Healthcare Patient Flow Management Software
See where every patient is at every moment, from arrival through checkout. Know which rooms are ready without walking back to check. Identify bottlenecks before they cascade through your entire day. The only clinic patient flow software that gives your team real-time visibility into every room, every queue, and every wait — so you can reduce patient wait times by 40% within the first month.
The Patient Flow Management Problem That Costs Your Practice Every Day
Most medical practices operate without real-time patient tracking into patient location and room status. Staff members do not know where patients are without physically walking through the clinic to check. Providers do not know who is ready to be seen without asking someone. The front desk does not know why the schedule is running behind. The entire operation relies on people asking questions, walking around, and holding information in their heads that becomes stale within minutes.
The Visibility Gap That Disrupts Your Entire Team
The visibility gap manifests in constant interruptions. The provider finishes with a patient and asks the MA who is next. The MA does not know because the last update was fifteen minutes ago. The MA walks to the front desk to ask who has checked in. The front desk checks the schedule and the waiting room. By the time the MA returns to tell the provider, another patient has arrived and the information is already incomplete. This cycle repeats dozens of times daily.
The Exam Room Status Problem No One Is Solving
Room status is equally opaque. The MA needs to room a patient but does not know which exam room is available. They walk to Room 1 and find it occupied. Room 2 has a patient but the provider has not entered yet. Room 3 is empty but dirty from the previous patient. Room 4 is clean but the computer is logged into another provider's session. Finding an available room takes three to five minutes of walking and checking. Multiply by forty patients daily and the practice loses two to three hours just figuring out which rooms can be used.
How One Delay Becomes a Schedule-Wide Disaster
The cascade effect transforms single delays into schedule-wide disasters. The 9:00 AM patient takes ten minutes longer than scheduled because they had additional questions. The 9:20 patient waits those ten minutes in the waiting room. The 9:40 patient waits twenty minutes because the provider is still catching up. By 11:00 AM the schedule is thirty minutes behind. By afternoon the delay has grown to forty-five minutes. The last patients of the day wait an hour beyond their scheduled appointment time, and staff stays late finishing paperwork.
What Patients Experience When Flow Breaks Down
Patients notice the chaos even when they cannot articulate it. They check in and sit in the waiting room — ten minutes pass with no update, then twenty. They see other patients being called back but have no idea if they were forgotten. They approach the front desk to ask if anyone knows they are here. The front desk confirms they are checked in but cannot say when a room will be available. The patient returns to their seat frustrated and anxious. By the time they finally see the provider, their mood has soured and the visit starts on a negative note.
The Staff Cost of Running a Clinic Without Visibility
Staff experience this chaos as constant stress. MAs feel pulled in multiple directions without clear priorities. Providers feel behind all day without understanding why. Front desk feels blamed for delays they cannot control. Everyone is busy but inefficient, working hard while accomplishing less than they should. Medical practice efficiency suffers as turnover increases because the work environment feels chaotic. New staff takes longer to train because the workflow is informal and inconsistent.
Patient flow management software solves these problems by providing real-time visibility into every patient and every room. Staff sees exactly where each patient is in their visit journey. Providers see exactly who is ready for them. Managers see exactly where clinic bottleneck detection needs to happen. Visibility enables action. Action prevents cascading delays.
Real-Time Patient Tracking: The Visibility System That Runs Your Clinic
Patient flow management software works through a system of status tracking displayed on dashboards accessible throughout the clinic. Every patient has a status indicating where they are in the visit process. Every room has a status indicating its current condition. These statuses update in real time as patients move through the clinic and staff perform their work. The dashboards display this information in role-appropriate views so each staff member sees exactly what they need without information overload.
Waiting Room View — Know Who Has Been Waiting and For How Long
The waiting room view shows every patient who has checked in but not yet been roomed. Each patient appears with their name, appointment time, appointment type, and current wait time. Wait time displays in color-coded format so staff can instantly identify patients waiting longer than threshold. Green indicates acceptable wait under ten minutes. Yellow indicates concerning wait between ten and twenty minutes. Red indicates unacceptable wait exceeding twenty minutes. This visual coding allows staff to reduce patient wait times by acting before situations escalate.
