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Why Grant Thornton
Whether you’re growing in one market or many, looking to operate more effectively, managing risk and regulation, or realising stakeholder value, our firms can help.
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Culture and experience
Grant Thornton’s culture is one of our most valuable assets and has steered us in the right direction for more than 100 years.
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Global scale and capability
Beyond global scale, we embrace what makes each market unique, local understanding on a global scale.
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Join our network
In a world that wants more options for high quality services, we differentiate in the market to grow sustainably in today’s rapidly changing environment.
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Leadership governance and quality
Grant Thornton International Ltd acts as the coordinating entity for member firms in the network with a focus on areas such as strategy, risk, quality monitoring and brand.
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Africa
24 member firms supporting your business.
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Americas
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19 member firms with nearly 25,000 people to support you.
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Business consulting services
Our business consulting services can help you improve your operational performance and productivity, adding value throughout your growth life cycle.
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Business risk services
The relationship between a company and its auditor has changed. Organisations must understand and manage risk and seek an appropriate balance between risk and opportunities.
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As organisations become increasingly dependent on digital technology, the opportunities for cyber criminals continue to grow.
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Forensic services
At Grant Thornton, we have a wealth of knowledge in forensic services and can support you with issues such as dispute resolution, fraud and insurance claims.
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We work with entrepreneurial businesses in the mid-market to help them assess the true commercial potential of their planned acquisition and understand how the purchase might serve their longer-term strategic goals.
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Recovery and reorganisation
Workable solutions to maximise your value and deliver sustainable recovery.
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Transactional advisory services
We can support you throughout the transaction process – helping achieve the best possible outcome at the point of the transaction and in the longer term.
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We provide a wide range of services to recovery and reorganisation professionals, companies and their stakeholders.
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At Grant Thornton, our IFRS advisers can help you navigate the complexity of financial reporting from IFRS 1 to IFRS 17 and IAS 1 to IAS 41.
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Audit quality monitoring
Having a robust process of quality control is one of the most effective ways to guarantee we deliver high-quality services to our clients.
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Our global assurance technology platform provides the ability to conduct client acceptance, consultations and all assurance and other attestation engagements.
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Our trusted teams can prepare corporate tax files and ruling requests, support you with deferrals, accounting procedures and legitimate tax benefits.
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Our teams have in-depth knowledge of the relationship between domestic and international tax laws.
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Global mobility services
Through our global organisation of member firms, we support both companies and individuals, providing insightful solutions to minimise the tax burden for both parties.
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Indirect international tax
Using our finely tuned local knowledge, teams from our global organisation of member firms help you understand and comply with often complex and time-consuming regulations.
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Transfer pricing
The laws surrounding transfer pricing are becoming ever more complex, as tax affairs of multinational companies are facing scrutiny from media, regulators and the public
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Africa tax desk
A differentiating solution adapted to the context of your investments in Africa.
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Banking Holding banking to account: the real diversity and inclusion pictureWe explore how the banking sector can continue to attract, retain and nurture women to build a more diverse and inclusive future.
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Sustainability From voluntary to mandatory ESG: How banks can future-proof their operationsAs we move from voluntary ESG initiatives to mandatory legislation, we explore what the banking sector needs to prioritise.
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IFRS IFRS 9 - Audit of Expected Credit LossesGPPC releases The Auditor’s response to the risks of material misstatement posed by estimates of expected credit losses under IFRS 9
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growthiQ Steering your company to long-term successHistory has something important to tell us about the difficulties of steering a business to long-term success – through seismic shifts in technology, consumer demands and product development. With that in mind it’s unsurprising that over half the world’s largest companies in the early 1900s had shut their doors by the late 1990s. Some, however, have endured.
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International Financial Reporting Standards Implementation of IFRS 17 ‘Insurance Contracts’The auditor’s response to the risks of material misstatement arising from estimates made in applying IFRS 17 ‘Insurance Contracts’
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IFRS Get ready for IFRS 17After twenty years of development the IASB has published IFRS 17 ‘Insurance Contracts’, find out more.
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Global business pulse - industry analysis Mid-market recovery spreads to more industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - industry analysis A very uneven recovery across industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - Sector analysis Clear patterns of damage from COVID-19 across the industriesThe index results for 12 key sectors of the mid-market reveal just how much or little the various parts of the economy were impacted by COVID-19.
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Not for profit Mission: possible – putting impact at the heart of charityGlobal charitable continues to decline and charity leaders are increasingly looking at their own unique impact journey.
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Access to finance Raise finance to invest in changePrepare your business to raise finance to invest in change.
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Private equity firms Private equity in the mid-market: reshaping strategies for 2021When the global COVID-19 pandemic stormed across the globe in early 2020, the private equity sector was hit hard but deals are coming back to the market.
