STAT HOSPITAL DATA
AXON STAT HOSPITAL DATA

Provides financial analysts and research professionals with the close-to-real-time data necessary to understand today’s dynamic acute care environment.

Provides robust hospital claims data, custom analytics and insights into the utilization of products, drugs, and services in the U.S. acute hospital environment.
what’s stat data?
Axon’s 3-Step Stat Data Process

CAPTURE
weekly reports
Outpatient
Axon captures inpatient & outpatient claims data reported 7-45 days after discharge from approximately 10% of US hospitals.

MODEL
statistical modeling
to AHA universe
We employ state-of-the-art Marketing Science to clean, weight and project the data to the totality of US hospitals, calibrating it against the AHA dataset for maximum reliability.

DELIVER
Distributors
Analysts / End Users
Subscribers receive their desired subset of the data weekly or monthly, with “flash” numbers provided as early as possible. The data is further refined as hospitals report and/or correct their data.
Subscribers can select virtually any “slice” of US hospital data, from specific procedures and products through drug categories or cost of care, inpatient and/or outpatient, national, regional, by state or even down to specific metro areas (depending on incidence & rate).
WHY STAT DATA?
OUR DATABASE
PATIENT LEVEL DATA
AS CLOSE TO REAL-TIME AS YOU CAN GET

Available data types:

Standard patient demographic data including, but not limited to, age, gender, region (e.g., SMSA), admit source, admit type and discharge status

Data across all procedural and diagnosis codes (ICD-9/10 and CPT-4), including day of procedure as well as unlimited patient diagnoses, clinical groupings (e.g. MSDRG and APC), AHRQ procedure class and chronic condition coding

All items billed, including quantity used and associated charges by day for each visit
HOSPITAL CHARACTERISTICS

Our hospital database represents most states across the U.S. – capturing approximately 10% of U.S. hospitals.

Data includes a mix of urban and rural, large to small, teaching and non-teaching facilities as well as outpatient centers/clinics.


Bed sizes ranging from under 20 to 2400. These data are generally representative of the U.S. hospital population, as hospitals are predominately small to mid-size, non-teaching facilities located in an urban setting.
WHY STAT DATA?
OUR TEAM
OUR TEAM
William Serad
Healthcare Data Analytics
Chief Methodologist
Roger Straus
Healthcare Data Analytics
Proposal Director
Harshal Thummar
Healthcare Data Analytics
Project Manager
Vidhya Thiagharajan
Healthcare Data Analytics
Project Manager
Nandkishor Patil
Healthcare Data Analytics
Project Manager
Pratik Wayangankar
Healthcare Data Analytics
Project Manager