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By Ken Shulman

 
Yet the world’s most costly health care system is neither its most effective nor efficient. Citizens of other developed countries enjoy better health outcomes and longer lives at a fraction of the price. According to the Institute of Medicine and the American Medical Association, around 30% of US health care dollars are wasted through misuse of resources. Retsef Levi, professor of operations management at MIT Sloan School of Management, isn’t sure he has all the answers to America’s health conundrum. But he thinks that he and his many colleagues at MIT are asking the right questions.

“If you want to change a system, you first need to understand how that system came into being,” says Levi, the J. Spencer Standish (1945) Professor of Operations Management at Sloan. “This country’s health system started to develop inorganically in the early 20th century focusing on care for sick people in hospitals. These hospitals delivered their services in exchange for fees. As a result, we have a system that focuses on treating the sick, instead of one that helps people to stay well.”

Born in Israel, Levi spent 11 years as an intelligence officer in the Israeli Defense Forces before earning degrees in mathematics and operations research. The latter discipline, he explains, is the science of leveraging data through models to inform decisions, particularly in a context of uncertainty. Levi and his colleagues use analytics and other quantitative methods to build data-driven models that help leaders and managers make decisions under the risks of an uncertain future.

Levi conducts research across a range of complex systems including supply chains, revenue management, and food safety. The uncertainties of health care, he says, are particularly complex—a unique web of technology, human behavior, politics, and culture. “Understanding the exact nature of the uncertainty is key,” he explains. “For example, I can’t predict exactly how many people will visit the emergency room at Mass General Hospital [MGH] on a specific hour and day in December. But I can build a model based on historical observations from the past three years on that day, and on similar days, and be able to get close to predicting.”

For Levi, the increasing availability of data opens up exciting opportunities in health care. Until recently, it was very difficult to predict when hospital patients were going to be discharged. Now, with big data from the new electronic medical records system at MGH and advanced analytics techniques, Levi’s MIT team and its MGH collaborators are able to predict daily discharges at an accuracy of over 90%. This enables providers to allocate resources more efficiently and substantially reduce patients’ wait time. The collaborative team also works on developing timely outpatient interventions and predictive risk models to reduce unnecessary and costly hospital admissions.

Retsef Levi, professor of operations management at MIT Sloan School of Management. Photo: Justin Knight

Levi believes the most commonly prescribed remedy for the US health care system—focusing merely on creating incentives that encourage hospitals to limit treatment and thus save money—is destined to fail. “You cannot change performance just by changing your pay structure,” he contends. “You need to design for performance, and then follow up with appropriate incentives.”

A co-leader in MIT Sloan’s Initiative for Health Systems Innovation, Levi is convinced that analytics coupled with human intelligence can help create a system designed to promote positive health outcomes and not just treat illness. “This requires a fundamental shift,” says Levi. “Not just in the US, but across the globe. At the moment, we don’t even have comprehensive metrics that can measure and help manage health outcomes.”

“I believe we’ve been asking the wrong questions about our health care system to this point,” says Levi. “Inefficient systems are not only costly, but are usually associated with bad outcomes. And our system is inefficient. Yet the only way to engage clinical teams to drive change is to focus on improving patient outcomes, which ultimately lead to lower cost and more efficient systems.”