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Recently, an Ambulatory Surgery Center engaged RDA Healthcare Supply Chain Services to review a pending supplier agreement tied to a high-spend category.On the surface, the contract appeared routine. The pricing was competitive, terms were in line with prior agreements, and leadership felt comfortable moving forward.
But when RDA applied its structured contract review framework, several hidden risks and missed opportunities surfaced, elements that would have impacted cost, operational flexibility, and long-term services to the facility.
This scenario is more common than many ASC leaders realize.
While every agreement is different, RDA uses a consistent methodology when reviewing contracts to ensure organizations are protected financially, operationally, and strategically.
Below are five of the core elements we evaluate first.
Many contracts clearly define what is being purchased, yet fail to define performance expectations, service levels, or operational dependencies. In this recent review, the supplier’s service obligations were broadly worded, leaving room for interpretation around response times, product substitutions, and service continuity.
Without precise scope language, ASCs can face delivery gaps, quality inconsistencies, or unexpected fees.
RDA works with clinical, operational, and supply chain stakeholders to ensure scope reflects real-world usage and not just supplier assumptions.
Competitive pricing is often the headline, but rarely the full story.
In this case, while price points were attractive, escalation language tied increases to a broad commercial index with no ceiling protections.
Over a multi-year term, this structure could have eroded projected savings.
RDA evaluates pricing through a total-cost lens including adjustment triggers, index selection, and negotiation opportunities beyond baseline agreements.
Group Purchasing Organization (GPO) participation is assumed to guarantee best pricing.
But that’s not always the case.
Certain product categories allow for local negotiation layered on top of GPO pricing, particularly when utilization, standardization, or commitment levels are in play.
In this engagement, additional savings were identified simply by activating the appropriate contract tier.
RDA helps ASCs determine when to stay within GPO constructs and when to negotiate outside of them strategically.
Operational clauses often receive less scrutiny than financial ones, yet they directly impact day-to-day performance.
In this contract, freight responsibility and delivery accountability were structured in a way that shifted risk to the ASC once goods left the supplier’s dock.
By renegotiating Freight On Board (FOB) destination terms and acceptance criteria, risk exposure was reduced and service reliability improved.
Termination language is frequently treated as boilerplate.
However, unclear exit terms can create barriers to supplier transitions, technology changes, or cost restructuring.
RDA identified notice requirements and auto-renewal triggers that could have locked the ASC into unfavorable terms longer than intended.
Proactive structuring ensured flexibility without disrupting continuity of care or supply.
ASC leaders are managing rising supply costs, increased procedural complexity, and tighter reimbursement environments. Having a written agreement is essential — but having a strategically structured one is what protects long-term performance.
RDA Healthcare Supply Chain Services applies a structured review model across dozens of contractual elements spanning pricing architecture, operational risk, compliance exposure, and supplier performance safeguards.
The goal isn’t just contract validation.
It’s contract optimization.
Because the most expensive contract risk……is the one you didn’t know to look for.