Exam Room Status Tracking — Full Visibility Into Every Room
The exam room status tracking view shows every exam room with its current state. Staff sees at a glance which rooms are occupied and by whom, which rooms are available and ready for the next patient, which rooms are in turnover being cleaned or restocked, and which rooms are blocked for equipment issues or other reasons. Providers see their assigned rooms highlighted. MAs see their pod or section rooms highlighted. The practice manager sees all rooms across the entire clinic.
Provider Queue Dashboard — No More Asking Who Is Ready
The provider queue dashboard shows each provider's current queue. Patients ready to be seen appear in order with room number and wait time. Patients currently with the provider appear as the active visit. Patients in checkout appear as completed visits. Upcoming patients who have not yet arrived appear on the horizon so providers can anticipate their day. Providers glance at their view between patients and know exactly where to go next without asking anyone.
Practice-Wide View for Clinic Bottleneck Detection
The practice-wide view aggregates metrics across all patients and all rooms. Total patients currently in the building. Average wait time across all waiting patients. Number of rooms occupied, available, and in turnover. Any clinic bottleneck detection alerts indicating systemic issues. This view serves medical practice efficiency by giving practice managers the big picture rather than individual patient details.
Multi-Device Access Across Your Entire Healthcare Operations Software
Dashboard access happens through multiple interfaces depending on physical location and role. Wall-mounted displays in clinical areas provide ambient visibility without requiring anyone to open a computer. Desktop dashboards on workstation computers provide detailed access for staff with assigned desks. Mobile apps on phones and tablets provide visibility for staff moving through the clinic. Large TV displays in break rooms or huddle areas provide practice-wide metrics for team awareness. This is what separates a true healthcare patient flow management software from a basic scheduling tool — the same live data everywhere, formatted for every role.
Exam Room Status Tracking — See Every Room, Every Second
Exam room status tracking answers the question every staff member asks multiple times daily: which rooms are available right now? Instead of walking through the clinic checking rooms physically, staff sees room status on a dashboard and makes decisions instantly. This is how clinic patient flow software eliminates the guessing game before it slows your day.
Room Status Types That Mirror Real Clinical Flow
Room statuses follow the natural lifecycle of exam room usage. Available means the room is clean, stocked, and ready for the next patient. Occupied means a patient is currently in the room, and the display shows the patient name and which provider is assigned. Turnover means the previous patient has left and the room needs cleaning or preparation before the next patient. Blocked means the room cannot be used for reasons such as equipment malfunction, scheduled maintenance, or reservation for a specific procedure type.
How Status Transitions Happen Without Extra Work
Status transitions happen through staff actions tracked by the system. When an MA rooms a patient, they indicate the room on the patient tracking interface, and the room status changes from Available to Occupied automatically. When the visit completes and the patient proceeds to checkout, the room status changes to Turnover. When housekeeping or the MA has cleaned and restocked the room, they indicate readiness and the status returns to Available. These status changes happen with single taps taking seconds rather than requiring paperwork or verbal communication.
Turnover Time Visibility That Surfaces Hidden Capacity Loss
Turnover time becomes visible and measurable with clinic patient flow software. The dashboard shows how long each room has been in Turnover status. A room in turnover for three minutes is normal. A room in turnover for twelve minutes indicates a problem that needs investigation. Maybe the previous patient left a mess. Maybe housekeeping is backed up. Maybe the MA forgot to mark the room as ready. Whatever the cause, the prolonged turnover is now visible and can be addressed rather than silently consuming capacity.
Room Utilization Metrics That Drive Smarter Operations
Room utilization metrics accumulate over time to reveal patterns. Which rooms have the highest utilization and which are underused. Which rooms have the longest average turnover times. Which times of day have room availability constraints versus excess capacity. These patterns inform operational decisions about room assignments, staffing levels, and schedule templates. A practice that discovers Room 6 is underutilized because of its distance from the nursing station can reassign that room or add signage. A practice that discovers turnover times spike at 2 PM can adjust staffing to add coverage during that period.
The Time You Recover by Eliminating Room-Checking Walks
The elimination of room-checking walks recovers significant time daily. An MA who previously walked the halls six times per hour to check room availability now glances at a screen and knows immediately. That time savings compounds across all MAs across all hours. A practice with four MAs each recovering ten minutes per hour saves over three hours of staff time daily. That time redirects to patient care rather than information gathering — and that is exactly what healthcare operations software built for real clinical environments makes possible.
