Pathway-driven coordination for community care


Making physical readiness visible before care fails.
When pathways fail, it’s rarely clinical.
Patients discharged into community care depend on oxygen, medication, equipment and follow-up services arriving in sequence.
When those elements arrive late, incomplete or out of order:
Visits fail
Safety is compromised
Primary care absorbs avoidable calls
Capacity is lost
Admissions repeat
This is not a clinical failure.
It is a coordination gap.








A coordination layer for physical readiness
State Engine
Supplier, logistics and service signal ingestion across systems.
Connector Layer
Deterministic pathway logic — what must be true, and when.
Surfacing risk before failure becomes visible downstream.
Operational Dashboard
Pathways depend on readiness.
Fewer delayed discharges
Fewer failed community visits
Reduced avoidable readmissions
Less hidden coordination burden



Initial pilot scope
Single pathway (e.g. COPD)
Defined geography
Defined supplier set
Defined observability metrics
Oxygen and respiratory equipment are safety-critical
Accountability spans acute, community, and suppliers
We are working with early NHS and Swedish Public Health partners to pilot Pathway Grid.
If this problem resonates, we’d welcome a conversation.


