Dealing with the top challenges faced by medical practices today: EHR adoption

Tuesday, January 17, 2012 by Susan Linton
EHRBack in June 2011, the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) released the results of its member survey. Members indicated that the top challenges they faced were:
  • Changing reimbursement models that place a greater share of financial risk on practices 
  • EHR issues - selecting and implementing the EHR system and participating in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' EHR Meaningful Use incentive program
  • Rising operating costs
  • Implementing and/or optimizing an accountable care organization
Financial, technological and compliance issues were clearly the main challenges. At the same time that practices plan on dealing with adopting a complex new system (EHR) that will require major changes in workflow, they also need to deal with managing potentially lower reimbursements and rising costs.

Ideally, the EHR will reduce administrative complexity, increase efficiency and lower operating costs but that takes time. Adopting an EHR has many other benefits for patient practice communication. Once patient records are digitized, they can be more easily shared with other systems, including a host of inexpensive, on demand web-based services. These services include automated appointment reminders, appointment scheduling, automated account balance notifications, patient surveys, and more. Such services can easily improve patient-practice communication and they also (1) save staff a considerable amount of time, (2) improve documentation and possibly reduce potential for legal action against the practice, (3) increase patient satisfaction.

Automating appointment reminders is a step that benefits the majority of practices. These types of calls typically are routine and the essential information can easily be conveyed by a quality appointment reminder service. Typically the practice only needs to generate a file with patients to be called and transmit that file to the telephone reminder service. This process can take just a few minutes. Appointment confirmations can be automatically tracked. 

For additional information, please visit Webley.

Your office is closed but still hard at work, thanks to your virtual medical receptionist

Thursday, January 12, 2012 by Susan Linton
Ever wish that there were more hours in a day so that you could finish your tasks at work? Wish you had more time to communicate with patients? Virtual medical receptionists can help your practice continue to serve your patients after your human staff has gone home for the day. 
 
Handling inbound messages when your office is closed

A virtual medical receptionist can answer the phone when no one is available, including during lunch, breaks, holidays and after hours. The virtual receptionist answers all calls courteously and promptly.  When a caller leaves a message, a new message notification is relayed immediately.

The call routing and immediate new message notification features are particularly useful after hours.  The on call physician will have quick access to patient messages and can triage the call personally, rather than relying on the call center operator to make such important decisions. Because the patient leaves a message, the on call physician can listen to and repeat the message, think about a response and call back. The recorded message can be saved to the patient's electronic medical record for future reference.  

Sending patients outbound messages when your office is closed

Rather than burdening your staff with a long list of calls to be made, your virtual medical receptionist can be put to use by making those routine calls for your practice.  Even better, the virtual receptionist tracks attempts to reach patients and the outcome of each call. 

Appointment reminders
It can take your staff hours a day to make appointment reminder calls. The staff member often reaches an answering machine and leaves a message with the date and time of the appointment.  When a live person is reached, confirmation and cancellations can be captured.  A virtual medical receptionist can perform these identical tasks, including allowing the patient to easily confirm or cancel the appointment.  The virtual medical receptionist can also call in the evening, when the practice is closed and patients are most likely to be home.

Account balance notification
When it comes to collecting account balances from patients, it can take multiple calls to reach the patient.  It's frustrating for your staff to make these calls. The automated phone dialer program can deliver the same message without burdening your staff. The patient will call your practice ready to discuss his/her account.

Lab test results notification
Patients are naturally anxious about their test results and they may call your office multiple times to get their results.  You can minimize these types of calls by keeping patients better informed.  Tell them when they can expect the results and that they can expect a call when the results are in.  The virtual medical receptionist makes it easy to deliver lab test results to patients. 

Health screenings and vaccines
If your practice has the capacity to handle additional appointments, your virtual medical receptionist can call patients and suggest that they come in for recommended health screenings and vaccines.  Target your existing patients for these type of messages.  Your patients will appreciate the extra step you take to keep them healthy.

For additional information, please visit Webley

4 tips to reduce your patient no shows

Wednesday, January 4, 2012 by Susan Linton
It's a new year and the time we typically reflect on lessons learned in the previous year. Here at Webley MD, we deal with helping our clients with their patient no show problem every day. We've compiled a list of best practices that can help medical practices manage their patient no shows. 

