Marco Insights for Governments

Marco Insights enables ministries and health agencies to monitor the real therapeutic challenges of their care network: which conditions generate the most uncertainty, which treatments concentrate queries, and how gaps vary by region. A unique real-time clinical epidemiology tool.

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Some answers to questions we often receive

Can Marco Insights segment data by region or facility type?

Yes. Data can be segmented by country, region, institution type (hospital, primary care, clinic), and medical specialty, enabling granular analyses for health policy decision-making.

How quickly can the government access data?

Marco Insights can deliver scheduled periodic reports or real-time dashboard access depending on the needs of the ministry or health agency.

Can Marco Insights detect early signals of emerging outbreaks or health emergencies?

Yes. Real-time monitoring of query patterns can detect sudden increases in queries about certain symptoms or diagnoses, potentially serving as an early warning signal for emerging epidemiological events at the regional level.

How is data privacy guaranteed?

All data is anonymized and aggregated. There is no way to identify individual physicians or patients in Marco Insights reports.

Can Marco Insights support the design of continuing medical education programs?

Yes. By identifying the clinical situations where physicians show the most uncertainty, Marco Insights enables ministries to design CME programs focused on the most prevalent knowledge gaps with the greatest impact on care quality.

Is Marco Insights data comparable across countries for multilateral analyses?

Yes. Marco Insights enables comparative analyses across countries and regions, especially valuable for multilateral bodies like PAHO/WHO or governments seeking international benchmarking of their clinical quality indicators.

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Governments lack visibility into the knowledge gaps and real therapeutic challenges of physicians in their public network, making it difficult to prioritize resources and training programs.