A licensed clinical advisory practice retained by hospital systems to improve perioperative care. Examined through four lenses, in this exact order: the patient, the team, the day, the institution. Led by Dr. Cameron Lambert, an active pediatric cardiac anesthesiologist.
Outcomes, harm reduction, recovery, experience. Working backward from preventable adverse events to the latent conditions that produced them, and forward from the patient's first encounter to PACU discharge.
Surgery, anesthesia, nursing, PACU, ancillary services. Optimize resource use and build the fair, transparent environment that makes coordination work. Every clinician sees how their numbers compare to the roster — turning subjective judgment about workload into shared, observable data.
The actual rhythm of the operating room. First cases, turnovers, blocks, cancellations, end-of-day variance. The day is where upstream failures become visible.
Where the prior three lenses translate into institutional value: capacity, contribution margin, sustainability, growth. Examined last, because it follows from the others. Get the first three right and the fourth follows.
The CMO leans forward at the first lens. The clinicians at the second and third. The CFO at the fourth. In that order, on every surface, without exception.
Every engagement delivers dashboards built around the hospital's specific service lines, the metrics they want to track, and the audiences who need to see them. The six capabilities below are representative examples — engagements typically combine more.
Epic, Cerner, SurgiNet, Qgenda, Power BI, scheduling spreadsheets, block schedules, on-call rosters. Reconciled line-by-line across whatever systems the institution uses.
A reproducible methodology for sizing anesthesia coverage room by room — calibrated to acuity, supervision model (1:1, 1:2, 1:3, 1:4), call structure, and vacation patterns. Quantifies the gap between current FTE complement and the optimal.
Surgeon-specific block utilization, release patterns, demand forecasting. Reallocates underused time before quarterly reviews flag the misalignment, with documented reasoning when difficult conversations follow.
High-acuity case tracking, supervision-ratio monitoring, ASA-class trending, and operational early-warning signals tied to perioperative safety outcomes.
Surplus, watchlist, and critical metrics color-coded so executives can read variance in less than a second. Every status follows the same encoding, across every dashboard, across every lens.
Every metric traceable to row-level source data. Methodology documented and reviewable. No black boxes, no silent assumptions, no metric that cannot be defended in front of the institution it concerns.
Examine the perioperative reality through all four lenses. Reconcile data sources. Surface the latent conditions producing visible failures.
Translate diagnostic findings into a sequenced intervention plan, ordered by lens. Strategy reviewed with C-suite and clinical leadership.
The principal embeds onsite at clinical and operational cadence. Physician adoption is engineered into the workflow, not enforced from above.
Outcomes audited against pre-engagement baseline. Methodology disclosed. Institution lens reported last, because it follows from the others.
The other options have structural limitations. In-house improvement teams lack outside authority. Management consulting firms lack clinical credibility. Software platforms lack methodology. Perioptimal was designed to neutralize each.
The principal stands at the table during pediatric cardiac cases. That fact carries operational arguments other consultants cannot make. There is no equivalent at McKinsey, Bain, or any platform vendor.
The four-lens framework begins with the patient. Physicians defend gains that begin with the patient. Physicians resist gains that begin with the institution. The order is not rhetorical. It is the work.
The principal is onsite at clinical and operational cadence through the implementation phase. Not a slide deck and a recommendation. The methodology is operationalized within the institution by the person who designed it.
The measurement window extends past most consulting engagements by a full year. Outcomes are reported against pre-engagement baseline, with methodology disclosed and the Institution lens reported last.
The principal stands at the table during pediatric cardiac cases. That is the moat.
Hospital systems evaluating perioperative improvement typically choose between in-house teams without outside authority, consulting firms without clinical credibility, and software platforms without methodology. Each has a structural limitation Perioptimal was designed to neutralize.
Engagements are personally led by Dr. Cameron Lambert, an active pediatric cardiac anesthesiologist who continues to practice at a major pediatric academic medical center throughout every engagement. Active is not a credential line. It is the source of the brand's authority and the reason engagements are deliberately limited to two concurrent at a time.
The methodology is reviewed against real perioperative workflows, validated across the institution's own data sources, and refined continuously by the clinicians and leaders inside the engagement.
Initial conversations are scoped to ninety minutes with the principal. Materials shared in advance are kept under non-disclosure. Capacity is limited; next availability Q1 2027.
Sample engagement materials shared with qualified prospects following an initial conversation.