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Creating greater acute care consistency across a multi-hospital health system

Home » Creating greater acute care consistency across a multi-hospital health system

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Creating greater acute care consistency across a multi-hospital health system

Home » Creating greater acute care consistency across a multi-hospital health system

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Creating greater acute care consistency across a multi-hospital health system

Creating greater acute care consistency across a multi-hospital health system

Case study: A multi-state health system unified 80 emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and critical care programs within 18 months—reducing care variation, cutting LWOT by 2.5 percentage points, halving door-to-provider time, lowering average length of stay, and sustaining clinician retention above 95%—through a system-wide strategic partnership built on unified governance, integrated clinical teams, and AI-enabled workforce management.

At a glance

Metric

Result over 18 months

Programs unified

80

Door-to-provider time

​​Reduced ~50% (21 → 10 minutes)​

Left without treatment (LWOT)

​​Reduced 2.5 points (4.5% → 2.0%)​

Average length of stay (ALOS)

​​Reduced ~10% (4.1 → 3.7 days)​

Clinician retention

Sustained above 95%

Hospital medicine recruitment fill rate

Increased by 28 percentage points, reaching 87%

Locums utilization (HM)

16-point reduction, bringing the rate down to 1%

Care variation vs. similar programs

Least variation and highest clinical performance

Setting

Multi-state health system, south-central U.S.

The challenge: Fragmented practices, inconsistent results

A major multi-state health system in the south-central United States operated acute care services through a patchwork of clinician practice arrangements. Emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and critical care were staffed by different groups across different hospitals, sometimes by different groups within the same hospital. The system had grown, but its clinical operating model had not been redesigned to match its scale. 

The fragmentation showed up in three places leadership cared about most: 

  • Quality and revenue cycle inconsistency: Different protocols, different documentation standards, and different reporting cadences across sites made it difficult to manage to a common standard. 
  • Workforce friction: Scheduling, coverage, and clinician feedback were handled differently at each program. Locums utilization was high, recruitment was uneven, and retention varied by site. 
  • Financial pressure: The system operated in markets with challenging payor mixes and elevated subsidy requirements. Fragmented operations made it harder to manage the gap. 


Leaders concluded that the operating model itself had to change. As described in our work on 
integrated hospital medicine leadership, system-level performance requires a system-level operating chassis: shared governance, consistent clinical teams, and a single source of truth for workforce and quality data. 

The approach: A system-wide strategic partnership

The system and SCP Health entered a system-wide strategic partnership designed to operate the full acute care portfolio—emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and critical care—under a single operating model. Implementation was phased across the 80 programs in scope, with a working cadence designed to absorb change at the speed each site could sustain. The partnership rested on three operating pillars. 

Unified governance and shared accountability 

Decision-making was consolidated under a joint operating framework. System and clinical leaders set shared performance targets, reviewed a common dashboard, and resolved escalations through a single forum rather than through separate vendor conversations. The structure gave the system a level of transparency it had not previously had and gave clinical teams a clearer line of sight into how their work connects to enterprise outcomes. 

Integrated clinical teams across emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and critical care 

Rather than maintaining separate staffing arrangements per service line and per site, the partnership stood up unified clinical teams that operated under consistent protocols. The teams blended physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and teleclinicians, supported by national clinician staffing and recruiting infrastructure and on-site clinical leadership development. Consistency at the clinician level was the precondition for consistency at the quality and financial level. 

AI-enabled workforce management and a hub-and-spoke virtual care model 

Scheduling, coverage, and surge response were unified onto an AI-driven dynamic staffing, giving the system real-time visibility into where capacity sat and where it was needed. A hub-and-spoke virtual and connected care architecture—including teletriage and telehospitalist services—extended the reach of clinical teams across sites without adding net new on-site headcount. 

The impact: Measurable change at scale, in 18 months

Why the model scales 

Three structural choices explain why the gains were delivered in 18 months rather than several years, and why they have proven durable. 

Shared governance reduces decision latency 

With a single operating framework and shared decision rights, system and clinical leaders no longer needed to negotiate the same issues at each program independently. Decisions made once propagated across the portfolio. That is the single biggest reason 80 programs could be unified in 18 months rather than three years. 

