Population health management (PHM) focuses on improving outcomes for defined populations by leveraging data to target interventions effectively.
Option A (Identify high-risk low-volume processes): This is more relevant to process improvement, not PHM, which prioritizes patient-level risks.
Option B (Determine the voice of the customer): Voice of the customer (e.g., patient surveys) informs satisfaction, not the core of PHM, which is risk stratification.
Option C (Determine high cost procedures): While cost analysis is part of PHM, it is secondary to identifying patient needs and risks.
Option D (Identify high-risk patients): This is the correct answer. The NAHQ CPHQ study guide states, “Population health management uses data to identify high-risk patients (e.g., those with chronic conditions or frequent admissions) for targeted interventions” (Domain 5). This aligns with PHM’s goal of improving outcomes through risk stratification.
CPHQ Objective Reference: Domain 5: Population Health and Care Transitions, Objective 5.1, “Use data to support population health management,” emphasizes identifying high-risk patients. The NAHQ study guide notes, “Data analytics in PHM focuses on stratifying patients by risk to prioritize care” (Domain 5).
Rationale: Identifying high-risk patients is the cornerstone of PHM, enabling targeted interventions to improve outcomes, as per CPHQ’s population health principles.
[Reference: NAHQ CPHQ Study Guide, Domain 5: Population Health and Care Transitions, Objective 5.1., , , , ]