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Mid-market businesses Getting ready for private equity investmentOur specialists explore how private equity firms are now working with their portfolios and how the mid-market can benefit from investment.
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Mid-market businesses Myth-busting private equityNervous about partnering with Private Equity? We explore some of the common myths we come across when speaking to mid-market businesses about PE investment.
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Public sector Helping build the government of tomorrow, todayLearn about the Grant Thornton US public sector team.
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Global business pulse - industry analysis Mid-market recovery spreads to more industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - industry analysis A very uneven recovery across industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - Sector analysis Clear patterns of damage from COVID-19 across the industriesThe index results for 12 key sectors of the mid-market reveal just how much or little the various parts of the economy were impacted by COVID-19.
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Industries European Real Estate PodcastJessica Patel, Tax Partner at Grant Thornton UK speaks with tax partners and directors across the network to share their insights on the real estate market and some of the challenges.
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Industries European Real Estate PodcastJessica Patel, Tax Partner at Grant Thornton UK speaks with tax partners and directors across the network to share their insights on the real estate market and some of the challenges.
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Global business pulse - industry analysis Mid-market recovery spreads to more industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - industry analysis A very uneven recovery across industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - industry analysis Mid-market recovery spreads to more industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Global business pulse - industry analysis A very uneven recovery across industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Retail How retail is positioning for successCOVID-19 provided some hard lessons for the retail industry. It is time to turn those into sustainable and well executed growth strategies in 2021.
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Telecoms Can tech and telecom leverage economic headwindsAs most businesses brace for an economic downturn, tech and telecom could see new prospects. But, to turn the headwinds to your advantage, you need to find your unique opportunities and risks.
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Technology Mid-market tech companies lead the way on diversity and inclusionWe explore how the mid-market tech sector can continue to build and nurture a culture that’s increasingly more diverse and inclusive for women.
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Tax Resetting global tax rules after the pandemicBusinesses are seeing rising challenges, and finance heads are dealing with a range of new measures. To say the next 12 months are critical for businesses is an understatement.
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TECHNOLOGY International tax reform: the potential impact on the technology industryIn this article, we’ve summarised key elements of the global tax reform proposals, their potential impact on technology industry and advice from our digital tax specialists on what technology companies can do to prepare.
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Telecoms Can tech and telecom leverage economic headwindsAs most businesses brace for an economic downturn, tech and telecom could see new prospects. But, to turn the headwinds to your advantage, you need to find your unique opportunities and risks.
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TMT TMT industry: Fully charged or on standby?Our research revealed five key trends that resonated with Technology, Media and Telecoms (TMT) industry leaders around the world. We asked a panel of our experts from UK, US, India Ireland and Germany, to give us their reaction to the findings.
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Cybersecurity One size fits nothingTechnology companies must adopt a new approach to digital risk: those that successfully develop a reputation for digital trust by demonstrating an unwavering commitment to cyber security and data privacy will be able to carve out a competitive advantage.
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Technology, media & telecommunications Why it’s time for a 5G reality checkFigures suggest the mobile sector is maturing. While data usage continues to soar, mobile revenues are expected to flatten out over the next few years.
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International business Mid-market businesses lifted by rising tide of optimismOptimism among global mid-market business leaders rose to 67% in the first half of this year and they are markedly more optimistic about their prospects with global optimism having increased by 8%.
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Global business pulse - industry analysis Mid-market recovery spreads to more industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
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Hotels COVID-19: Checking in with the hotel industry one year onCOVID-19 provided some hard lessons for the hotel sector. It is time to turn those into sustainable and well executed growth strategies.
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Global business pulse - industry analysis A very uneven recovery across industriesThe index results for 13 key industries of the mid-market reveals a very uneven recovery from COVID-19
- By topic
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Women in Business 2024
2024 marks the 20th year of monitoring and measuring the proportion of women occupying senior management roles around the world.
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COP28: Mid-market firms should seize the opportunity from adaption and innovation
COP28 was the first time there has been a global stocktake on progress against the Paris Agreement.
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Scanning the horizon: Mid-market sets sights on global trade growth
The latest International Business Report (IBR) data shows that mid-market businesses have high expectations for global trade.
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Mid-market sees business optimism reach record high
Grant Thornton's latest International Business Report (IBR) sees optimism among mid-market business leaders reach a record high with 74% optimistic about the outlook for their economy over the next 12 months.
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Women in tech: A pathway to gender balance in top tech roles
Grant Thornton’s 2024 Women in Business data suggests we are far from achieving parity within the mid-market technology sector.
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Women in leadership: a pathway to better performance
What makes the benefits of gender parity compelling is the impact it can have on commercial performance.
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Women in Business 2024
2024 marks the 20th year of monitoring and measuring the proportion of women occupying senior management roles around the world.
