
What You Should Know:
– Xsolis, an AI-driven technology company that reduces administrative waste by enabling collaboration between healthcare providers and payers launches Dragonfly Navigate, a discharge planning and capacity management solution designed to help optimize length of stay.
– West Tennessee Healthcare, a not-for-profit leading regional healthcare system, has expanded their existing partnership with Xsolis and will be the first healthcare system to pilot the new solution.
Optimizing Length of Stay Analytics to Improve Care Coordination
Dragonfly Navigate is Xsolis’ third offering in this space and is a more comprehensive solution that incorporates length-of-stay analytics directly into clinical workflows with automated, AI-powered tasks. This is designed to drive efficiency, improve care coordination, and make it easier to identify and address the root causes of discharge barriers and avoidable delays.
Key features of Xsolis’ Dragonfly Navigate include:
- Proprietary AI Models: Predict discharge date and disposition early in the encounter for proactive planning.
- Automated AI-Powered Tasks: Alert users to predicted conflicts and discharge opportunities.
- Thoughtful Documentation: Provides standardized, clinically curated data sets designed for efficiency and on-unit planning.
- Bi-directional EMR Integration: Prevents double documentation and data silos while avoiding disruption of current workflows.
- Performance Dashboards: Offers facility dashboards with metrics to manage capacity, identify discharge opportunities, and track patients with known barriers.
- Retrospective Dashboards: Connects performance trends to root causes of avoidable delays and workflows.
“Length of stay is the next frontier for bringing our customers significant savings,” said Joan Butters, CEO and co-founder of Xsolis. “We have listened to their needs and are excited to deliver a more seamless workflow solution with Dragonfly Navigate, which builds on the success of our previous products to drive length of stay improvements.”