Devices & Diagnostics

How J&J’s Walmart relationship is inspiring its device business

The worldwide chairman of Johnson & Johnson's medical device business shares the steps the business is taking to take advantage of value-based care and prove to be an indispensable long-term partner to hospital customers.

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The Affordable Care Act has laid the groundwork for a seismic shift in the way the medical device industry operates.

Traditionally, large companies like Johnson & Johnson built up an army of sales reps who would have relationships with the same hospital customer but touting the New Jersey’s companies individual products — be it cardio, ortho or general surgery. As value-based care gains a footing, health systems are focusing on how they can lower costs and improve outcomes through services and solutions as opposed to buying more and more hardware and implants that device firms are known for.

J&J’s medical device business has been ill-equipped to adjust to this shift and its financial performance has been poor. Last year it garnered $25.1 billion, down 8.7% from 2014. The division has also restructured and announced it would be eliminating thousands of jobs earlier this year. In a phone interview, Gary Pruden, J&J’s executive vice president and worldwide chairman for medical devices, explained how the unit is undergoing a wholesale metamorphosis to take advantage of the opportunities afforded by value-based care. One inspiration has been to take a page out of the consumer business book and see how it manages a really large customer:Walmart.

Gary Pruden, worldwide chairman,                                               J&J Medical Devices

“I have more than a dozen companies in the U.S. for example and in the past, they would all go to the hospital system provider separately. They all have separate P&Ls, they all operate independently, they all go separately,” Pruden recalled. “We made a conscious decision and actually this year we integrated all the different business into one single P&L and I have one single strategic account management group in the U.S.”

This model is unlike how other large device firms are fulfilling their go-to-marke strategy. For them, the product business and solutions business sit separately, Pruden declared referring to the likes of Zimmer Biomet and Stryker.

“They are trying to bring together a compilation of [offerings] and those solutions providers operate separately from those individual businesses,” Pruden claimed. “And when you talk to [hospital] customers, that’s a little challenging. They want to talk to one person.”

At J&J, that single account management group now has the power to speak on behalf of the product and service offerings of J&J Medical Devices with a single voice as well as to strike deals with hospital customers, partner with them and write contracts. The goal is not only to lower their costs but also share in the risk for clinical outcomes, Pruden said. If J&J  is able to achieve both, it wins with greater volume of products sold.

Pruden wouldn’t provide specifics about the value-based care offerings but said that there are certain demonstration projects with certain hospital customers, both U.S and globally. Through them, J&J’s medical device business can offer its expertise in providing end-to-end supply chain solutions for hospitals, perioperative efficiency, clinical standardization programs as well as in help in figuring out bundled payment programs.

In trying to create a model by which the devices team at J&J would be able to provide savings by managing a customer’s supply chain end-to-end, the inspiration came from the conglomerate’s consumer business.

“With Walmart, we have a very unique partnership where we have a large number of people working in Bentonville, on behalf of Walmart that help manage the end-to-end supply chain,” Pruden said.

This model is already being put to use in the U.S., but Pruden declined to identify the customer or customers with whom this program has rolled out. [In May, Pruden’s presentation to analysts showed the Medical Devices business had at least had eight such customers – or strategic partners. They include New England Baptist Hospital, OSF Healthcare, Saint Luke’s Health System, Grupo Angeles Servicios De Salud and Schulthess Klinic among others]

He was similarly elusive when asked about the types of products for which the corporation has taken on some risk. This is in direct contrast to other device companies that are not only providing full-throated support for alternative payment models that mean bearing more risk with hospitals but actually identifying the product at the heart of the matter.

Take Stryker for instance.

Earlier this year, the Kalamazoo, Michigan orthopedic company announced that it is providing no less than a “money-back guarantee” for customers who use its SurgiCount system to keep track of the surgical sponges that in some cases may inadvertently get misplaced, ending up inside surgical patients. Stryke said that it would offer up to $5 million in product liability indemnification to hospitals and an additional guarantee to refund the incremental cost hospitals bear to invest in its SurgiCount program compared with the hospital’s previous sponge spending for up to three years.

Medtronic, the largest pure-play device company, has also gone at-risk with its Tyrx absorbable antibacterial envelope. The mesh device is meant to encapsulate a pacemaker and ICD  and release antimicrobial agents over a period of seven days to prevent surgical site infections of such cardiac devices.

While Pruden didn’t provide any specific example of products that J&J Medical Devices, he was very emphatic about the need for device makers to assume some risk with their products as they become more of a strategic partner to hospitals than a supplier. And that can mean the difference between a supplier relationship always on the verge of being cut and a long-term strategic partner.

“That’s the essence of what I am doing – aggregating our businesses at scale, offering some willingness to take some risk and leveraging the enterprise and some of the things we can do to create some value,” he said. “Partnerships that only go one way don’t last very long.”

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