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Any kind of identity mix-up is disturbing, but when it occurs within the healthcare system, the fallout can be severe. At best, misidentifying patients leads to lowered consumer confidence, but at worst it can compromise a person’s essential medical treatment. As a healthcare professional, you want to be absolutely certain that comprehensive and correct data is associated with each person who comes in for care, and that you’re utilizing the most advanced measures to make it happen. Universal patient identifiers are an integral part of that goal.  Patient Safety Awareness Week is the perfect time to convey that message clearly and positively. What is Patient Safety Awareness Week Patient Safety Awareness Week, organized by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, is an annual recognition event dedicated to boosting the public’s knowledge about health care safety. In 2020, it runs from March 8th to the 14th. Patient Safety Awareness Week is your ideal opportunity to proactively inform and reassure patients of your commitment to safety. New systems, such as universal patient identifiers (UPI) developed by Experian Health, were created to ensure that patient demographics are as complete and error-free as possible through patient matching. Impact of patient identity problems Many patients may already have concerns about their records, having heard about problems from the news, friends or relatives, or have personally experienced identity misidentification. According to an ECRI Institute report, approximately 30% of the patient data that’s held in electronic health records is either incomplete or inaccurate. So how bad can the damage of patient misidentification be? The Ponemon Institute reported that roughly 86% of all clinicians witnessed a medical error that was caused by patient misidentification. And most disturbing: a study by the National Institutes of Health discovered more than half of all the deaths attributed to medical errors are a result of identity errors. Identification mistakes don’t just lead to unnecessary patient suffering either. These unforced errors undermine the very foundation of healthcare organization: trust. The organization that makes them suffers a serious blow to their brand. How patient identity mistakes are made Human error has been most often to blame for patient identity mistakes. Every day, healthcare providers handle an astonishing influx of information, as hundreds of thousands of electronic patient records flow in from a vast number of different systems and departments. All the while patients’ names and addresses change, which in turn requires updates. Inputting all that data manually is a major challenge, and inconsistencies typically occur in the data entry process. In fact, the National Center for Biotechnology Information found that the greatest proportion of mismatches are centered around a patient’s middle name and their Social Security numbers. Misspellings and entering first, last, and middle names into the wrong fields are also common. Once identity mistakes are entered, a patient can have duplicate records and disparate facts, matching past diagnoses and prescribed medications. Billing problems, too, can result. A patient’s statements might not be sent to the correct mailing address, resulting in them experiencing unnecessary credit troubles. Solutions to identity problems In order to consistently and correctly match patients with their medical records, innovative technology has been developed. UPIs use Experian’s consumer demographic information and methodologies to identify record matches and duplicates in a patient’s file. Once a unique UPI is created for the patient, the potential for identification mix-ups is vastly reduced. More, UPIs lead to efficiencies that drive costs down for all concerned. It’s expensive and laborious for healthcare provider employees to record and update such a high volume of patient data by hand. Rectifying mistakes is not only time-consuming, it can cause insurance issues to arise. Certainly, obtaining the best treatment is paramount to patients, but keeping healthcare costs to a minimum is also important. 79 million Americans are struggling with overwhelming medical liabilities, found The Commonwealth Fund. However, a survey conducted by Black Book found that patient matching discrepancies can lead to nearly $2,000 in extra inpatient costs per person. No one should pay more than they have to for their healthcare, and UPIs can make sure bills are appropriately assessed.  For this year’s Patient Safety Awareness Week, spread the word to your patients that measures have been put into place to protect their identity. As of the end of 2019, every person in the U.S. has been assigned a UPI, and correct and complete information will be associated with each patient. Everyone should be aware that you are taking steps to ensure the accuracy of their medical records — which keeps them safe and their financial obligations down.

