- 97 percent say COVID-19 has significantly accelerated the change agenda
- 79 percent believe that, within the next three years, all aspects of care delivery models will be transformed
- 84 percent believe transformation won鈥檛 happen without real change, including reforming the way care providers are incentivized
The COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating transformation in healthcare systems across the globe, but obstacles including workforce stability, provider incentivization and innovation barriers could slow progress, according to 200 healthcare leaders from around the world.
Chief Executives from some of the world鈥檚 leading public and private healthcare providers in eight geographies were interviewed for 乐鱼(Leyu)体育官网鈥檚 first ever Global Healthcare CEO Future Pulse. The report鈥檚 breadth and scale offers insights into how healthcare leaders overseeing hospitals, health systems and care provider networks, are preparing for the future.
Healthcare providers have been on the frontlines of international efforts to tackle the pandemic. Now, as many jurisdictions plan and transition to post-COVID recovery, the healthcare sector itself is preparing for longer-term transformation. While more than half of CEOs (62 percent) were already undertaking substantial change prior to the pandemic, COVID-19 has significantly accelerated the change agendas of 97 percent of respondents.
The vast majority (79 percent) of CEOs interviewed believe that, within the next three years, all aspects of care delivery models will be transformed, but the sector faces significant obstacles and challenges ahead.
Ability to meet demand, the impact of new operating models on staff, supporting wellness and recruiting new talent were the biggest workforce concerns leaders reported, as the sector readies itself for significant future reform and change.
Sixty-five percent of CEOs identify the risks associated with technological change as their top barrier to innovation, while roughly two-thirds (67 percent) of executives acknowledge the need to focus more acutely on talent and resources, and 84 percent believe transformation won鈥檛 happen without more systemic change such as reforming the way care providers are incentivized.
The vast majority of CEOs agree the traditional care delivery ecosystem is evolving, with 70 percent expecting hospitals themselves to evolve into 鈥榟ealthcare hubs鈥�, focused on specialty care and 63 percent believe it鈥檚 important to shift the delivery of care into more community settings.