See Where Social Risk Is Driving Costs
Live Demo: Population Pulse
Tuesday, July 1 | 1 PM ET | 🕑 30 Min
Combine your claims and utilization data with social risk insights to reveal where unmet needs are driving cost.
You already know social risk affects cost and outcomes. But tying those risks to financial impact? That's the hard part.
Population Pulse changes that. It combines your claims and cost data with social risk insights to show where social factors are driving spend and where focused intervention will make the biggest difference. Get a clearer understanding of all of your lines of business, organized by risk domain and conditions, all in one place.
Built inside SocialScape®, the industry’s first HITRUST-certified social risk analytics platform, Population Pulse turns disconnected data into clear, actionable guidance—so you can stop guessing and start investing in what works.

What Kind of Results Are We Seeing?
Socially Determined customers are seeing meaningful impact through focused program design and clearer populations insights:
reduction in 30-day readmissions
drop in low-acuity ED visits
fewer inpatient admissions
Designed for healthcare leaders, strategists and program designers, this demo will walk through how Population Pulse can help you:
Identify high-cost savings potential by layering medical, utilization and social risk data
Build smarter, more effective intervention programs that align resources with real-world need
Understand where social needs are driving avoidable costs and how to address them
Get clarity on where social risk is driving cost—and what to do about it.
Join the live demo and see how Socially Determined helps health plans connect cost and need, prioritize interventions, and reduce unnecessary spend.
Speaker:

Sara Torrence, VP of Payer & Provider Solutions
Sara brings over 10 years of experience in healthcare sales, product innovation, and leadership across payer, provider, and health system markets. With a background as a registered dietitian, Sara is passionate about advancing health equity, particularly for women and children. As an active board member of March of Dimes in MN, she advocates for improving maternal and infant health outcomes.