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Women in business: Regional picture
We saw an increase in the percentage of senior management roles held by women, on a global level, but there are some significant regional and country variations.
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Pathways to Parity: Leading the way
To push towards parity of senior management roles held by women, who leads within an organisation is vital.
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Generating real change with a long-term focus
The most successful strategy to achieve parity of women in senior management is one which stands alone, independent of an ESG strategy.
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People at the heart of great business
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Focusing and developing a solid strategy around diversity, equity and inclusion
Grant Thornton Greece is pioneering a growing set of diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) initiatives that centre around three strategic pillars.
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Ten considerations for preparing TCFD climate-related financial disclosures
Insights for organisations preparing to implement the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)’s Standards.
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COP28
COP28 was the first time there has been a global stocktake on progress against the Paris Agreement.
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Transition Plan Taskforce publishes its final disclosure framework
As organisations in the private sector make commitments and plans to reach net zero, there's a growing need for stakeholders to be able to assess the credibility of their transition plans.
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Promoting ESG excellence through tax
ESG considerations have never been more important for an organisation’s long-term success, but how can tax be used to add value to an ESG agenda?
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International business: Mid-market growth and expansion
The mid-market looks to international business opportunities for growth.
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Top five constraints to international business in the mid-market
Top five major constraints that are testing the mid-market’s ability to grow their businesses internationally.
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Brand and international marketing – breaking global barriers
Brand has been identified as a key driver of mid-market success when looking to grow and develop international business.
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The key to international business: Investing in people
How can recruitment and retention help grow international business?
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Building resilience in international business
Evolving supply chains and trade patterns amid ongoing global uncertainty.
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IFRS Alerts
IFRS Alerts covering the latest changes published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).
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Example Financial Statements
General guidance for preparers of financial statements that supports the commitment to high quality, consistent application of IFRS.
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Insights into IFRS 2
Insights into IFRS 2 summarises the key areas of the Standard, highlighting aspects that are more difficult to interpret and revisiting the most relevant features that could impact your business.
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IFRS 3
Mergers and acquisitions are becoming more common as entities aim to achieve their growth objectives. IFRS 3 ‘Business Combinations’ contains the requirements for these transactions.
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IFRS 8
Our ‘Insights into IFRS 8’ series considers some key implementation issues and includes interpretational guidance in certain problematic areas.
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IFRS 16
Are you ready for IFRS 16? This series of insights will help you prepare.
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IAS 36
Insights into IAS 36 provides assistance for preparers of financial statements and help where confusion has been seen in practice.
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IFRS 17
Explaining the key features of the Standard and providing insights into its application and impact.
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Pillar 2
Key updates and support for the global implementation of Pillar 2.
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Global expatriate tax guide
Growing businesses that send their greatest assets – their people – overseas to work can face certain tax burdens, our global guide highlights the common tax rates and issues.
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International indirect tax guide
Navigating the global VAT, GST and sales tax landscape.
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Global transfer pricing guide
Helping you easily find everything you need to know about the rules and regulations regarding transfer pricing and Country by Country reporting for every country you do business with.
T hheealthcare sector is still experimenting with using big data
But, as Anne McGeorge the national managing partner of healthcare at Grant Thornton US shares, it already has plenty to teach us about the benefits and challenges of big data analytics.
Healthcare providers have been collating big data long before we even knew it existed. Today, in certain controlled environments, technology allows for vast databases of detailed medical records to be digitised and analysed on a scale large enough to detect patterns invisible to the human eye.
At the same time, the healthcare sector is undergoing a fundamental cultural shift in which healthcare providers are paid for ensuring patients remain healthy rather than for a particular treatment or procedure. Big data analytics can help providers make this transition from a fee-for-service model to a value-based model.
However in making the transition, healthcare providers are encountering some important challenges: how do we organise the data we have, and how do we make impactful use of it? How do we collect and store highly sensitive data securely while making it available for data analytics? How do we make databases from different but related institutions talk to each other? And how is data in that federated environment managed and distributed effectively so that every data user has the same experience?
These are questions that the leaders of every business in every sector need to ask themselves before embarking on the big data journey.
A values-based approach
Healthcare systems around the world face multiple challenges: caring for aging populations; treating rising rates of serious conditions such as heart disease, diabetes and obesity; and increasing patient expectations and standards of accountability. This, twinned with dwindling public funds to pay for healthcare, is persuading policymakers to move towards a values-based approach to providing healthcare.
In the US, for example, where the federal government’s Medicare programme funds health insurance payments for the elderly and selected younger people, more than 50% of insurance payments for the over-65s must be paid this way by 2020. In 2009 the UK government introduced an initiative called Commissioning for Quality and Innovation, which allows 2.5% of the cost of hospital treatment to be held back, contingent on outcomes.