Tip #1: Send out messages when patients are likely to be home
If you have handled reminder calls from your office during regular business hours, you know that you reach an answering machine 80% of the time. You have a better chance of reaching most people at home by calling in the evening. By using an automated reminder system, calls can be made in the evenings and on the weekends, when patients are likely to be home.

Tip #2: Make the message personal and specific
Your appointment reminders are more effective if you can provide your patients with personalized information about their appointments. Always mention the date of the appointment, time of the appointment, and the patient’s name. Look for an automated reminder system that makes it easy to add personalized information for each call.

Tip #3: Be clear and offer to repeat information
Many reminder calls are made from a noisy practice by someone rushing to get through the reminder calls before the office closes. It’s better to use a pre-recorded message for appointment reminder calls. A good script for reminder phone calls keeps the message short and simple and minimizes background noise. Make sure the message is clear, slow-paced, and that the patients have the option to have key information repeated.

Tip #4: Automate to save valuable office time
At a typical practice, reminder calls can take several hours every day. Each call takes at least three minutes and it can take multiple attempts to reach a patient. Good appointment reminder software makes it simple to automate your phone reminders. When you do not have to make each call manually, you save valuable office time. A good reminder system also saves time on tracking appointment confirmations and cancellations.

Your appointment reminder service is a reflection of your practice. To help you make your choice, we've included our new article, Tips on Selecting an Automated Appointment Reminders Service.

For additional information, visit our website.

More tactics to lower your patient no show rate

Tuesday, December 6, 2011 by Susan Linton
Still looking for ideas to lower your no show rates? Try to do something different and see if it changes your no show rates.

Tactic 4: Send multi-channel appointment reminders
We've said it before and we'll say it again. Ask your patients how they'd like to receive their appointment reminders (cell phone, home phone, email, etc.) and listen. Chances are they are easiest to reach using the communication channel they say that they prefer. Multi-channel communications require more effort to manage but they increase your reach and the effectiveness of your communications.

Tactic 5: Don't just send one reminder, send multiple reminders
Patients might be annoyed by multiple reminders, but it can take more than one reminder to get their attention. Sending two reminders in advance of an important appointment is likely to be appreciated by the patient. Try sending one the week before and then a day before the appointment. 

Tactic 6: Ask patients to confirm their appointments
By asking the patient for a confirmation or cancellation with the option to rebook, you can be 99.9% certain that they have received the appointment reminder and understood the message. Asking for the confirmation conveys the importance of keeping the appointment to the patient. The interactivity of the message means that the message is more involving and more memorable. Some automated appointment reminder systems can capture appointment confirmations automatically. 
 
Be sure to read my previous two posts for additional ideas. 

Getting the most out of your reminder calls by experimenting

Wednesday, November 30, 2011 by Susan Linton
Maximizing the effectiveness of your appointment reminder calls isn't an easy task. There can be seasonal variations in no show rates, not to mention the ever present element of randomness. However, some elements are under your control. When you see your no show rate grow or you're unhappy with the current rate, try sending the reminders out at a different time, that is change the number of days between the reminder and the appointment. It's easy to make the change and you should be able to see results quickly. Anything longer than a week is likely to be ineffective unless you send another reminder closer to the appointment date. 

We've generally found that making reminder calls 2 days before the appointment works best because (1) it gives patients time to listen to the message if a message is left, (2) there is still time to confirm or cancel the appointment and possibly find another person to take the slot. However, what works best for your practice may differ and it can change over time. If the appointment requires preparation, it may make sense to send a reminder several days before the appointment. Most practices send reminders 1 to 3 days in advance of the appointment.

Patient satisfaction, patient care & physician compensation

Tuesday, November 29, 2011 by Susan Linton
The plans for the Centers of Medicare & Medicaid Services to tie physician compensation to patient satisfaction (i.e., starting in October 2012, acute care hospitals with higher satisfaction scores will receive higher compensation from Medicare) have justifiably been controversial among the medical provider community. 

Patient satisfaction depends on many factors, including how much time the patient spends waiting, treatment of the staff, the appointment confirmation process, etc. While the physician may have some influence on those factors, these factors have little to do with the quality of patient care. 

Consider some of the adverse consequences of existing Pay for Performance (P4P) programs in place today. These systems provide financial incentives to reward providers for meeting certain quality measures. The results have been mixed.

Some of the issues that have arisen include poor collection of valid data for quality assessment and avoiding high-risk patients when payment was linked to clinical outcome measures. These measures can further reduce the accessibility of care to the neediest, most disadvantaged patients, those with low health literacy and fewer financial resources.