Unified teams change what culture looks like 

Consistent compensation, contract language, and quality expectations gave clinicians a clear answer to the question “what is expected of me, and what can I count on?” — the precondition for retention at scale. Investing in clinical leadership development on top of that consistency turned a contracting change into a culture change. 

Technology unlocks regional capacity 

AI-enabled scheduling and a hub-and-spoke virtual care architecture let the system flex capacity across sites, which both improved patient access and reduced reliance on locums. A clinician in a hub facility can support a spoke ED through teletriage in minutes — a kind of capacity that does not exist in a fragmented model.

Implications for health system leaders

The transferable lessons from this engagement highlight that multi-hospital performance improvement depends greatly on the operating chassis underneath it: 

  • Standardize what delivers improved outcomes at the level of teams, protocols, and dashboards. 
  • Sequence the work. Eighty programs at once is too many; one program at a time is too slow. A phased rollout with a common cadence is what delivers sustainable results quickly. 
  • Treat workforce technology as core infrastructure. Scheduling, coverage, and virtual are how capacity moves. 
  • Invest in clinical leadership inside the system. The medical director bench is the single most important asset in sustaining the gains. 


These are the same operating principles SCP Health applies across 
emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and critical care programs nationwide, supported by our operational performance and clinician staffing and recruiting capabilities.

Frequently asked questions

How do health systems reduce care variation across multiple hospitals? 

Sustainable reductions in care variation come from three things working together: shared governance with a common performance dashboard, unified clinical teams operating under consistent protocols, and a single workforce platform that gives leaders real-time visibility into scheduling and coverage. Standardizing only one of those layers does not move variation; standardizing all three does. In this case study, the partnership achieved the least care variation observed across comparable health system engagements in the SCP Health network. 

What is a unified clinical team model? 

A unified clinical team model blends physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and teleclinicians under shared protocols, shared performance expectations, and consistent compensation and contract language across sites. The unit of accountability is the team, not a single clinician’s contract. This model is well-suited to multi-hospital systems because it standardizes the patient-facing experience while still letting each program flex to local volume and acuity. 

How does AI-driven workforce management improve hospital staffing? 

AI-enabled workforce platforms give system leaders real-time visibility into demand and coverage across every site, surface staffing gaps before they become surge events, and support agile schedule changes when patient volume shifts. In multi-hospital systems, this is the layer that lets capacity move across facilities — a clinician in one hub can support a spoke ED through teletriage or telehospitalist services, rather than each site bearing its load alone. 

What is a hub-and-spoke acute care model? 

A hub-and-spoke acute care model designates one or more larger facilities as clinical hubs that support smaller “spoke” sites through a combination of standardized protocols, local flexibility, shared clinical leadership, and virtual care services such as teletriage and telehospitalist coverage. The model is designed to extend the reach of specialized clinical resources and to provide consistent capacity across a multi-hospital footprint. 

How can a multi-hospital partnership improve clinician retention? 

Retention rises when clinicians experience consistency: consistent compensation, consistent contract language, consistent expectations, and a clear leadership track. In this case study, retention was sustained above 95% during the transition specifically because compensation, contracts, and quality expectations were standardized, and because the partnership invested in clinical leadership development on top of that consistency. 

How long does it take to standardize acute care across a multi-hospital system? 

Timeline depends on how many programs are in scope and on the change capacity of the system, but a phased rollout under a shared operating framework can typically unify dozens of programs within 12 to 24 months. The case study described here unified 80 emergency medicine, hospital medicine, and critical care programs within 18 months. 

How is this different from a contract or staffing arrangement? 

A staffing contract change re-papers a relationship. A system-wide strategic partnership rebuilds the operating model underneath it — shared governance, integrated teams, a single workforce platform, and a coordinated virtual care architecture. That is the difference between negotiating new terms with the same patchwork and changing how the system actually runs. 

Related insights and resources

  • Service: Hospital medicine services 
  • Service: Critical care services 
  • Service: Emergency medicine services 
  • Insight: AI-powered operational excellence: Transforming hospital operations 
  • Resource: Systemness self-assessment 

About SCP Health: SCP Health partners with hospitals and health systems to deliver clinical and operational solutions across emergency medicine, hospital medicine, critical care, and integrated acute care. We support more than 6,500 clinicians serving 10 million patient encounters annually across hundreds of programs nationwide. 

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