Published: March 5, 2020 by Experian Health

Recovering underpayments from commercial insurers costs the healthcare industry billions every year. When payments come up short against what the provider expects, it’s not just the missing revenue that puts a dent in the bottom line – the staff time spent on reprocessing bills takes an extra bite out of the organization’s margins. Underpayments can be attributed to confusion around changing payer policies, inadequate claims data and simple human error. But when providers are focused on creating the best possible patient experience, keeping track of payer behavior is a task that’s easily crowded out. Unfortunately, failing to spot underpayments or keep tabs on those policy changes could lead to bigger revenue loss further down the line, in the time-suck that is collections recovery. From the payer’s perspective, it can be hard to understand why providers don’t just fill out claims according to the agreed rules. For providers, those rules seem to be in constant flux and different for each insurer. Ultimately, it’s a lack of communication that’s at the heart of the problem. Clean claims are only possible when payers tell providers exactly what they need, and providers have the systems in place to deliver that and check that payers are themselves following those rules. Within the industry, we already measure so many aspects of the revenue cycle, but are we paying enough attention to the payer-provider relationship? Is communication the missing metric? Three essential ingredients for a healthy payer-provider relationship Managing payer contracts can often be time consuming, complex and costly. Many healthcare providers are focusing on three strategies to help build better relationships with their payers, to take the stress out of this process and ensure they get reimbursed quickly and fully: Better communication. When you’re clear about what your payers need, you can make sure all your staff and systems are set up to deliver that. It’s impossible to fix the sticking points in your claims processing if you don’t know where they are. With a method to support better communication with payers, you can negotiate contracts that better suit both parties, keep track of changes to payer policies and move quickly when payers aren’t holding up their end of the bargain. You’ll know when a payer has made a payment at an out-of-network rate or reverted to rates in a previous policy and you’ll have the data your payer needs for a quicker recovery process. Two-way accountability. One way to build a better relationship with your payers is to hold each other accountable. Providers need to have systems in place to be able to hold payers to account for underpayments, but also to hold themselves to account for under billing. With a robust contract management tool, you can monitor payer compliance with contract terms and clarify what’s expected on your side to ensure you submit clean claims every time. Efficient processes: When the payer landscape is constantly changing, you need to have solid workflows to manage your claims processes as efficiently as possible. Automation and software solutions can help you minimize staff time spent manually checking payer policies, as well as generating the data you need to challenge underpayments. With a dashboard showing you real time claims data all in one place, your team will be able to identify, discuss and resolve queries with payers much more quickly than with disparate manual systems. How better payer monitoring saved one practice group $3.5 million in a single year In 2007, UCLA Health System Faculty Practice Group (UCLA FPG) saw $4 million go uncollected, largely down to difficulties tracking payer contracts. As the volume of payer contracts grew, it was harder to catch underpayments and manage the recovery process. Measha Ford, Director of Revenue Integrity at UCLA FPG says: “Before using Contract Manager, we didn’t have a method in place to track under and overpayments so there was a lot of lost revenue.” Without an efficient system in place, it was extremely challenging to manage collections data, monitor payer performance and spot when claims were being paid at out-of-network rates. This put UCLA FPG in a tough position to try to negotiate the best possible contracts with payers. By implementing an automated system, UCLA FPG could keep a closer check on payer contracts, eventually sustaining a recovery rate of 80% and recouping $3.5 million in one fiscal year. The data collected has not only helped to build a more predictable revenue cycle, but also supports more strategic decision-making when modeling new and amended contracts. And for Measha and her team, being armed with up to date, reliable data makes managing the relationships with payers so much easier, saving them time and effort that can be better used elsewhere. Find out more about how Experian Health Contract Manager can help you create friction-free interactions with your payers.