Ultimately patient satisfaction does likely have financial implications for medical practices in competitive markets. Dissatisfied patients will tell others and take their business elsewhere. It’s important to track patient satisfaction but these measures shouldn’t be directly tied to physician compensation.

The patient's perspective: Front desk reminder calls vs. automated reminder calls

Thursday, November 17, 2011 by Susan Linton
A common concern that medical practices have when considering automated reminder calls is their patients' reaction. The staff may believe that patients prefer a call from someone they know at the practice and that these calls are more effective than automated reminder calls. While some patients will prefer the personal call from your practice, you shouldn't assume that they represent the majority of your patients.

Many patients appreciate the automated reminder call service for the following reasons.
  1. Greater efficiency. The calls use custom scripts and provide useful, personalized information to patients. Patients may be able to interact and respond to the message by pressing a button to confirm or cancel an appointment. Patients with more complex needs still have the option to call your practice.
  2. Greater convenience. The telephone reminder service isn't limited to office hours. The service can call patients in the evening and on weekends, when they are more likely to be home.
  3. Personalized and customizable experience. Automated calls can easily be replayed or offer options such as delivering the message in another language.
Pre-recorded reminder voice messages are not necessarily more impersonal than a call from your staff practice. Your staff often reaches someone's answering machine or voicemail so there isn't much difference between the automated reminder call using a pre-recorded message and the call from a staff member. 

Some phone reminder systems send pre-recorded voice messages. These are human voice messages. Sound quality and the clarity of the speaker may still vary but high quality pre-recorded appointment reminder messages are recorded with professional voice talent in a controlled studio environment. 

If you're concerned about patient acceptance of automated calls, ask your patients for feedback on your service. If most hate it, you'll know that you either need to find a better automated reminder service or find another solution.

For additional information on automated reminder calls, please visit Webley.

Revenue boosting and cost cutting strategies for smaller medical practices

Thursday, November 10, 2011 by Susan Linton
A Sermo survey found that 26% of solo physicians (single physician practices) have either closed their practice or are considering closing. Many have turned to practice management companies for assistance. Cash flow concerns are such that a delay in reimbursement can jeopardize the practice, so some solo physicians are switching to a cash-only model and/or becoming a non-participating provider.

"Physicians point to a variety of issues including low and delayed reimbursements, problems with management companies, and a lack of business/practice management education."

Finding more revenue opportunities

Most solo practitioners find that income is limited by the number of patients that can be seen per day. There are several ways to boost income. If the physician cannot see additional patients, it may make sense to add nonphysician providers (NPPs) who deal with routine cases or offer extended hours. If the physician has additional capacity, then consider adding a wider range of related services and econsults.

Take a close look at staffing and productivity

With the high cost of staffing, it's important to make the best use of your staff. Start by comparing your staffing levels with your peers and find ways to increase staff productivity. Technology can help. Some practices have no support staff. This is not to say that support staff are unimportant but that certain aspects can be outsourced or automated using technology (e.g., adding an online patient portal can reduce demands on your existing staff and allow patients the convenience of paying bills, requesting appointments, making prescription refill requests and so forth, online.)

Appointment reminder calls and other routine correspondence (e.g., account balance notifications, normal lab test results reporting) with patients can easily be handled with greater reliability and at a much lower cost by a good automated telephone reminder service. Appointment reminders delivered by email and SMS text messaging can be effective as well. These services usually automatically capture contact attempts and the results of each contact attempt. They can also offer multilingual messaging, custom scripts, and so forth.

EMRs, electronic billing and other technologies can decrease costs and increase staff productivity.

Control your no shows

Manage your no shows. Be sure to send appointment reminders. Lower no shows further by asking for confirmations. Follow up with patients who don't show up. 

Take advantage of federal incentives

The federal government offers several incentive payment programs, including those for ePrescribing, EMRs and reporting of quality measures to Medicare under the Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS).

Email patient reminders make sense for patients and practices

Tuesday, October 4, 2011 by Susan Linton
emailDid you know that 77% of patients would like an email reminder?

Now guess how many actually receive email reminders. The answer is 4%, according to a Wall Street Journal Online/Harris Interactive poll.

I'm astounded by the huge gap between what patients want and what they're currently getting from their healthcare providers. Perhaps many providers don't know what patient preferences are...or they don't think that being more patient friendly will make that much of a difference, so there isn't a compelling reason to change their current practices. 

