Your hospital's numbers,
before you scroll.
Enter three data points. Pulse calculates your projected readmission savings, monthly deterioration flags, and CMS penalty reduction.
Enter your bed count and readmission rate to generate your projection
Seven metrics. One clear answer.
Legacy alerting systems were built for compliance documentation, not clinical prediction. The gap compounds every shift.
Sources: NEJM 2024, JAMA Internal Medicine 2023, CMS HRRP FY2026 Final Rule, prospective validation studies (n=5, 2025 meta-analysis). Legacy system data based on published NEWS algorithm validation literature.
Peer-reviewed. Prospectively validated.
Five prospectively validated studies. One meta-analysis. The numbers don't change because the study design is rigorous.
Three tiers. One pattern.
Anonymized outcomes across community, regional, and academic health systems.
Facing 1.8% CMS readmission penalty with a 16.4% 30-day readmission rate, two understaffed med-surg floors, and no dedicated rapid response coordinator.
After 90-day Pulse deployment, the system reduced readmissions by 19% and eliminated 6 of 8 monthly RRT activations that were previously missed on overnight shifts.
Post-merger IT consolidation left nursing staff managing three alert systems simultaneously. Alert fatigue had degraded response times to genuine deterioration events by an estimated 40%.
Pulse replaced all three legacy alert streams. False alert volume dropped from 3.7 to 0.6 per shift within 60 days. Clinical staff response time to genuine flags improved from 22 minutes to 8 minutes.
Teaching hospital with high patient complexity and 23% ICU transfer rate from med-surg. Residents flagging deterioration events an average of 2.1 hours after onset — well past the intervention window.
Pulse flagged 94% of deterioration events an average of 14.2 hours before escalation. ICU transfer rate from med-surg dropped 12 percentage points over two quarters.
See your hospital's full model.
A 30-minute session with a clinical solutions engineer. Your EHR, your bed count, your penalty exposure — modeled live.
240 hospitals (8.1%) face penalties of 1% or more beginning October 1, 2026 — up from 208 in FY2025. CMS is expected to include Medicare Advantage enrollees in FY2027 calculations, with 75–82% of hospitals projected to face some penalty. The deployment window to affect FY2027 scores is narrowing.