Published: March 2, 2020 by Experian Health

Before brands like Apple and Amazon became synonymous with consumer culture, the healthcare experience didn’t have much motivation to change. If you felt ill, you’d go see a doctor. The doctor would check you over, make a diagnosis and set you on the appropriate path to treatment. It was on you to initiate contact: your physician’s only job was to provide whatever care was needed, once you were in the system. Today, the healthcare journey can look quite different. Patients have options. In an increasingly crowded market, it’s now up to providers to reach out and woo healthcare consumers. To stay ahead of the competition, providers must seek innovative ways to attract new consumers and inspire loyalty among existing members. Chris Wild, Experian Health’s Senior Director of Consumer Engagement Solutions, says: “Health systems have started taking a good, hard look at how they engage with patients, whether that’s marketing to new populations or encouraging patients to come in when they are sick. It all comes down to data. With a complete picture of the patient, you can loop together clinical information with insights about their lifestyle and attitudes, so you really know who they are and what they’ll need from your health system.” Three ways consumer data can help you attract and retain patients Data-driven marketing and engagement is a growing opportunity for providers. With the right data platform, it’s easier than ever to leverage reliable, high-quality data and analytics to better understand and serve your patients. In fact, Wild suggests there are three main ways marketing data can benefit healthcare providers (you can watch Wild talk about these on video): 1. Marketing to new and existing members Why should prospective patients choose your hospital or physician’s practice? What would prevent existing patients from being tempted to switch providers? Understanding what makes your patients tick lets you pinpoint the exact benefits, priorities and language that will resonate with them most. As Wild says: “If you’ve got five health systems competing in a town of 1.5 million people, how are you going to differentiate yourself? Once a patient picks up a provider and they’re relatively satisfied, they don’t change a lot. They’re starting to look at things like quality. They’re starting to look at cost and what’ll give them the biggest bang for their buck, but getting to them first is a big first-mover advantage for sure.” ConsumerView bundles up reliable information on around 500 demographic, psychographic and behavioral attributes to help you get to know your target market, so you can get the right message in front of them at the right time. 2. Engaging with patients to improve health outcomes Even if you’re the only health system in town, there’s still a need to engage. You want your patients to achieve the best possible health outcomes and often that requires them to take ownership of their health. You can help them do that by encouraging them to come in when they are sick, or by pointing them toward services that could make it easier for them to access care. To do this effectively, you need to know what your patients need. ConsumerView has around 1500 verifiable data points on 300 million US consumers, covering about 98% of the US population. These can be used to discover how your patients think about their health and how they make their buying decisions. When that’s merged with your own information about their clinical journeys, you can give them a truly personalized healthcare experience. 3. Future-proofing your services Finally, you can use these analytics to better understand your current patient population to make smarter decisions about the investments you need to make in future. Where are the bottlenecks in the patient’s healthcare journey? Where should you put new services? Robust data analytics help you say, “we need to invest here and this is why.” Wild says, “I’m working with one analytics team that’s looking to better understand where they’re going to allocate physical and human resources so they can follow up with their patients more completely. They’re digging in deep to understand what their current patient population looks like, and then using that data to understand what their future population may look like.” Data analytics helps you predict demand for services, so you can direct resources accordingly. You’ll be able to identify trends in patient pathways, so you can engage with patients earlier and make sure they get prompt care and support, giving them a better chance of a good outcome and saving your organization time and resources. Learn more about how your organization can drive marketing results through customer segmentation, targeted messaging and analytics

Published: February 3, 2020 by Experian Health

It’s amazing to look back at how far medical science and digital technology have come – and how those two worlds are increasingly intertwined. Ten years ago, the idea of managing your healthcare bills or making appointments through an app on your phone would have been unthinkable. Now we take it for granted! But having all these tools at our fingertips means there’s more data being shared between different services and platforms. As a healthcare provider, you might be accessing and sharing patient data multiple hospitals, primary care services, pharmacies, patient portal providers, payers and more. It’s vital to make sure that data is accurate. Research by RAND Corporation revealed that between 8-16% of patient records are duplicates. Trying to provide care on the basis of unreliable data is inefficient and expensive for providers, who lose staff time and revenue trying to match up records and reconcile the data on file with the patient in front of them. According to RAND, a mid-size health system absorbs as much as $96 for each duplicate. What this means for patients is even more worrying. According to the US National Institutes of Health, “195,000 deaths occur each year because of medical errors, with 10 of 17 being the results of identity errors or wrong patient errors.” In a value-based system where patients are covering more of the costs themselves, the financial impact of having unnecessary repeat tests or longer-in-patient stays due to delayed treatment is an added pain. Currently, standard health IT products have some catching up to do, as only 10% of duplicates are spotted. But looking ahead, the future of patient identities is promising. Unique patient identifiers are key to unlocking value-based care The twin trends of value-based care and healthcare consumerism are bumping up patient expectations. They expect a seamless experience. They expect their records to be updated immediately. They’re confused when one department doesn’t have access to information that was just shared with another. And they definitely don’t want to see different services working off different versions of the same record. The answer for many high-performing health systems is to introduce unique patient identifiers (UPIs). This allows a patient’s record to follow them throughout their healthcare journey, ensuring that at every touchpoint, clinical and admin staff are confident in the accuracy of the information they hold. But transitioning to any new system can involve a bit of culture shock for those involved, and so careful planning is essential. What steps can providers take to make sure they implement a patient identity management strategy that’s built to last? How to future-proof your patient identity platform 1. Make sure everyone’s on board with the plan First, whatever solution you’re using to manage patient records, it’s essential that your patients, staff, payers and any other parties involved all buy in to the new approach. Changing the way you handle data and introducing new digital tools such as UPIs can often call for a mindset shift in the way your team and consumers think about data. Be sure to communicate the benefits of UPIs to patients, payers and staff. For example, UPIs can: improve patient safety, by preventing duplicate and inaccurate recordslower healthcare costs, by eliminating inefficiencies and errorssafeguard patient privacy, by keeping records securecreate a better patient experience, by supporting patient-centered carehelp staff access up to date information about their patient’s healthcare situation 2. Choose a UPI system that works within and outside your network Some providers use hospital- or practice-based patient identifiers, where a master patient index is used to link all versions of a patient’s record held within a single organization. An enterprise master patient index (EMPI) does the same, but across several facilities or services. A cross-enterprise solution makes it much easier to manage patient identities across your entire network, without having to wrangle disparate records that don’t interface well with each other. When this system is based on ‘referential matching’, which uses wider data sources and UPIs to build a more connected and accurate data ecosystem, you’ll get a much more complete view of your patients and far fewer inaccuracies. 3. Use data analytics to improve decision-making UPIs bring another advantage: they enable you to analyze health, credit and consumer data for a single patient, giving you useful insights about your patient population as a whole. A network of interoperable data can help you spot trends in the social and economic factors that affect health and wellbeing, so you can target your resources more effectively. As the world of public health data matures, it’s highly likely that UPIs will become the norm. Data-sharing remains a challenge, but by using digital tech to your advantage, you can improve the way patient records are managed in your health ecosystem. Learn more about how UPIs could help close the patient data gap in your organization.