Email patient reminders are not only easy but they save the practice time, effort and money.

Affordable automated patient reminder services can use existing information from your appointment files and customize reminder messages. The results of campaigns can be easily tracked. Some services let patients click to confirm or cancel an upcoming appointment. 

You can manage your email volume by sending a "do not reply" email reminder. For patients that require additional assistance, the email body can provide instructions to call your practice. 

Emails are seen as convenient and accessible to patients and practices should think of them in the same way. Patients do care. Multiple polls have shown that the majority said that having electronic access to physicians would influence their choice of providers. Offering email reminders can enhance the satisfaction of current patients and attract new patients.

Understanding the basics of automated appointment reminders

Thursday, September 15, 2011 by Webley MD

Driven by economic necessity, many physicians are seeing more patients than ever. Some are extending their hours to accommodate more patients. "According to the American Academy of Family Physicians, more than one in three primary care doctors now sees patients after hours, a figure experts say has surged among all specialties in the past 12 to 18 months."

This increase in patient load puts a greater demand on office staff as well. Over 75% of physician's practices use reminder telephone calls from their staff to remind patients about their appointment time and date. Even the smallest practice can benefit from automating appointment reminder calls.

Reminder phone calls from a phone dialer program help maintain peak patient flow. An automated appointment reminder system uses a computer software program to dial customers at a preset time before their appointment. A pre-recorded message provides a details of the appointment, including date, time and patient name.  Even messages that are left on answering machines serve as effective reminders. However, the most effective reminder (i.e., the one with the lowest probability of a no show) is one where you reach your patient and your patient confirms the appointment.

Traditional communication methods have grown less effective

Many traditional patient appointment reminder techniques are no longer as effective today because lifestyles and communication preferences have changed. It's easier to reach many people on their cell phone and email than at home with a phone call.  

Calling patients to remind them of upcoming appointments may take up several hours of effort. Dialing each person by hand and speaking with them, or leaving a message takes away from patients that are in the office. Using an automated phone reminder service can help to reach patients without the effort of a staff member. And the phone dialer can make calls during the evening, when the practice is closed and patients are more likely to be home. 

Automated phone reminders are more efficient and more cost effective. The cost of making an automated phone call is typically 80% less than mailing a postcard and 72% less than making a manual phone call.

The same call reminder can deliver other routine messages, such as account balance notifications, lab test results, recommended health screenings, and more.  

Automated phone calls have proven effective at getting the patient's attention and may offer interactive features that make it convenient for the patient to respond.  This also makes it extremely easy for practices to track responses.  

Tips for keeping your automated calls respectful, personal, and effective

Thursday, August 25, 2011 by Webley MD
Automated telephone reminders can sometimes be perceived as impersonal. However, this misconception is easily corrected by working to improve your patient's experience with your new computerized system. Here are three easy ways to be respectful, personal, and effective with your automated reminder calls.

1. Be aware of your messaging schedule
Have your reminder service send your messages at times that people are most likely to be home (after dinner) and available to take your call. Many people will not answer the phone during dinner, so avoiding the 5:30pm to 6:30pm time frame is a wise practice. Also, be aware of holidays and weekends, especially high travel times like Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year celebrations. 

2. Always be respectful

As you are well aware, medical matters require the utmost privacy. In your appointment reminder, don't reveal what the appointment is specifically for. Sometimes even mentioning that your doctor is the OB/GYN can be embarrassing for some. “Remember your appointment with Dr. Smith” is perfectly sufficient. Remember that just about anyone can be listening to the messages on an answering machine or taking the reminder call. Be respectful of your patient's privacy and they will be grateful.

3. Invite a two-way communication
One of the benefits of having your receptionist perform your reminder calls is that if the patient has any questions, she is already speaking with a live person who can answer them. In most cases, the patient doesn't have questions, so the pre-recorded message is sufficient. But sometimes the patient will have a question. To account for this possibility, be sure to include the practice phone number in your message script.

Your automated reminder may also be interactive. For example, the patient may be able to confirm the reminder by pressing a button. This type of message is superior to one that does not allow for two-way communication. 

In the end, remember that automated communications can be just as personal and convenient as having your receptionist perform all the calls. It just takes the right combination of respect and usefulness to make the new system satisfying for your practice and your patients.

