Consulting Case Studies
01
Engaging with the challenges of today's aged care sector
THE PROBLEM
This project, for a major aged care services body, our health consulting services were initiated as a convergence of factors was placing the aged care sector under growing pressure and creating an environment where the risk of medication errors was increasing. At the same time as the workforce is contracting and aging, the proportion of high care patients and rates of polypharmacy are increasing, and up to a third of all patients admitted to hospital from residential aged care are admitted as a result of adverse medication events, many potentially preventable. The sector also wanted to identify the potential benefits that participation in the National Electronic Health Record could bring to the aged care sector.
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OUR APPROACH
The business case was informed by interviews and workshops with key stakeholders across Australia held to inform solution design, feasible options and the scope of costs, risks and benefits. The business case included a full financial appraisal and sensitivity analysis, Risk Management Plan and Benefits Realisation Register.
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A readiness assessment was performed to assess current information and business processes, define future processes and develop gap closure strategies to address information gaps and ensure facilities could participate in eHealth initiatives. This informed the deployment approach and mechanisms to promote adoption of systems to enable participation in improved integration with the health sector.
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THE OUTCOME
The project involved an assessment of the policy and process impacts that the introduction of eHealth would bring to the aged care sector, considering issues such as privacy, consent, authorised representatives, family access, liability, interaction between aged care processes such as ACAT assessments and eHealth systems.
A communication strategy was developed that identified all stakeholders and the communication materials and tactics appropriate for each group. A training plan and materials were developed to address both the business process and information system changes that staff needed to implement.
02
Improved data quality for improved analytics
THE PROBLEM
A large state government agency wanted to establish a program to monitor and improve the quality of the data used to measure performance of services across the state and determine funding allocations. Data was sourced from a number of systems, with variability in configuration, integration and local business processes. Methods of monitoring data quality and resolving issues that were identified were highly manual, and there was no way of making the reliability of data visible to users to inform decision making. The department needed an assessment of their current processes and a strategy and plan to implement more effective data quality controls.
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OUR APPROACH
The project involved an assessment of the strategic priorities for the agency and an assessment of the organisation’s information assets to identify the highest risk data to be the initial focus of the program. This involved the development of a methodology for the agency to review and update the quality program priorities in subsequent years. A data profiling tool was developed to support the risk assessment process. Existing processes to manage data quality were reviewed, a consolidated view of the current state documented and gaps identified to inform the forward program.
THE OUTCOME
We developed a data quality plan that focused on transitioning from the current labour intensive methods to an analytics approach. An operational model was also developed to identify the governance and processes needed to maintain the program and monitor the outcomes that were being achieved. A methodology for scoring the reliability of individual data and performance indictors so that a quality scorecard could be linked to dashboards was also developed.
03
Leading a competitive market engagement process
THE PROBLEM
A large volunteer based agency needed to replace its aging online infrastructure with a new online system for staff and customers within an organisational environment with diverse constraints, including time-intensive seasonal community activities, prioritised funds and tightly committed support resources.
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Key issues facing the project included the need to identify and engage potential market suppliers, provide rigouros project estimates, test solution requirements, and engage confirm supplier cababiltiies all the while ensuring that the key internal business units were kept informed and were able to provide their valuble input into key decisions.
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OUR APPROACH
We established a business consulting approach that addressed these issues while maintaining cost efficiency and procurement probity. We presented the agency with two alternative procurement approaches. One was to issue a Request for Quotation (RFQ), in which a formal tender was to be developed and issued to vendors. The other was to conduct a Competitive Dialogue Process, where a preliminary statement of requirements is issued to pre-selected suppliers, seeking an indication on feasibility, their capability and interest. This informative process is iterative and culminates in the receipt of formal responses.
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The client elected to proceed with the Competitive Dialogue Process. and it provided opportunity to informally engage selected market suppliers to test requirements and identify current, emerging and innovative approaches. The agency saw value in the earlier confirmation of scope, budget, cost estimates which better informed interrelated business activities, such as the development of the business case and benefited from the improved shared understanding and cultural fit between potential suppliers and client through collaboration. The competitive dialogue process ultimately decreases negotiation timeframes, despite additional dialogue processes, due to improved overall project understanding by all parties.
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THE OUTCOME
The project saw highly engaged agency stakeholders and market suppliers and an improved project scope, informed by discussions and feedback. We were able to elicit quality procurement responses and comparable, competitively priced solutions for the agency which help deliver high quality procurement outcomes and efficient use of agency resources. The agency felt comfortable with this model of procurement, as the competitive dialogue process allows successful respondents to ‘hit the ground running’.
04
Development of an analytics architecture to support enhanced business intelligence
THE PROBLEM
A human services agency needed assistance to develop a strategy to manage a large number of data collections required for evaluation of a number of priority Government programs as well as reporting, monitoring and planning, and to develop an analytics architecture. Data is sourced from a range of systems as well as manual data collections. An implementation roadmap for warehousing the relevant data collections was also required.
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OUR APPROACH
The data collection approach that was in use was very complex and there was considerable duplication across programs. The first step in the process was a review of the data collections and an assessment of the feasibility of rationalising and standardising these. Several options to go forward arose out of this review and these were analysed in light of stakeholder feedback on the constraints and capability of the department and the emphasis on change for the areas of real need.
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Once an option was decided upon, we were able to provide a roadmap and resourcing plan for the agency, which involved reaching their desired goal state through an iterative process, aligning with departmental and government strategies at each step. This put the agency on a steady path to enhanced analytics capability while still ensuring that they had the flexibility to take advantage of the inevitable technological advances in the analytics space.
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THE OUTCOME
In total, the project delivered an assessment of the maturity of the current analytics capability, systems, tools and infrastructure and the goal state and of the source systems in use and the challenges with extracting data from these into the warehouse. It ensured strategic alignment between the broader agency initiatives and the programs under review. It provided a gap analysis between the current warehouse and the future capacity of this to meet the identified data requirements.
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The development and evaluation of options to meet analytics requirements, with an assessment of dependencies, constraints, risks and costs was a transparent mechanism to decide on and develop the proposed architecture for the future state. This architecture was supported by a implementation roadmap which identified the activities to transition to this architecture from the current state. Finally, despite the large nature of the project, costing and resource requirements to implement the recommended option were given so that the project was given the best opportunity to proceeded without major administrative roadblocks or complications.
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