Published: January 27, 2020 by Kerry Rivera

At the end of 2019, Experian Health announced that every person in the U.S. population, an estimated 328 million Americans, had successfully been assigned a unique Universal Patient Identifier, powered by Experian Health Universal Identity Manager (UIM) and NCPDP Standards™ (the “UPI”). Universal Patient Identifiers (UPIs), created with a comprehensive view of patients from health, credit header, and consumer data sources, are thought to significantly reduce the challenges that stem from the misidentification of patients which span patient safety, financial, and operational inefficiencies. But what does 100% coverage mean? And what does this mean for the future of healthcare? To take a deeper dive, we sat down with Victoria Dames, an Experian Health leader in the identity management space to learn more. 1. It doesn’t get more perfect than 100%, so tell us more. What exactly does 100% coverage mean? Experian Health developed an algorithmic engine known as our Universal Identity Manager about five years ago. Since this time, we’ve worked closely with many providers, pharmacies and payers to help address their duplicate records. We’ve been monitoring our adoption and enumeration by unique patient identifiers against 328M individuals in the US population (2010 Census) and achieved this milestone at the end of 2019. Through our broad network of provider clients, which include hospitals, pharmacies, payers, and healthcare technology companies, patients who have received care from participating entities over the past few years have been enumerated.  As new patients enter the healthcare ecosystem, this number will continue to grow.  2. Why are universal patient identifiers (UPIs) needed and how do they benefit providers and patients? The Universal Patient Identifier (UPI) helps providers link the right records together, preventing duplicate records from being created. For example, think of all the ways duplicate accounts or variances can occur: address differences, name variations (Katherine, Kathryn, Kathy, Kat), maiden names and potential user entry error. With the UPIs, providers can link records together and have one complete record and view of the patient, ultimately leading to a better patient experience. It’s important to note that the UPI is not something the patient knows or sees, but rather part of the technology. It can be embedded within a hospital’s information system, for example. It simply links a patient’s records together, so a provider has a complete view of the patient’s identity. The flow of communication happens when participating healthcare organizations send Experian Health patient demographic information; the system provides the organization in return with the insights and identifiers that they need to better manage patient identities and prevent duplicate records. The UPI can be attached - if the situational requirement is met - to active claims in real-time transactions effectively improving the integrity of patient records. During this process Experian Health does not rely on or use any clinical information about the patient; Experian Health only leverages the minimum data elements needed to successfully match an identity.  3. How did you get numbers assigned to all Americans? When a healthcare organization enlists our help, we process all their historical records through the UIM, returning a Universal Patient Identifier (UPI). The initial run of this data helps resolve existing duplicates which can date back several years. Working with multiple providers and pharmacies, we were able to get numbers assigned to all Americans. The number will continue to evolve of course, as the population changes with births and deaths. 4. Are there privacy risks with this? Experian Health is a HIPAA-compliant Business Associate when it receives PHI from customers.  It takes its privacy obligations very seriously.  As to UIM, privacy risks are minimized by the fact that the UIM does not leverage any medical records, prescription histories, or provider systems. The purpose of the solution is to assist healthcare professionals to better match an individual’s identity through data assets that would normally be unavailable to a healthcare provider.  5. Does a UPI function similar to a credit report, meaning it provides a singular view of a patient’s medical history? It depends on the situation.  If a provider has a patient in their EHR twice under two spellings of the patient’s name in error, then yes, the UPI would link those two profiles, creating a singular view of the patient in that provider’s system. Additionally, the UPI generated by Experian Health is designed to help facilitate interoperability between healthcare providers.  For example, if your pharmacy has you listed under your maiden name of Smith and your doctor has your married name of Wilson, during the ePrescribing process, your ePrescription might not get associated with your prescription profile. If both providers have the UPI on record and submit it during the transaction, the systems will match the patient using the UPI. It’s important to note that the UPI is technology for entities and is not patient facing. 6. What is the direct benefit to consumers; will it help them control their medical data? Consumers will benefit depending on how a provider implements and utilizes the UPI. For instance, if a provider has two medical records, and they merge this into one record, the patient will see one consolidated record. Imagine two patient profiles for the same individual at a pharmacy.  One prescription is filled under each profile and the two separate prescriptions, if taken together, could lead to a severe reaction. If filled under two different profiles, the automated process to screen for drug interactions would not identify this harmful reaction. But the UPI directly solves for this issue. 7. What are the next steps and goals for Experian Health as it pertains to UIM? Our goal is to continue to partner with healthcare organizations to help prevent and resolve their duplicate records. We are continuing to invest in our technology and capabilities within identity, as we care deeply about patient safety and data integrity. Having a single, unified and accurate view of the patient is a challenge that plagues the healthcare system, and now we have a comprehensive solution that reduces the barriers to make healthcare safer.