Best practices for sending appointment reminders to patients

Tuesday, August 2, 2011 by Webley MD

reminderMany medical and dental practices have persistent problems with patients that don't show up for their appointments. And many practices, both large and small, have found a successful solution to this problem by using reminder call software. To obtain the best results with automated appointment reminders, we recommend the following best practices:

Personalize your message. Anyone is more responsive to a message that is personalized. Look for a reminder call service that can customize the call script based on the needs of your practice and also include the basic information: the patient's name, time and date of appointment.   

Short, clear messages work best. While it's tempting to create a long message, an effective call reminder is clear, short, simple and slow paced.  The patient needs to have an option to repeat the message and to hear key information again. This is the type of message that is most likely to be understood and remembered.

Call when the patient is likely to be home. A patient appointment reminder may not be as useful if the patient is not at home when the system calls. The patient may not check his messages often or the message can be lost if there is a power outage, someone deletes it, etc. Phone reminder software can send out messages in the evenings or on weekends when the patient is more likely to be home to receive it.

Include an easy way to respond. You can further reduce no show rates by capturing appointment confirmations and cancellations. Some appointment reminder services allow for interactive messages. Make it easy for the patient to respond to the message and you'll have a better idea of who will show up on the day of the appointment.

Consider message timing. Sending reminders a day before the appointment may not be enough to ensure that the patient receives the message (e.g., it may take multiple attempts to deliver the message). We've generally found that 2 days before the appointment works best. Of course this can differ by practice, so you may want to try a few variations and track the results to see what works best for your practice.

Send the message according to patient preferences and characteristics. Your goal for sending appointment reminders is to reach the patient in a timely manner and maximize the chance that the message is understood. You stand a greater chance of accomplishing your goal if you are able to send the message using the preferred communication channel of the patient, whether that is by email, to a particular phone number, etc. Have a large Spanish speaking patient base? Look for a reminder service that offers a Spanish language option.

If you have other best practices for sending appointment reminders, we'd love to hear them. 

Add email communications to please your current patients and attract new patients

Thursday, July 14, 2011 by Susan Linton
email Intuit Health's Annual Health Care Check Up Survey of 1,000 American adults in January 2011 found that 59% of Gen Y respondents and 29% of Baby Boomers would switch doctors for one with better online access. 

Rosemarie Nelson, a self-proclaimed “healthcare technology guru” and management consultant, weighs in: “In a recent Harris Interactive poll, 77 percent of the adults surveyed indicated they would appreciate email reminders from their physicians when they are due for a visit or follow-up care,” she says. The poll also revealed, in concurrence with other studies, that many patients will choose a new doctor based on whether they use modernized forms of communication.

The message is clear. Modernize the way you send appointment reminders to please your patients and improve communication. Adding email communications and/or a practice website is the easy way to attract new patients and retain the ones you already serve. 

A good automated reminders service sends interactive high quality messages that allow patients to easily confirm (or cancel) the upcoming appointment, whether that message is sent by e-mail or by phone.

Using multi-channel electronic communication solutions to one's advantage will not only determine the practice's growth, but its survival against other competitors. 

Why appointment reminder cards are obsolete

Tuesday, July 12, 2011 by Susan Linton
Do you remember the last time you received an appointment reminder card? Perhaps you still receive them. If you're the organized type, perhaps you remember to add the appointment information to your calendar. If you're like most people, you stick the card in your wallet and forget about it. 

Appointment reminder cards are easy to lose, misplace and overlook, particularly when they are given weeks or even months before the actual appointment. Another drawback of the appointment reminder card is that they lack interactivity. With a phone reminder or email reminder, the patient can confirm or cancel an appointment in one step. If the appointment reminder is mailed, it's impossible to know whether the patient actually received the reminder. Finally, the mailed appointment reminder is much more expensive than the automated reminder call. 

Timely appointment reminders that get your attention are more effective. Reminder calls work well for most of the population. Even if you don't reach the person, chances are you can leave a message. 

Emails can also work well for some people. They have a clear record of the appointment that they can refer to and perhaps even access from their cell phone. 

With automated notification technology, one person can send out hundreds of messages in just a few minutes - and those messages can be for more than just appointment reminders.  Automated messaging services can send out notifications for account balances, lab test results and more.  For additional information, please visit Webley.