Patient Queue Management That Keeps Everyone Moving
Patient queue management software replaces the constant question-asking that disrupts workflow throughout the clinic. Instead of MAs asking the front desk who is ready to room, MAs see their queue on a screen. Instead of providers asking MAs who is ready to see, providers see their queue on a screen. Instead of the front desk calling back to check on patients, the front desk sees patient status updates in real time. Everyone knows what they need to know without interrupting anyone else. This is medical office queue management working exactly the way your clinic needs it to.
The MA Rooming Queue That Eliminates Front Desk Interruptions
The MA rooming queue shows patients ready to be brought back from the waiting room. Each patient appears with their name, appointment time, appointment type, provider assignment, and any special notes such as wheelchair needed, interpreter requested, or anxious patient requiring extra attention. The queue sorts by priority, typically longest wait first but configurable per practice preferences. When the MA completes rooming one patient, they glance at the queue and see the next patient immediately. No walking to the front desk. No asking who is next. No delays.
The Provider Queue That Ends the "Who Is Ready" Question Forever
The provider queue shows patients ready to be seen. These are patients who have been roomed and prepped by the MA and are waiting in exam rooms for the provider. Each patient appears with room number, appointment type, chief complaint when available, and wait time since rooming. The provider finishes documenting one visit, glances at the queue, sees the next patient is in Room 4 with a complaint of knee pain, and walks directly there. No asking the MA who is ready. No hunting through multiple rooms. No delays. This is what true patient queue management software delivers to every provider, every session.
The Checkout Queue That Keeps Rooms Turning Over
The checkout queue shows patients ready to complete their visit at the front desk. These are patients whose clinical encounter is complete but who need to schedule follow-up appointments, receive referrals, provide payment, or complete other administrative tasks. Each patient appears with their name, provider seen, and any pending tasks. Front desk staff sees patients approaching checkout and prepares accordingly. A patient with a complex referral need gets routed to the staff member who handles specialty scheduling. A patient with a straightforward follow-up gets handled quickly so rooms can turn over faster.
Queue Prioritization Rules Built for Real Clinical Environments
Queue prioritization can follow multiple rules depending on practice needs. Longest waiting first is the most common rule because it is fair to patients and easy for staff to understand. Scheduled order is another option that prioritizes patients based on their original appointment time regardless of when they checked in. Urgency-based prioritization is appropriate for practices with a mix of routine and urgent visits, flagging urgent patients to the top of the queue. Custom rules can combine factors such as appointment type, patient VIP status, or provider preference. The key is that medical office queue management applies consistent logic rather than relying on staff memory or informal prioritization that varies by who is working — making your entire clinic workflow management software operate as one coordinated system.
Wait Time Tracking That Drives Real Improvement
Wait time tracking transforms wait times from invisible frustrations to measurable metrics that can be actively managed and improved. When wait times are measured, they can be benchmarked, trended, and reduced. When they are not measured, they simply get worse until patients complain or leave. This is the core of what separates a true patient flow management system from a basic scheduling tool — the ability to reduce patient wait times through data you can actually act on.
Wait Time Segments That Reveal Where Your Flow Is Breaking
Wait time breaks down into distinct segments that reveal different operational issues. Waiting room wait measures the time from patient check-in until they are roomed. This segment reveals rooming capacity and MA workflow efficiency. A long waiting room wait with available exam rooms indicates an MA bottleneck. A long waiting room wait with no available rooms indicates a room turnover or provider throughput issue. Room wait measures the time from patient rooming until the provider enters. This segment reveals provider pacing and MA prep efficiency. A long room wait indicates the provider is running behind or the MA did not complete prep work. Total wait combines both segments to show the full patient experience from arrival to seeing the provider.
Real-Time Wait Time Display That Enables Intervention Before It Is Too Late
Real-time wait time display enables intervention before problems escalate. The dashboard shows the current average wait time across all waiting patients. If that average exceeds threshold, staff can take action. The MA can prioritize rooming over other tasks. The provider can shorten visits temporarily to catch up. The practice manager can open an additional room or reassign staff. Without real-time patient tracking software giving your team this visibility, these interventions happen too late or not at all.
