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Home » Practice Management

 

Improving Business Processes at Your Medical Practice

By Sue A. Irwin, MCS-P | April 24, 2012

There are many types of practice management software that can give you excellent reports to evaluate your practice’s business processes. Do you actually read them, understand them, and use the information to massage your processes for better results? With some of the practices we have worked with the answer, sadly, is no.

Most of your good practice management software programs can get you reports on any field that is populated in your system. “Data mining” is a very popular phrase right now and you should be able to do that with your information. What it means is that you are able to drill down to the points of interest for your practice so that you can get better results. You should be able to analyze things that directly affect your cash flow. With the government trying to reduce your income on one side and possibly increase it on another, you need to keep track of your processes.

(MORE: Don't Let 30 Percent of Your Practice Income Get Away (Part I))

We’ve all read what you don’t measure can’t be improved and what you don’t track cannot be improved exponentially. So, with that in mind, following are some processes that need to be measured and tracked.

• How long does it take for charges to get into the system?
If an office visit is on the 12th, when does it get put into the system and charged to insurance? Are you aware of the correlation between getting charges in quickly and correctly to getting paid quickly and correctly? So, you need to know how long it takes between the time you see the patient and the time the charge is submitted. Also, you need to remember that many insurance companies are now cutting their timely filing limits to 90 days (some are even shorter). So for those of you who take your time getting the information to the billers, expect to lose money due to timely filing denials. As a rule of thumb, if you don’t have an EHR, you should have the charges into the billing office within 24 hours of seeing the patient. Sometimes that is not feasible; I suggest that in no way should it take longer than a week for the billing office to have the charges. Measure this and you can improve on the processes to reduce the time lag.

• Do you track your denials?
Know what kind of denials you are getting and why it is vital to your practice’s fiscal health. No practice is free of denials. Part of the reason for that is the insurance companies change the rules constantly. Modifiers required or not required are changed, certain charges become bundled with another while others become unbundled, etc. If one was a cynic, one could think that the insurance companies do that on purpose to limit their own liability. Once you know what the most common denials are, you can adjust your processes to stop and/or limit them. This knowledge is also useful when it comes to the negotiations of new contracts. This knowledge is vital!

• Do you quickly repay back the credit balances?
Many practices ignore them — not smart! Credit balances are unavoidable as things can cross in the mail, insurance companies can change their minds on the way they processed something, etc. If the credit balance belongs to the patient, some practices believe the patient will be back and can "work" off the credit. This is horrible “customer relations.” At the least, the patient should be notified that there is a credit and asked how they would like the credit to be handled. A much more direct and cleaner way to handle them is to just send a check. Many practices also think that the insurance companies mess with their reimbursements enough and don’t want to reimburse them. Again, not smart and probably not legal; in your contracts, credit balances are addressed. The cleanest way to handle them is to contact the insurance company and have them do a “take back” on a future remit. Often when you just send an insurance company a check with an explanation, things often get confused. This is also not a good situation.

• Do you write off small balances?
This was the practice for many medical practices for many years. It was not cost effective to go after anything under $10. Times have changed!!! There is now software out there that can help you to go after the small balances that don’t cost postage, paper, etc. All you need to do is collect e-mails and/or cell phones. Along with those numbers, put in your financial policy that you have permission to text them or e-mail them and have them sign the policy. You can then set up notices to go to those patients. Is that great, or what? When a practice actually adds up all their small balance write offs, it usually finds that the cost of the software/service to send the texts and emails is easily absorbed and the return on investment is huge!

Knowing the above information is what helps a practice stay solvent. Little things that are measured and tracked often make a huge difference to the bottom line. That is always a good thing!

Find out more about Sue Irwin and our other Practice Notes bloggers.

 

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by Sue Irwin | May 21, 2012 4:36 PM EDT

The best way to make it smooth and slick, in my experience, is get as much information as possible on line from them before you are forced to call.

by Practice Management Software Medinol | May 16, 2012 2:38 PM EDT

One of the biggest bug bears I've come across is the practice staff's reluctance to telephonically interact with the insurers. This stems largely from the mind numbing time it takes to wade through the prompts of the insurers' call center and the time wasted listening to on hold music in the caller queue.

I advise many to try and make this chore as smooth and slick as possible.

More from Sue A. Irwin:

When Your Medical Billing Vendor Changes Ownership

The Right People in the Right Roles Is Key to Your Medical Practice

Improving Business Processes at Your Medical Practice

Today's Medical Practice Cash Flow Tied to Internet

10 Tips to Differentiate Your Medical Practice from the Others

Debate over ICD-10 Future Leaves Medical Practices Struggling in Present

Planning for ICD-10 Conversion

Treat Your Patients Like Customers, or Lose Them

Two Steps to Simplify ICD-10 Transition at Your Medical Practice

New Year Comes with New Challenges in Healthcare Reimbursement

Physician Credentialing: Worth Getting Right to Get Paid

Feds Set Fraud Watch List for Physicians in 2012

It’s Time to Trust Your Trusted Healthcare Vendors, Advisors

Seven Reasons to Be Very Nervous About Your Cash Flow

Do What You Do Best, Outsource the Rest

Don't Let 30 Percent of Your Practice Income Get Away (Part II)

Don't Let 30 Percent of Your Practice Income Get Away (Part I)






 
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