Published: January 17, 2020 by Kerry Rivera

The stats are alarming: Up to 80% of health outcomes are not due to medical factors, but to a patient’s social and economic circumstances—such as their income, housing situation and even whether they own a car.68% of Americans are affected by at least one social determinant of health (SDOH).Approximately 24% of hospitals and 16% of physician practices screen for food insecurity, housing instability, utility needs, transportation needs, and interpersonal violence—which means the majority don’t screen for all relevant social needs. The healthcare industry has been talking about the importance of addressing social determinants of health for years, but many struggle with how to collect the insights. For example, if 68% of Americans are affected by at least one SDOH, how do they even discover the one? What is the ideal way for providers to screen for SDOH? Should they simply ask the patient? Do they start a visit with a survey, probing for details that could ultimately impact care management decisions? Providers know these sensitive topics – housing instability, financial instability, food insecurity and onward – can be tough and uncomfortable conversations. So, where to begin? Should you rely on patient surveys to capture SDOH? Patient surveys can be a useful way to find out about many potential barriers to care. However, they bring limitations: Your insights will be limited to the patients who show up—so anyone who has struggled to attend an appointment (and therefore potentially with higher needs) will be left out It can be time-consuming and expensive to give staff the time and space to conduct personal interviewsThey rely on patients to be willing to share openly, but some may not feel comfortable doing soThere is room for error in how questions and answers are interpreted by both the survey team and respondentsSocial circumstances can change over time, so it’s possible that the information gleaned in the survey may not be relevant a few months down the line. Knowing SDOH can have such a huge impact on a patient’s health certainly means clinicians should discuss these topics in the exam room, but relying solely on patient surveys and conversations could lead to gaps in intel. When should you screen for SDOH? Screening for social needs when a patient first registers or engages with your services is a good starting point. But what happens when their situation changes between diagnosis and treatment? What if they disclose a social need to a specialist that wasn’t flagged on their initial intake form? Does your staff know how to discuss sensitive social issues? Can they create a safe space for patients to share? Have you got clear referral pathways when an issue is flagged? Look for possible touchpoints in the patient’s journey where referrals to support services would be appropriate. Looping in the relevant primary care services is a good way to make sure your patients are connected to community-based programs and supported throughout their journey, whenever a new or changed social need is identified. What types of data could offer the SDOH insights a provider needs? Geographical and community-level data can help a healthcare organization understand their patient population’s income, housing situation and employment status. These are useful for population-level care planning but aren’t patient-specific. A better way is to analyze securely collected consumer marketing data for more specific and accurate information. Working with a trusted data vendor that is a compiler of original-source consumer data can help you navigate your options. The real predictive power of SDOH data comes when you combine patient-specific information obtained through screening, with consumer databases. A third-party vendor can help you access data on your patient population’s income, occupations, length of residence and other social and economic circumstances. Your care managers can use this to inform proactive, preventative conversations with patients to solve any non-clinical gaps in care. Bottom line … When healthcare organizations have a holistic view of patients—and the SDOH that play a role in their lives—they can take steps to help prevent avoidable hospital visits, emergency department (ED) utilization, appointment no-shows and worsened conditions by encouraging and facilitating earlier interventions. The key is to start with the right data.