Individual Patient Wait Alerts That Catch the Forgotten Patient
Individual patient wait alerts catch outliers that might otherwise be forgotten. A patient whose wait time exceeds fifteen minutes generates an alert visible to staff. This prevents the scenario where a patient is accidentally overlooked, sitting in the waiting room while staff assumes they have already been roomed. The alert prompts someone to check on the patient and either room them immediately or provide an update on the expected wait. This single feature alone is worth the switch to a dedicated patient flow management system.
Historical Analytics That Turn Patterns Into Scheduling Decisions
Historical wait time analytics reveal patterns over time. Average wait time by day of week shows which days have flow issues and which run smoothly. Monday mornings often have the longest waits as the week begins and patients accumulate. Friday afternoons often have short waits as appointment volume decreases. Average wait time by hour shows morning versus afternoon patterns. Average wait time by provider shows which providers run efficiently and which consistently run behind. These patterns inform scheduling decisions, staffing decisions, and performance conversations that help your practice continuously reduce patient wait times week over week.
Wait Time Benchmarks That Show Where You Stand
Wait time benchmarks provide context for your metrics. Excellent practices achieve average waits under ten minutes in the waiting room and under five minutes in the exam room. Good practices achieve fifteen minutes total. Average practices run twenty to thirty minutes. Poorly performing practices exceed thirty minutes. Knowing where you stand relative to benchmarks helps set realistic improvement targets. A practice currently at thirty minutes should target twenty minutes as an initial goal rather than aiming for five minutes immediately. Patient flow management software gives you the data to close that gap systematically rather than guessing at solutions.
Clinic Bottleneck Detection That Prevents Cascade Failures
Clinic bottleneck detection identifies flow problems as they develop rather than after they have cascaded into schedule-wide delays. A bottleneck occurs when one part of the patient flow process cannot keep up with the rate of patients arriving, causing backup and waiting at that stage. Early detection allows intervention before the backup propagates through the entire schedule. This is what makes a patient flow management system fundamentally different from simply having a schedule. It shows you where the breakdown is happening in real time so you can stop it before it costs you the entire day.
Rooming Bottlenecks — When the Waiting Room Fills Faster Than Rooms Open
Rooming bottlenecks occur when MAs cannot room patients as fast as patients are checking in. The waiting room queue grows while exam rooms sit empty. This pattern is visible on the dashboard: many patients waiting, available rooms not being filled. Causes include insufficient MA staffing, MAs pulled to other tasks, or MAs spending too long on each patient during rooming. Intervention options include having another staff member assist with rooming, simplifying the rooming process temporarily, or having the provider room patients directly in extreme cases. Real-time patient tracking software makes this pattern impossible to miss.
Provider Bottlenecks — When Rooms Fill Faster Than Providers Can Clear Them
Provider bottlenecks occur when patients are roomed and waiting but the provider cannot see them fast enough. Exam rooms fill with waiting patients while the waiting room empties normally. This pattern shows rooms occupied with high wait times while the provider has multiple patients queued. Causes include complex patients requiring extended visits, provider documentation taking too long, provider interruptions for phone calls or questions, or simply scheduled volume exceeding provider capacity. Intervention options include the provider deferring non-urgent documentation, shortening visits temporarily, or a second provider absorbing some patients if available.
Checkout Bottlenecks — When Completed Visits Block Room Turnover
Checkout bottlenecks occur when patients finish their clinical encounter but stack up waiting to complete checkout. Rooms cannot turn over because patients are still in them waiting for checkout staff. The dashboard shows completed visits not leaving rooms while the checkout queue grows. Causes include complex checkout processes, insufficient front desk staffing, or checkout tasks that should be handled earlier in the visit. Intervention options include adding checkout staff, simplifying the checkout process, or having MAs complete some checkout tasks before the patient leaves the room. Without clinic patient flow software surfacing this pattern, rooms sit blocked and capacity silently disappears.
Room Turnover Bottlenecks — When Clean Rooms Take Too Long to Come Back Online
Room turnover bottlenecks occur when rooms take too long to become available after patients leave. Patients are waiting, checkout is flowing, but rooms stay in turnover status for extended periods. Causes include housekeeping delays, equipment issues, or staff forgetting to mark rooms as ready. Intervention options include adding housekeeping support, streamlining the room turnover process, or implementing automatic room-ready detection. This is where exam room status tracking pays for itself by making every delayed turnover immediately visible.
