Twenty questions across the seven domains your informatics function actually has to defend — governance, data integrity, CDS, AI, patient safety, workforce, and the technology burden on your clinicians. The same diagnostic conversation tool I use with executive teams before any engagement begins.
Each domain is a separately scored slice of the diagnostic picture — and each is grounded in peer-reviewed evidence, regulatory programs, or three decades of clinical-informatics practice. The Scorecard surfaces which one is failing first.
The Scorecard estimates your organization's annual Burden of Disease from clinical-informatics deficiency — a financial figure typically $15M–$50M per year for a midsize system, vs. $3M–$7M for a properly funded informatics program. The ROI math is rarely close.
Answer Yes only when the statement is unambiguously and consistently true. Somewhat means it's partial, inconsistent, or in progress. No is honest. The instrument is calibrated to the discipline of clinical examination — overstating gets you nowhere.
Done? See your diagnosis. The PDF will generate and download instantly.
What follows is the first step of the workup. The PDF below carries the full record; The Diagnostician's copy sits unopened until you ask for the engagement.
The H&P Scorecard told you how your informatics function is doing. The Benefits Realization Assessment tells you what it's worth — dollarized opportunities across all twelve pillars, the Cross-Impact Matrix, and the full 133-KPI Symptoms Inventory. About ten minutes.
Take the Benefits Realization Assessment →The Scorecard is the History. The Workup, the Diagnosis, and the Treatment Plan happen during an engagement. I only take on patients who want my care.