Published: January 14, 2020 by Kerry Rivera

Did you ever have someone tell you, “there’s no magic pill” for reaching a goal? It’s a somewhat ironic analogy, given that so many people struggle to take their meds as prescribed. Following a medicine schedule actually takes a lot of organization and discipline, never mind the financial and emotional cost of having a daily reminder that you’re not well. It’s estimated that 50% of patients don’t take medications as prescribed. Sometimes a patient is busy and misses a dose. Maybe they forget whether they’ve taken it already and accidentally take double. Perhaps they feel better and decide to stop a course of meds early. Or maybe they can’t get to the pharmacist to get their refill on time. Unfortunately, medication non-adherence (MNA) can have a more direct impact on a patient’s condition than the specific treatment itself, according to the World Health Organization. Non-adherence is thought to contribute to nearly 125,000 deaths and 10% of hospitalizations each year. It costs the health care system between $100–$289 billion each year, and according to a study by Walgreens, for every 1% improvement in adherence, $50 can be saved in healthcare spending. The causes are varied. Of course, patients have a role. But healthcare organizations operating at various points along the care continuum can also play a big part in helping or hindering patients in sticking to their prescriptions. Doing so is in everyone’s interest, as tackling non-adherence can help reduce readmissions and avoid more serious medical conditions, improve patient loyalty, yield financial savings and create a better experience all around. Here are three ways different healthcare organizations can help patients stay on track with their meds: 1. Keeping accurate patient records from hospital to home When a patient is hospitalized, it’s fairly easy for them to stick to a medicine schedule. Drugs are dispensed in the same building and brought right to the patient’s bed at the appropriate time. The problems arise when the patient goes home. They may leave hospital with new prescriptions which can be confusing and if they already have a prescription, the admission itself can disrupt their usual routine. As things stand, hospitals tend not to be reimbursed for interventions to improve adherence, so these are less likely to be prioritized during care transitions. But given the likely improvements to patient outcomes and consumer loyalty, and the fact that hospitals could save $37 for every dollar spent tackling MNA, these interventions are worth a second look. A simple but effective place for hospitals to start is in improving patient identities. When your clinical teams know they have a 100% accurate and up-to-date record for each patient, including their current prescriptions, they can help the patient stay on track and prescribe new medicines with confidence. New identity management platforms such as Universal Identity Manager can help you keep track of patients and their meds, reducing the risk of medical errors and avoiding billing mistakes associated with duplicate prescriptions and preventable readmissions. This ‘golden thread’ of patient information can also improve communications within and between providers in your health system, such as Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), pharmacies and other community providers. 2. Understanding and addressing wider barriers to adherence Common barriers to adherence often relate to a patient’s circumstances at home, such as not being able to get to the pharmacy because of a lack of transport, or because the opening hours don’t fit with their work schedule. For patients juggling work, childcare and other responsibilities, refilling their prescription can easily slip down the to-do list. Pharmacies can help by offering logistical support such as automatic refill programs, home delivery and help with organizing medication into pill boxes. But how do you know which intervention will be most relevant? This requires a wider understanding of the make-up of your patient population and their needs, preferences and behaviors. Understanding the social determinants of health can help you identify the specific barriers to care for your healthcare consumers, so you can put in place the right response. 3. Develop patient engagement strategies to help patients take their meds It’s not just those directly involved in providing care who can help improve MNA. Payers can help in two major ways: firstly, by supporting members to overcome barriers such as cost and confusion, and secondly, by working with hospitals and pharmacies to help them develop effective strategies to reduce non-adherence. For example, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona (BCBSAZ) has introduced a text messaging service to send reminders to members about their prescriptions, with a $45-50 discount on copays for those that refill on time. It’s hoped this program will tackle behavioral barriers to adherence such as procrastination or forgetfulness, while also addressing price concerns. Chris Hogan, Chief Pharmacy Officer at BCBSAZ described the program “as being a very high tech, modern, simple and effective addition to our overall initiative to improve medication compliance.” This kind of personalized patient engagement can be very effective in helping patients to stay on track. With ConsumerView, you can access a wide range of high-quality demographic, psychographic and behavioral consumer data, to help you offer personalized support such as digital reminders to your patients. You can develop engagement strategies tailored to the specific needs of your patients in just a couple of clicks. Could one of these strategies help your organization do more to improve medication management? Learn more about how we can help you help your patients – and your bottom line.