How Bottleneck Alerts Replace Delayed Recognition Across Your Entire Practice
The system alerts managers when bottleneck patterns are detected. The alert identifies the bottleneck type and location so managers can respond appropriately. A rooming bottleneck alert prompts a different response than a provider bottleneck alert. These alerts replace the delayed recognition that typically happens only when patients complain or the schedule falls significantly behind. Early detection means smaller interventions can prevent larger problems — and that is the core promise of patient flow management software built for how real clinics actually operate.
Healthcare Operations Software That Integrates Into How Your Staff Already Works
Patient flow management software only works when it integrates naturally into how staff already works. A system that requires constant manual updates or disrupts established workflows will be ignored or resented. A system that fits seamlessly into existing patterns while providing visibility benefits will be adopted enthusiastically. This is what separates healthcare operations software built for real clinical environments from tools that look good in demos but fail on the floor.
MA Workflow Integration That Replaces Walking With a Single Glance
MA workflow integration starts with the rooming queue replacing the old pattern of walking to the front desk to ask who is next. The MA finishes with one patient, glances at their screen or the wall display, sees the next patient's name and room assignment, walks to the waiting room, calls the patient, and brings them back. When the MA completes rooming and vitals, they tap a single button indicating the patient is ready for the provider. The status updates instantly across all dashboards. No radio calls. No verbal handoffs. No walking to find the provider. The information flows through the system automatically — exactly how clinic workflow management software should work.
Provider Workflow Integration That Eliminates Every Interruption
Provider workflow integration means the provider never asks who is ready. They finish with a patient, glance at their queue display, see the next patient and room number, walk directly there, and begin the visit. When they complete the visit, their documentation action or a single tap indicates visit complete. The patient status updates to checkout. The room status updates to turnover. The provider sees their next patient appear at the top of the queue. This rhythm maintains throughout the day without interruptions for information gathering — and that uninterrupted rhythm is how providers using a patient flow management system consistently see more patients without extending hours.
Front Desk Workflow Integration That Turns Isolation Into Visibility
Front desk workflow integration provides visibility into clinical operations that the front desk typically lacks. Instead of not knowing why the schedule is running behind, the front desk sees exactly where patients are in the process. They can provide meaningful updates to waiting patients. They can anticipate checkout volume and prepare accordingly. They can alert clinical staff when the waiting room is backing up. This visibility transforms the front desk from isolated to integrated — a shift that real-time patient tracking software makes possible from day one of go-live.
Frictionless Status Updates That Staff Will Actually Use
Status updates must be fast and frictionless or they will not happen. The target is single-tap status changes taking under two seconds. Room patient: one tap. Patient ready for provider: one tap. Visit complete: one tap. Room ready: one tap. If status updates require navigating menus, typing information, or selecting from long lists, staff will skip them when busy. The system must make the right action the easy action. This design principle is what makes clinic patient flow software stick after implementation rather than getting abandoned within weeks.
Status Automation That Maintains Accuracy Without Relying on Memory
Status automation reduces manual updates where possible. When a patient checks in through a self-service kiosk, their status automatically updates to Arrived. When a provider opens a patient chart from a specific exam room workstation, the system can infer they are seeing that patient and update status automatically. When checkout payment processes, the system can infer the patient is departing. These automatic updates maintain accuracy even when staff forgets manual updates — keeping your patient flow management system reliable across every shift, every provider, and every volume level your practice sees.
Clinic Workflow Management Software — Implementation and Return on Investment
Patient flow management software implementation focuses on configuration, training, and behavior change. The technology setup is straightforward. The real work is helping staff adopt new visibility-based workflows that replace old patterns of walking, asking, and guessing. Practices that commit to this behavior change see results within the first month, and the ROI from clinic workflow management software done right compounds every week after that.
Week One: Technical Setup and Workflow Design
The first week covers technical setup and workflow design. The implementation team maps your current patient flow process from arrival through checkout, identifying where status changes should occur and who is responsible for each update. Room configurations are entered into the system. Role-based views are configured so each staff type sees appropriate information. Wall displays are planned and ordered if desired. Integration with your check-in process and EHR is configured and tested so your patient flow management system works with the tools your team already uses.
Week Two: Training and Practice Before Going Live
The second week covers training and practice. Staff learns the dashboard interfaces appropriate to their role. MAs learn the rooming queue workflow. Providers learn the patient queue workflow. The front desk learns the visibility tools. Practice runs with role-playing help staff experience the new workflow before going live with real patients. Adjustments are made based on feedback so every team member feels confident before the first real patient moves through the new system.
