representing an average revenue savings of $74,000 per new physician hire.

Although no one would deny the importance of revenue, automating credentialing is about more than just money.

“I had to spend a lot of time on the education around not just the time value of money, but the notion … that looking to fill a role or seat … is by virtue a pull through need, and you’re changing elements of access, and you potentially, absolutely are impacting workforce resilience and burnout,” says David Sylvan, president of University Hospitals Ventures. “You certainly are impacting revenue from the standpoint of unfilled slots and the other challenges associated with not having the right staffing mix—right place, right time, right patient. And it took us some time to convince people that this was not just a delayed revenue play—this was a lost revenue, lost workforce resilience, and potential adverse patient outcome play.”

An outsider’s perspective

Before automating its credentialing, University Hospital’s average credentialing timeline was 70–75 days, slightly better than the U.S. average of 100 days.

As an outsider to the medical staff credentialing process, Sylvan quickly learned a lot—including the common issues MSPs struggle with.

“I’ll be quite honest, I did not know that credentialing was a problem,” he says. “I came from a capital markets world and investment banking world where I had licensure, and for me to re-up was pretty much every couple of years sitting for a relatively low lift–type test and instantaneously I was relicensed for the next couple of years.”

Once Sylvan started looking into University Hospitals’ current credentialing process, he quickly noted areas that could be improved. The credentialing process was not fully electronic—the medical staff services departments were still relying on paper and fax machines.

“It was very easy to begin to extrapolate all of the downstream impacts, effects, and implications of just not doing this right. From the system’s perspective, from the clinician’s perspective, and most importantly from the patient’s perspective when it comes to outcomes, there was very clearly a big, glaring problem. We are human-centered design focus in our innovation department, so we always start with the users, the people that will be impacted by introducing a new technology. I have a chief medical officer and other clinicians on the team, so I didn’t have to go very far to understand what this looks like, and it was a really burdensome process,” says Sylvan.

Streamlining the onboarding process of clinicians

University Hospitals Ventures partnered with Axuall, Inc., a national digital credential network and clinical workforce intelligence company that enables clinicians, healthcare systems, and primary source institutions to share and manage authenticated credentials in real-time.

The partnership created what Sylvan calls a “digital wallet” for each practitioner with all of the practitioner’s credentialing information. Not only can this information be stored for reappointments and enrolling with insurance panels, it also can be used throughout the 23 hospitals in the health system for practitioners who apply for privileges at multiple hospitals. It can even be used if the practitioner leaves the organization and applies to another hospital that also uses Axuall.

“I know the net promoter score is through the roof because clinicians are saying, ‘Wait, I’m done and I don’t have to do it again? You mean this is going to repopulate and re-up without much of my intervention other than making my affirmations?

And you’re telling me this is mine—if I leave here and I go to another hospital using this platform, bang, I’m just

credentialed?’ And the answer is, ‘Yes.’ ”

University Hospitals purposely took it slow in the early days of the rollout, deciding to start with a limited number of practitioners to work out kinks in the system and to keep both practitioners and MSPs comfortable with the process. The organization has since processed over 3,100 of its clinicians on the Axuall network. For clinicians who established their digital wallets, the feedback was overwhelmingly positive, with an average score of 9 out of 10 when asked to rate the degree to which they would recommend the service to a peer.

Support for MSPs

As can happen with the implementation of any new technology, some MSPs at University Hospitals feared that the automation of credentialing would mean they’d be replaced by robots. Sylvan reassured them that this wasn’t the case.

“The technology is not intended to support every edge case nor automate 100% of tasks,” says Sylvan. “I had to tell them, ‘This is going to actually perfect your job. Use your skills only for those elements where there needs to be manual intervention or stand-alone investigation, and where possible, use the technology to sort of funnel everyone else through the process in an expedited manner.’ ”

As part of the adjustment process, MSPs also needed to break old habits of manually processing certain tasks when supervised automation could improve accuracy and coverage.

Sylvan notes that automation continues to place patient safety at the forefront. “The credentialing process still requires other important steps to ensure safety and manage the workflows associated with approvals, privileging, and payer enrollment. Axuall helped automate and streamline the collection of data from clinicians and independent verifying sources. However, credentialing standards require that MSPs still review all the data in a clinician’s file prior to advancing them through the cycle,” he explains. “While automation serves a critical role in driving efficiency, it should never replace the steps that protect our patients. As an analogy, we’re not removing the pilots in the cockpit, but rather automating their tasks to make everything safer. This is an important cultural shift for our teams.”

This is where health system leadership comes into play, he adds. Now that they have the tools in place to get practitioners credentialed faster, leaders need to make sure it is happening. Specifically, Sylvan is working with the chair of clinician services to champion the program. “When he doesn’t have the right number or optimal provider in the right place at the right time for the right patient, he needs to solve the problem.”