Technology provides relief to understaffing

Tuesday, June 14, 2011 by Susan Linton
I wanted to give a shout out to a blog that I found that seemed particularly helpful for medical practice managers. It's called Manage My Practice and the author is Mary Pat Whaley, a practice administrator in North Carolina. If you're a practice administrator, you're sure to identify with her and if you're not, you can learn what the life of a practice administrator is like. 

One recent blog post contained many helpful pointers for practices that are struggling with answering patient phone calls. Mary Pat writes: "The only answer to understaffing is technology. Use a patient portal to allow patients to request refills, schedule appointments and chat with billing staff or nurses. Replace paper charts with EMR. Use efaxing to eliminate paper faxes. Use the cloud to store information and collaborate."

The key themes are (1) centralizing your information to make it easily accessible to others at your practice, (2) reducing paper - it's eco-friendly, saves money and makes it less likely that something will get overlooked/lost, (3) increasing the accessibility of your staff to your patients - maybe this means that it's time to let your patients email your staff, (4) offering self-service features for patients.

Automated patient messaging systems, aka reminder call software, save time and money for your practice. They make it easier for the practice to communicate with patients, whether it's sending appointment reminders or telling patients that their lab test results are available. They make it easier for patients to confirm their appointments. And the system tracks patient responses, creating an electronic report that can be accessed from any computer with an Internet connection. 

Automated voice answering services answer the phone for your practice and direct your callers - connecting them to the right person or organizing messages when no one can answer the phone. By connecting the caller to the right department or person, messages are organized, saving response time and the potential for lost or incorrectly relayed messages.

The virtual office receptionist answers the phone during lunch, breaks and after hours.  The automated answering service can be easily turned on or off whenever the practice feels it is necessary or when everyone is away from the office.

Lessons learned from MGMA's top-performing practices

Thursday, April 21, 2011 by Susan Linton
Every year the MGMA surveys medical practices across the country, identifies top-performing practices, and looks at how these top-performing practices excel. The 2010 report found that top-performing practices often:
  1. Use a greater number of nonphysician providers (NPPs). NPPs handle routine cases while physicians focus on more complex medical conditions. You can apply this lesson to other areas of your practice. For example, consider automating routine tasks handled by your staff, such as appointment reminder calls, informing patients of normal lab test results, providing basic information such as hours of operation, and so forth.
  2. Adopt measures to minimize the impact of no shows and last minute cancellations. Smart practices know that no shows directly affect the bottom line. They don't just let them happen but they are proactive. They send appointment reminders, ask for appointment confirmations, and follow up with patients who miss appointments.
  3. Increased accessibility by using open access scheduling and/or offering extended hours. Increased accessibility provides greater convenience for patients. Technology can also increase accessibility, e.g., econsults, patient portals, helpful practice websites, a social media presence, and so on.

Better performing practices are able to see more patients and be more responsive to patient needs. They're run like smart businesses who understand the value of the individual patient.

Why making reminder calls might not be enough to drive down your no show rates

Friday, April 1, 2011 by Webley MD
As a busy medical practitioner or office manager, you realize the importance of sending your patients reminders for their appointments. If you completely eliminated your reminders, you can expect your no show rates to increase immediately. So, you have your receptionist sit down with the list of patients with upcoming appointments and she makes phone calls for several hours. She does the same thing the next day, and the next day after that. Yet you may still find that your no show rates aren't as low as you'd like them to be.

It's not that your office doesn't make the effort to remind people to come in. The problem could very well be that the way you are approaching your reminders is ineffective.

Telephone calls to someone's home during the day are becoming an obsolete form of communication. That's because 80% of people are at work, school or out and about during the day. When your receptionist leaves a message on an answering machine, if there is an answering machine, there is no confirmation that the reminder has reached the intended patient.  If there isn't an answering machine or the line is busy, your staff tries to call the person again (if there is time to do so).

Most people are home during the evening, but your staff doesn't make calls after your practice is closed.  If you want to increase the effectiveness of your appointment reminders, you should make the calls when you're more likely to reach your patient and also listen to how they would like to be reached.  

Some of your patients want to receive emails from your office. That is what is most convenient for many people today. While that may sound like more work than making reminder calls, in truth, it is much simpler. With an automated notifications service, all your receptionist does is generate a report with a list of patients that need appointment reminders and upload that report to the service provider. It takes her minutes, not hours. The messages reach your patients in ways that are convenient for them and the system automatically tracks the success of reminder attempts, appointment confirmations, appointment cancellations, etc.