Week Three: Go-Live With Full Support on the Floor
The third week is go-live with support. Staff use the new clinic patient flow software throughout the day with the implementation team available to answer questions and address issues in real time. Inevitably, some situations were not anticipated during configuration. Those situations are addressed immediately. By the end of the week, the team is operating in the new model with increasing confidence and the old patterns of walking and asking have already started to disappear.
Week Four and Beyond: Optimization and Habit Formation
The fourth week and beyond focuses on optimization and habit formation. The implementation team reviews metrics with practice leadership. Wait times, room utilization, and bottleneck frequency all become visible data points for discussion. Adjustments to thresholds, alerts, and workflows are made based on actual results. Staff habits solidify as the new workflow becomes routine and your patient flow management software moves from a new tool to the operating system your clinic runs on every day.
The Return on Investment That Makes This an Easy Decision
Return on investment comes from wait time reduction, staff efficiency, and patient satisfaction improvement. Reduce patient wait times and you directly impact patient experience, with practices typically seeing fifteen to twenty-five point improvements in wait-time-related satisfaction scores. Staff efficiency improves as time spent walking, asking, and checking redirects to patient care. A practice with four MAs each saving thirty minutes daily recovers ten hours of staff time weekly. Patient throughput can increase as flow improvements enable the same resources to see more patients without extending hours.
The investment is modest relative to returns. clinIQ Professional at four hundred ninety-nine dollars monthly includes patient flow management software along with check-in, scheduling, and other modules. Implementation is seven hundred fifty dollars one-time. Wall displays, if desired, cost two hundred to five hundred dollars each. First-year investment under ten thousand dollars generates returns through staff time savings, increased throughput capacity, and improved patient retention that typically exceed fifty thousand dollars annually for a multi-provider practice — making this the highest ROI decision most practices will make this year.
“We went from controlled chaos to actually knowing what is happening at every moment. Wait times dropped from twenty-eight minutes to fourteen minutes in the first month. Providers stopped asking where their next patient is because they can see for themselves. Staff stopped walking the halls checking rooms because the status is right there on the screen.”
What Patient Flow Management practices ask.
Single-tap buttons on any device including desktop computers, wall-mounted displays, tablets, and phones. Status updates take two seconds. Some statuses update automatically based on other actions such as check-in completion or provider chart opening. The system makes status updates fast and frictionless so staff actually does them.
Wall displays are recommended but not required. Desktop dashboards provide full functionality on existing workstations. Wall displays add ambient visibility that staff can glance at without opening a computer, which is particularly valuable in clinical areas where staff moves between rooms. Most practices start with desktop dashboards and add wall displays after seeing the value.
The system flags stale statuses that have not updated as expected. A patient shown in an exam room for ninety minutes generates an alert asking whether they are still there. A room in turnover for fifteen minutes generates an alert asking whether it is ready. These alerts catch forgotten updates before they cause significant problems. Additionally, automatic status updates reduce reliance on manual updates where possible.
Yes. clinIQ integrates with major EHR platforms to synchronize patient information and appointment data. Some EHRs support bidirectional status updates where provider actions in the EHR automatically update patient flow status. Integration scope depends on your specific EHR capabilities and is determined during implementation.
Visibility is immediate. On day one, you will see exactly where patients are and where bottlenecks occur. Behavioral improvements follow quickly as staff adjusts to visibility-based workflows. Most practices see measurable wait time reduction within two to four weeks as new habits form. Significant improvement of thirty to fifty percent reduction typically occurs within two to three months.
Optional. Some practices display queue position to patients through waiting room screens or text messages. Others prefer to manage patient expectations through staff communication rather than automated updates. Patient-facing visibility is configurable based on your practice culture and patient population preferences.
Each provider sees their own queue and their assigned rooms. Practice managers see all providers and all rooms. Multi-location practices can view each location independently or aggregate metrics across locations. Role-based access ensures each user sees information relevant to their responsibilities.
Three weeks total. Week one covers configuration of rooms, roles, and workflows. Week two covers staff training and practice runs. Week three is go-live with support. Most practices are operating independently by the end of week three with optimization continuing over the following weeks.
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