University Hospitals is also leaning on Axuall to provide ongoing support and training to MSPs as they learn the new process.

Showing ROI

When it comes to improving the credentialing process, lack of support from the organization is a common problem. MSPs often lament that leaders don’t understand how credentialing affects the hospital, the revenue cycle, and most importantly, patient care. So while MSPs might understand that they need software or automation processes, it can be an uphill battle convincing leadership of that fact.

Getting through to leaders might require MSPs to have a physician champion in their corner—and to show the ROI on an investment in software or automation.

Sylvan says University Hospitals Ventures has partnered with the revenue cycle, credentialing, and finance departments, as well as the Office of Operational Effectiveness, to come up with some estimations on positive net impact.

Time matters in healthcare, and the statistics gathered since University Hospitals partnered with Axuall are showing significant improvements in credentialing and processing times. For instance, clinicians using the digital wallet were able to apply and share their credentials in a median of seven days as opposed to the common baseline of 21, saving valuable effort.

“The ROI on something like this is a little mercurial. But we used some very conservative numbers … and [came up] with a number that can add up to tens of millions in revenue capture and operating efficiency for an organization our size. And as the chair of my department said: ‘Even if you’re 80% wrong, we should still do this all day long.’ ”

“Until we can truly prove this out mathematically, we certainly know from observation and experience that this is having a very positive impact. And we should do it all day long. It pays for itself,” says Sylvan.

AristaMD Selects Axuall to Streamline Workforce Deployment with Real-Time Provider Data Network

Partnership will provide a one-stop solution to manage credentialing and increase onboarding efficiency

CLEVELAND—(BUSINESS WIRE)—Axuall announced today a new partnership with AristaMD to streamline the organization’s onboarding, privileging and payor enrollment process, as well as provide its contracted specialists with the tools to manage the company’s digital credentials through Axuall’s real-time provider data network.


Patient safety and access to care are critical problems that the U.S. healthcare space continues to face in terms of scale and flexibility. As the clinician shortage continues, reducing the unnecessary burden and time commitment of paperwork will help address the national imperative to decrease burnout and drop-out rates among healthcare professionals. Healthcare organizations, like AristaMD, are beginning to realize how data and analytics can be applied across the provider community to help solve this problem through an emerging practice: workforce intelligence.

“We’re fortunate to support organizations like AristaMD, as we continue to address the need to eliminate waste, prevent fraud, manage risk, and meet demand for the next-generation of products and services in healthcare,” said Charlie Lougheed, Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Axuall. “We developed our network with leading healthcare systems in mind, not only to accelerate their deployment into care settings, but also to maintain workforce readiness and elasticity.”

AristaMD plans to integrate its network of hundreds of providers into the platform this year. “Even the telehealth space is not immune to the growing challenges with workforce shortages and resource management that is impacting the healthcare ecosystem,” said Rebecca Chi, Chief Client Experience Officer at AristaMD. “We’re excited to partner with Axuall to leverage technology to not only continue attracting and retaining top talent, but also accelerate credentialing that will improve our bottom line, and more importantly, provide patients with better care.”

Axuall continues to grow its network of providers and data partners, building on the success of commercial deployments and leading healthcare systems and staffing agencies.

About Axuall

Built with leading healthcare systems, Axuall is a workforce intelligence company powered by a national real-time practitioner data network. The technology enables healthcare systems, staffing firms, telehealth, and health plans to dramatically reduce onboarding and enrollment time while also providing unique, powerful data insights for network planning, analytics and reporting. To learn more, visit www.axuall.com.

About AristaMD

AristaMD’s care transition solutions, including eConsult and referral management tools, empower providers to conduct electronic physician-to-physician consultations, facilitate the selection and scheduling of in-person specialist visits, trigger automatic follow-up activities critical to patient care, and schedule peer-to-peer reviews for insurance authorization. Electronic referral management and eConsults significantly improve the patient referral process and deliver greater access to timely, equitable, high-quality care. For additional information, visit www.aristamd.com, or follow AristaMD on LinkedIn and Twitter.

How to reduce friction in onboarding and clinician placement in telehealth

The American Telemedicine Association recently highlighted how Axuall and LocumTenens.com and LT Telehealth are partnering to provide more seamless onboarding, credentialing and deployment processes for clinicians.


Download the PDF to learn more.

MetroHealth: Champion of a Streamlined Data Network

MetroHealth and Axuall partner to create a digitally-enabled elastic care network

As the healthcare industry swiftly adapts to advancements in technology, digitization, and business model evolution, health systems are simultaneously burdened with workforce challenges exacerbated by the onset of COVID-19. Innovation in workforce intelligence strategies can help Leading Health Systems (LHS) navigate the fast-paced environment, drive decision-making and maximize revenue opportunities. In addition, workforce intelligence provides relief for over-worked clinicians and staff, which translate to high-quality patient care.