The end result is that your no-show rates begin to decrease, your revenue increases, and your receptionist has a little extra time on her hands. It really is that easy.

How automating the appointment confirmation process can reduce no-shows

Thursday, March 24, 2011 by Webley MD
Missed appointments are a significant problem for most medical practices.  The average no show rate is 20% according to MGMA and that's a percentage that's far too high for most practices to live with.

Initiating an effective two-way communication system between your office and patients is the number one way to battle no-shows.

The first step to improving communication with patients is to consider what's convenient for them and realistic for your practice to provide.  An automated communication system can provide multiple channels of communication to accommodate your patients communication preferences. Whatever is most convenient for them, whether it is the standard telephone call reminder or an email, or both, the system can handle it.  If you have your patient's email address and phone number(s) and an automated multi-channel electronic communication system, you'll have more chances to connect with your patient.

Automation is important because it allows your practice to quickly send messages to patients using multiple channels of communication.  If you had your staff make phone calls, it could hours a day and tie up at least one phone line.  

The next step is to automate your appointment confirmation process. The traditional postcard reminder made it difficult for a patient to confirm or cancel an appointment and phone call reminder made during the day usually reach an answering machine.  Automated reminder services can make reminder calls during the evening - and thus are more likely to reach a live person who can then easily confirm or cancel the appointment during the call by pressing a button.  Or with email appointment reminders, the patient can click to confirm or cancel an appointment.  The system captures these responses and allows them to be easily viewed in an electronic report.

Patients who confirm appointments a day or two before the scheduled appointment are far less likely to miss their appointment.  

Why your practice should consider automated patient notifications

Thursday, March 17, 2011 by Webley MD
A typical medical practice is an extremely busy place.  The staff spends much of their time on the phone with patients for various reasons and it's often a challenge to keep up with appointment reminder calls, lab test results notifications, billing/account balance calls, etc.  Some of these calls are routine and therefore can be efficiently handled by a quality automated notification system at a cost and time savings for the practice.  Automated patient reminder calls are becoming commonplace for multiple reasons, the key ones being cost and time savings and improved communications technology.

Today's high quality patient reminder calls are often indistinguishable from manual calls for the patient receiving the call.  These calls can be more effective as well as they can be made during the evening and over the weekend, when the patient is more likely to be home.  And they are easily tracked.  The practice can be assured that the patient reminder calls will be made.

No practice can survive long with a constant stream of no show appointments.  While your office might give out patient reminder cards, sometimes those don't help with patient no shows.  This is especially true when the appointment is 3-6 months out; there are just too many chances that the appointment reminder card will be lost or get buried underneath something.  Even with reminder cards, it's important to call the patient a day or two before the appointment.

A phone dialer program can send the patient a personalized reminder with the date and time of their appointment.  It can also give the patient any other information they might need for their visit.  And it may be able to automatically capture the patient's response, including appointment confirmations and appointment cancellations.  The same program may be able to help with other types of notifications as well, including account balance notifications, lab test results notifications, immunizations and more.  

An automated reminder service is easy, affordable and best of all, allows you to communicate more effectively with your patients so that they receive timely reminders. 

Key benefits of automating your patient reminders

Wednesday, March 9, 2011 by Susan Linton
On a good day, your front office staff has time to answer the phone, greet patients, make those appointment reminder calls and more.  But in reality, there will be days that the staff just doesn't have time to get to all the important tasks of the day.

As Rosemarie Nelson, principal with the MGMA Health Care Consulting Group observes, "All too often when I'm in a practice, I see a last minute scramble by the staff to race through those calls at 4:30 in the afternoon. They leave rushed messages on answering machines and in voice mail without really confirming with the patient. And suppose they do reach the patient. If he says he can't come in after all, it's too late in the day to fill the slot with another patient."

Automated patient call reminders are superior to having your staff make calls because these call reminder systems are more reliable, capture patient confirmations automatically and track results. All this happens with little effort on from the staff and a cost savings to the practice.  Reminder calls can be scheduled to go out a day or two before the appointment, giving staff members a chance to fill in time slots that open up due to cancellations.

Rosemarie Nelson estimates the cost of a reminder call from a staff member who leaves a message to be $0.42 cents per call, and the cost of a call that reaches a patient to be $0.63 to $0.82 cents. Automated calls typically save the practice at least 50% of the cost of a call from a staff member. With that extra time that automated reminders can save the staff, they can turn their attention to more rewarding, non-routine tasks.