Published: January 2, 2020 by Kerry Rivera

When it comes to value-based care, there’s really just one measure that matters: patient satisfaction. As CMS incentivizes providers to help patients find better care, improve population health and lower healthcare costs, more top health systems are seeing patient engagement as the path to value-over-volume success. Patients are finding themselves footing more of the bill for medical expenses, so elevating the patient experience is essential. If they’re not satisfied, they’ll simply take their dollars elsewhere – not what your CFO wants to hear. Helping patients feel more engaged in their health creates a more satisfactory experience, and in turn, boosts patient loyalty. And what’s more, by giving them opportunity to make informed decisions about their care, you can also reduce preventable admissions, avoid no-shows and fix the revenue leaks in patient collections. It’s beneficial for everyone. Here are four strategies to help you boost patient engagement and create a more consumer-friendly experience in your organization. 4 ways to boost patient engagement 1. Use segmentation and customization The first route to consumer-friendly care is about treating each patient as an individual. With advances in data analytics, it’s now possible to group your patients according to risk (whether that’s risk of a particular disease, exposure to a social determinant of health, or likelihood of non-attendance at follow-up). This allows you to be more targeted in your marketing efforts, provide patients with information that’s more relevant to them, and help each patient move to the next stage of their healthcare journey. Stanford Medical School sees this data transformation as central to its vision of “‘Precision Health’ – a more preventive, predictive, personalized and precise” approach to healthcare. Analytics give you a wealth of insights about the clinical, financial, behavioral and social factors affecting your patients, so you can personalize your patient engagement strategy to each member’s specific preferences and needs. As noted in research undertaken by Frost and Sullivan on behalf of Experian Health: “Analytics help us select patients who will respond to engagement strategies and de-select patients who won’t respond are needed. Not everyone responds to engagement in the same way.” By prioritizing precision marketing, you can create a culture of precision care. 2. Help patients take ownership of their health journey Value-based care is an opportunity to empower patients to be active players in their health. Greater transparency into the billing process, access to healthcare data and consumer-friendly tech can all help patients see what’s happening at each stage of the process. When they’re more informed, they’re more likely to adhere to care plans, turn up to appointments and successfully navigate payments. Your patient portal is a good place to start. Research shows that use of portals enhances patient engagement, satisfaction and health outcomes. Patients can access their records, view test results, schedule appointments at a time that suits and sort out bills with less of the stress. It helps patients ask the right questions and builds a trusting patient-provider relationship. 3. Improve the patient financial experience When two-thirds of Americans are worried about being able to cover unexpected medical bills, any way you can make the payment process more transparent is a big plus. Help your patient navigate the financial side of their healthcare experience with clear, real-time information about their coverage status, estimated co-pay calculations and appropriate payment plans based on their specific circumstances. Putting them at ease will help them meet their financial obligations without leaving a bad taste. In this way, you can build consumer trust and optimize your revenue cycle at the same time. 4. Use SDOH data for proactive outreach Research shows that medical tests and treatments alone are not enough to determine the outcome of a patient’s healthcare journey. We should be paying more attention to the social and economic factors that can get in the way of care. Because when patients struggle to access care, it’s harder for them to follow treatment plans or show up to important follow-up appointments. In a value-based world, tackling social needs is a growing priority for providers seeking to improve population health. When you have a more complete grasp of each patient’s motivations, support networks and personal circumstances, you can create a more efficient patient engagement plan. You’ll avoid wasting resources on patients who aren’t in a position to respond and instead can adopt outreach strategies to help those patients access the care they need. This might include offering alternative payment plans, signposting to logistical support such as childcare or transport, or referring to local community services, such as cooking classes or social clubs. To do this, you need reliable, relevant and accurate consumer data and the capability to draw actionable insights. Experian Health’s unrivaled consumer marketing data can help you better understand your patient population so you can communicate with them and support them in the most effective way. Consumer-friendly care is the new currency in value-based accounting – and the key to positive patient engagement. Find out more about how Experian Health can help your organization lift your patient engagement strategies for greater patient satisfaction, better health outcomes, and a healthier