One recent example of successfully leveraging workforce intelligence is The MetroHealth System (MetroHealth), a public, academic medical center, headquartered in Cleveland, OH. As Cuyahoga County’s only safety-net health system, MetroHealth plays an essential role in providing care for all in the region, regardless of a patient’s ability to pay.

To read more, download the case study now.

Axuall’s CEO Talks Why Health Administrators Should Adopt Robotic Process Automation

HIT Consultant

By Fred Pennic

Axuall’s CEO & Founder, Charlie Lougheed shares why health administration teams should embrace the power of robotic process automation (RPA).

Built with leading healthcare systems, Axuall is a workforce intelligence company powered by a national real-time practitioner data network. The technology enables healthcare systems, staffing firms, telehealth, and health plans to dramatically reduce onboarding and enrollment time while also providing unique, powerful data insights for network planning, analytics, and reporting. The company’s CEO and founder, ​​Charlie Lougheed, believes that the smarter use of analytics is a core factor in giving health systems the opportunity to build better networks, all while empowering healthcare administration teams with better, more complete, and more timely data — that also complies with industry standards and aligns with existing workflows.

HITC: To start, why should health administration teams embrace the power of robotic process automation (RPA)?

Lougheed: Robot Processing Automation (RPA) can sound like a threatening term for health administration teams, but in reality, this technology should be looked at as their friend, rather than their enemy. To put it simply, these bots are like border collies because they do the job of constantly herding information (not sheep, of course).

There was a time when shepherds used to herd sheep themselves, but then along came the sheepdogs, and the process got a lot more efficient. The only shepherds that lost their job were the ones that didn’t take advantage of this new “technology,” it has nothing to do with “giving up control.”

HITC: So, it sounds like bots aren’t replacing humans, but rather enhancing their productivity. How can RPA and other healthcare automation tools ensure health administrators can meet the current challenges?

Lougheed: Exactly. Healthcare administrators should view RPA as a tool to enable – not replace – humans. While this automation isn’t a new concept, its potential to help alleviate some of the biggest trends and challenges facing our country’s healthcare system today has become much more prevalent (e.g., the widening gap between supply and demand, a rapidly growing clinician shortage, and the shrinking revenue and budget that follow as a result).

By combining RPA with the provider big data, for instance, the two can eliminate much of the manual intervention that currently holds administrators back from the truly important activity that requires critical thinking. The widespread adoption of this technology could empower MSPs and healthcare executives to collaborate, analyze, plan, and deploy resources where they’re most needed in a way that’s never been possible before – all while automatically meeting credentialing and privileging regulations at the same time.

HITC: How can RPA specifically help health admin teams optimize their employee staffing?

Lougheed: It’s no secret that staffing has emerged as one of the most immediate concerns in healthcare today. In fact, personnel shortages even just replaced financial challenges as the top concern for hospital CEOs for the first time in nearly two decades, according to the American College of Healthcare Executives.

This “new normal” leaves health systems permanently operating in an extremely challenging environment. The key to successfully navigating staffing will be efficiency and flexibility – two things traditionally not within reach for hospitals due to credentialing and privileging regulations. However, RPA is providing health systems with comprehensive, real-time insight into their current and future clinical workforce, allowing administrators to better navigate the increasing challenges of care logistics. Doing so allows big data to be applied across the provider community that can address gaps in workforce supply, distribute precious resources more efficiently, and optimize care networks.

The result will be a future of healthcare that allows administration teams to become data analysts, not just data aggregators.

HITC: What are some best practices for selecting an RPA vendor for health administrators?

Lougheed: There’s no silver bullet solution that will ever be able to make all of our problems immediately disappear – especially in an industry as convoluted as healthcare. However, I would encourage healthcare administrators who are considering partnering with an RPA vendor to seek out those who can offer the following:

  • The ability to analyze and plan through comprehensive real-time insight into your current and future clinical workforce.
  • Enabling faster onboarding that allows clinicians to speed up the credentialing and privileging process, become enrolled, and ultimately be deployed where they’re needed to meet demand.
  • Continuous updates that ensure an always-ready and compliant workforce.
  • Cross-credential across collaborative care networks to expand services and revenue.
  • Technology that plugs into and leverages existing systems.

Most importantly, any RPA vendor should be able to ensure health systems can optimize their economics by ultimately reducing unnecessary delays, costs, and barriers to revenue capture.

HITC: What are some of the deployment challenges health administrators should be aware of?

Lougheed: A successful deployment relies on top-down support from healthcare leaders. Process change requires aircover and encouragement for those in the trenches. We’ve seen the greatest success in environments where team members are encouraged to make the long-term investments needed to rethink and retain old ways.

