A New Spend Management Approach for Shoulder Replacement Surgeries


As COVID-19 prompted hospitals to suspend routine care and postpone elective surgeries, financial stakeholders scrambled for innovative ways to balance the books. At Rush University Medical Center, one part of its overall cost reduction effort came from a unique source—performing total shoulder arthroplasties— commonly known as shoulder replacement surgeries.

The key to reducing shoulder spend at the 671-bed facility is the cost of the artificial shoulder joint itself. It’s a physician preference item, or PPI, meaning that the Chicago-based academic medical center—like all hospitals and health systems—buys the medical devices that a surgeon prefers. That’s why streamlining costs and negotiating with suppliers was top of mind for Luis Forero, director of strategic sourcing and procurement at Rush University Medical Center.

“Overall, our goal is to reduce expenses at Rush. And traditionally, our goals were about $4-5 million per year. When COVID hit, we were asked to save about $8-9 million, and we exceeded that,” Forero says.

By taking a collaborative approach to problem solving, Rush University Medical Center achieved a 21% reduction in the hospital’s shoulder replacement spend, delivering $800,000 in savings in less than one year.

Learn how Rush University Medical Center took an innovative approach to cost reduction and partnered with a healthcare performance improvement company to achieve a 21% reduction in the hospital’s shoulder replacement spend, delivering $800,000 in savings in less than one year. 

CQO Tie-in: Rush reduced shoulder replacement spend without compromising quality of the devices they used for shoulder replacement surgeries.

 

Download Case Study

THIS CASE STUDY IS SPONSORED BY AHRMM’S CQO MOVEMENT SPONSOR:

vizient logo

Related Resources

On-Demand Educational Webinars
Improve clinical and financial outcomes for hip fracture care using a standardized, collaborative service line approach.
Educational Podcast
Listen as Bruce Radcliff, System VP of Supplier Diversity at Advocate Aurora Health discusses the tangible methods to build supplier diversity base
e-Learning
The Introduction to Health Care Supply Chain eLearning courses provide grounded education for those new or seeking a refresher.
e-Learning
This advanced course leads learners through 10 areas of infrastructure surrounding the functions of health care supply chain management.
Podcasts
Decision making by studying where our data is coming from and the outcome of its source.