Published: December 11, 2019 by Experian Health

  Recently I had the opportunity to present at a regional chapter of the National Association of Healthcare Access Management about the growing need for business intelligence to improve patient access functions, as well as revenue. In speaking with attendees, it became clear that automating the patient access workflow with real-time data can create a more efficient and accurate process. Here’s how. As the responsibility for paying healthcare bills increasingly falls to patients themselves, patient access can make or break the revenue cycle. From registration and verifying insurance details, to scheduling appointments and collecting cash payments—this is the front line for the financial side of the patient experience. When you consider that half of denied claims occur earlier in the revenue cycle at the point of registration, improving those early-stage patient access processes is the obvious place for providers to look when seeking to minimize lost revenue. Revenue loss in patient access is mostly due to errors in patient identification, inadequate data analytics and inefficient workflows. If front and back office teams were better connected and able to work together quickly to communicate and resolve issues, many of these errors could be prevented. Without reliable tools and workflows to support this, those teams often must resort to manual fixes for any errors that arise. Unfortunately, this takes time and effort, blocking opportunities to find new ways to improve decision making and business performance. Healthcare is becoming more competitive. Providers must work to leverage the right data in the right way to safeguard profits and offer a better patient experience. That said, where should you start? Doing more with less requires the right data insights There are two sides to the solution: first, you need to be sure your data is accurate from the start. Around a third of denied claims are caused by inaccurate patient identification, while 12% of patient records are duplicates. Cleaning up your data with high-quality demographic data can help eliminate preventable denials. Secondly, you need to be able to draw insights from your data to help make smarter decisions in the future. Let’s say you notice a spike in late payments from a certain population. Why is that? Looking at historical data on patient and payer behavior can point to emerging trends and help you figure out where to focus your efforts in response. Or perhaps you’ve recently added a new function to your patient portal. Analytics can help you see if and how patients are using it and evaluate its overall performance. Once you have your data and analytics in place, you can start to use it to make improvements. Automating the patient access workflow with real-time data can create a more efficient and accurate process. It will also help link front and back office staff with shared systems that minimize errors and wasted staff time. 3 ways to use data analytics to streamline patient access For providers looking to streamline their early revenue cycle processes using the power of data, three areas to focus on are: Creating a better patient experience Increasing numbers of self-pay patients means patient loyalty is a growing priority for providers. Creating a positive, straightforward patient financial experience is essential for hospitals and health systems looking to reduce the stress and anxiety many patients feel when dealing with healthcare bills. Using data insights to identify the sticky parts in your patient access processes can help you spot opportunities to improve the consumer experience. For example, are patients receiving duplicate communications because the system is failing to update demographic information? Are there bottlenecks or backlogs that are creating stressful delays for patients? A business intelligence tool such as Revenue Cycle Analytics can help you pinpoint the root cause of delays and errors so you can work to fix them—and level-up your patient experience. When Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital (MLKCH) realized patient registration in their busy Emergency Room was a bottleneck and source for claim denials, they implemented an automated platform to streamline their registration process and improve the data being captured at the point of registration. Lori Westman, patient access manager at MLKCH says: “We get fewer denials because we’re getting true verification data, and our patient volumes continue to increase. So the fact that we can take off two to three minutes, at least, on half of our registrations is speeding up the work for the team, and the turnaround time is much better for the patients.” Uncovering potential revenue loss Analytics can show you exactly where your revenue cycle is losing money. Using appropriate benchmarks and custom KPIs, you can analyze accounts across the entire cycle to make sure your existing revenue cycle solutions are performing optimally and identify new opportunities for improvement. By gathering together multiple data streams into a single dashboard, you’ll get an at-a-glance view of your revenue cycle performance, so you can drill down to the root cause of denials. This also helps link up your front and back office staff. Rather than working retrospectively to address issues as they happen, your back office team can use insights from whole system data reporting and analytics to give front office staff immediate feedback on where denials are occurring. Monitoring payer rules and performance With American hospitals footing the bill for more than $620 billion in uncompensated care over the last two decades, it’s vital to verify a patient’s insurance options as soon as they set foot in the hospital. With up to date information on payer rules and a robust process for finding missing coverage, you can avoid protracted negotiations with payers and focus on denials, rejections and exceptions. A payer dashboard can also help you assess how payers are performing against one another, so your discussions around timely payments will be based in fact. By analyzing performance around pre-service, point of service and post-service, you’ll be better placed to work more closely with payers to minimize the risk of both late payments and denied claims. Learn more about how data analytics and an automated patient access workflow can help eliminate costly denied claims, boost revenue cycle performance and improve the patient financial experience. Steven Thiltgen is Director of Analytics Consulting for Experian Health

Published: December 3, 2019 by Steven Thiltgen

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