Remember, all old ways were once new ways. Healthy and accountable patience for what it takes to transition is critical to transformation.

HITC: What would you like our readers to understand about Axuall and the power of analytics? What is the message you hope to spread through this interview?

Lougheed: Automation, when combined with work workforce intelligence, enables leaders to plan their care networks, providing visibility into where resource supply and demand are today and in the future (especially when combined with market data). It streamlines the recruiting process, making it easier for clinicians to apply for positions or privileges.

This doesn’t just improve patient access to care, but it can dramatically improve the bottom line by preventing leakage, reducing burnout, and improving overall financial performance. In fact, a recent study even found that Cleveland-based University Hospitals could generate an additional $74,000 per new physician hire based on a savings of just 16 days. If the health system leveraged Axuall for only a quarter of the newly onboarded physicians annually, administrators could ensure additional revenue capture of between $9.2 million and $13.9 million each year.

The early adopters of big data and analytics, combined with the power of RPA, are set to enjoy a significant advantage over the competition and reap the benefits long into the future.

Axuall’s CEO Delivers Keynote at ATA Telehealth Conference

Workforce Intelligence

Leveraging Provider “Big Data” to Fuel the Future of Telemedicine

Click here to watch

Charlie Lougheed Discusses Challenges and Opportunities of Modern Day Workforce

Charlotte Inno

Mary Vanac

Charlie Lougheed is on his third big-data startup in Cleveland since 1999.

His latest company, Axuall (pronounced like “actual”), is a workforce intelligence company built on top of a national, real-time data network that tracks, verifies and reports on the credentials of medical practitioners.

In addition to enabling physicians and other medical professionals to quickly produce digital CVs, Axuall is starting to use its data to bridge gaps in patient care.

The Cleveland company also is moving from the startup phase to the scale-up phase, thanks, in part, to a $10.4 million Series A funding round in July.

Lougheed talked to the Cleveland Business Journal about some of the things he learned at his past startups that are making growth at Axuall a little easier. This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

What’s the most satisfying part of your work?

Working through tough scaling challenges and learning quickly from them has been really important for us. That sometimes takes a little while to learn. We’re so execution-oriented that we get into the mindset of just getting something done. But as you scale up, it’s important to take a step back and ask questions like, “Is that really an efficient way to do it?” and “Is that what our customers still want?”

How do you manage this task-oriented mentality?

Automation is one of the key elements of our business. We’re a data and automation company; that’s what we do. But we need to recognize that not everything can be automated. Sometimes, the glass is half full, meaning, if we can automate 90% of our tasks, we don’t necessarily have to kill ourselves to try to close the gap today. Our customers are pretty good with having only 10% left to automate.

I’ve also learned that it’s important to understand and pay attention to how we’re delivering our services and the pressure that puts on our team, in good ways and bad. Just learning through the process feels good.

How is your work changing as your company scales up?

At a startup, you wear many different hats. But as you scale, it doesn’t matter how smart you are, you can’t wear that many hats. You have to understand how teams evolve and grow. So in the last six months, we’ve added client services implementation and quality verification teams. We sort of all did quality verification, but now we have someone fully in charge of just that. I’ve been through this maturation and learning process a number of times. It’s never easy, and it’s a little different every single time, but I would tell you that just seeing the team grow through that is probably the most satisfying.

Does this learning process get any easier, over time?

I don’t know <laugh>, good question. That’s like asking, “Does Mount Everest ever get easier to climb?” Absolutely, yes, there are some mistakes I know not to make again.

Name one thing that is different for you at Axuall than at your previous startups.

There are cultural differences in our workforce. People have different expectations than I had when I got into my career. By and large, that’s a good thing. There’s a lot more work-life balance going on. And having a mission that our team members can align around is incredibly important to them. A mission gives clarity. It enables you to focus on the North Star, as opposed to the tasks.

As I get older, I feel more responsible for my team. When things go a little sideways, the impact on my team hits me a lot harder. We’ve got pretty low turnover. I don’t ever take that for granted, especially in a job market in which it is incredibly hard to hire. You’ve got to care about your team, because if they walk out the door, it would get pretty hard to serve our customers. They are really important, and I want them to be part of the vision for our company.

Healthcare IT Today: Provider Security and Privacy Matter Too

It is important to remember that healthcare organizations do not just have an obligation to protect patient data, but staff data as well. Charlie Lougheed, CEO & Co-Founder of Axuall, stressed this in his statement to Healthcare IT Today:

Data security in healthcare, rightfully so, often focuses on the patient. However, security and privacy are also important to the millions of healthcare workers who serve these patients. Their credentials define their career, and as such, their ability to work in different care settings. It deserves the same encryption, privacy, authentication, and consent level as patient data.

To view the entire article, click here.