These types of reform are already driving efforts to use big data to understand the true health of patient populations and to make appropriate recommendations that keep people healthy.
However, big data analytics can play a much bigger part. For example, it can help detect early warning signs in a flu outbreak by understanding the underlying causes and therefore treat affected patients more efficiently. It can also help government healthcare systems and healthcare insurers discover insights that lead to more effective and financially sustainable treatments. For example, by understanding the underlying genetic causes of diseases, existing drugs can be repurposed to treat those illnesses.
Paying for outcomes
Alongside what providers are paid for, how they are paid also has an impact on the case for big data.
Many governments and insurers have moved towards a system where a single payment is offered for a full care cycle of acute medical conditions, or for a defined period of overall care for chronic conditions. In Sweden, the Stockholm authorities have been using this approach for hip and knee replacements since 2009; in Germany, such payments are offered for hospital inpatient care. It’s an approach that’s encouraging providers to be more efficient and collaborative in the way they deliver healthcare. Big data can help that collaboration.
For example, if healthcare providers can gather data about the treatment of a given condition across multiple institutions they can also identify common factors in efficient and cost effective instances. Sharing that data across the sector can help to reduce ‘clinical variation’ – instances of the same treatment leading to different outcomes.
Taking a longer-term view, big data can help providers understand if certain treatments or procedures really lead to improved patient welfare down the line. If they don’t, providers could save costs by not carrying out unnecessary procedures.
Cyber-risks
A global push towards electronic medical records systems will create the big data that enables these types of collaborations to take place. But storing data electronically comes with risks. Cyber-crime and the threat to patient privacy is the top concern of hospital CEOs right now. In the US alone, 113 million medical records were hacked in 2015 and 3.5 million were breached in the first quarter of this year, according to government figures.
Data security isn’t the only issue that can undermine the public’s trust in having their personal data collected and stored. The lack of regulation governing how this data can be used is also a challenge and can have the add-on effect of people choosing not to share their data in the first place. This threatens the potential promise of data-derived innovation and makes large datasets more difficult to manage, increasing the chances of a data breach.
Electronic medical records are just one of hundreds of IT systems in the healthcare sector that will need to be interoperable – that is, be able to ‘talk’ to each other – if big data is to be used to its full potential. Data breaches could occur at every point of connectivity, which is why providers need to audit their systems to ensure they are secure and ensure there are safeguards at any points of weakness.
In addition, providers should have a well-thought-out plan they can implement in the event of a data breach. That’s tougher in healthcare than in other sectors because, as one hospital CEO told me: “You cannot shut down the clinical systems or people will die.”
Providers need to understand what types of breaches might occur, as well as the operational and IT implications of those breaches – principles that apply in other sectors. For example, which systems can and cannot be shut down? What are the legal implications to consider; not easy in a world where technological advances are outpacing the governance and legal frameworks, especially when it is unclear who 'owns' the data? Most healthcare providers haven’t thought through all these questions yet and so dealing with cyber-crime becomes very reactive. Although some are starting to take a more planned and organised approach.
Private-sector opportunities
Despite the risks, the potential of big data to improve healthcare provision can’t be ignored. The challenge is finding the resources to exploit that potential. For public healthcare providers who are accountable for how they spend taxpayers’ money, that might not be an option, which leaves a space for private-sector providers to step in and offer this service.
Many big healthcare insurers are trialling big data, including Swiss Re, Zurich and several US-based insurers. They are using technology such as IBM's Watson which analyses vast amounts of unstructured data to answer particular questions, extract key information or reveal data insights to improve patient outcomes.
Over the next few years, we are likely to see some private companies take a lead in this field, making a name for themselves by gathering and mining public/private healthcare data for beneficial patient and provider outcomes. Strong data governance systems in the private sector will also give rise to interoperability challenges that will need to be addressed.
Open data initiatives could provide another route to harnessing the benefits of big data. In the UK, the government-funded 100,000 Genomes Project has opened the genetic data of 100,000 patients up to public and private sectors organisations to help sequence 100,000 genomes by 2017. The project hopes to enable the UK to make strides in the genomics field, leading to a host of benefits such as earlier and more precise diagnosis, faster clinical trials for new drugs and treatments and, ultimately, new cures.
The big data journey
Embarking on the big data journey can be daunting but healthcare providers will need to get on board. As the sector moves towards a values-based rewards system, public and private providers that leverage big data and share it across the care-delivery ecosystem will be able to offer more efficient and effective treatment.
The healthcare industry can be a leader for what could happen in other sectors too. Yes, big data has its challenges: security, governance and interoperability, to name a few – but it also has multiple benefits that, ultimately, will lead to deeper insights and improved outcomes, performance and growth. Not to mention healthier communities.
To find out more about harnessing big data to improve your performance, contact Anne McGeorge.