5 Step Process To Increase Practice Collections
These are the crucial times where providers need to give more attention to patient collection and balances since there is now a situation with more financial responsibility from insured patients. This is a direct impact of high dollar deductible health plans related to health saving accounts or tax-advantaged medical savings accounts.
Proven
patient collection strategies are about the basic concept of good communication
and education of medical debt owed. These strategies for patient collection are
meant to solve one of the greatest challenges that patient collection costs two
to three times as much to collect from patients as it does to collect from
payers. Hence, practices need to avoid costly measures that result in
ineffective statements and calls that don’t pay off.
This Article Talks About 5 Ways to Increase Patient Payments and
Boost Practice Revenue
Patient
payments are an important element of every practice’s revenue cycle management,
but when patients avoid taking financial responsibility, practitioners and
their practices take a hard hit. According to a report from the American
Hospital Association, US hospitals have provided more than $502 billion in
uncompensated care expenses since 2000. More patients are spending more
out-of-pocket costs for medical care expenses than ever. Let’s see 5 ways your
practice can increase patient payments that boost your practice’s revenue.
- Patient
Statements & Collection Notices Design
Neatly
designed patient statements and information need to clearly mention the balance
due for medical services. The details about an effective statement should
clearly inform the patient not only of the balance due but also, the important
information regarding the services performed, provider of services, charges of
services, payer payments, and adjustments, along with contact name, address,
and contact number for statement inquiries. Many statements sent to the
patients lack the information for the patient to understand the charges they
are being asked to pay. Your practice may stand a better chance of getting a
patient to respond if they understand how they relate to the services
performed.
- Point
of Service (POS) Collections
Another
most effective time to collect money to meet the financial responsibility of
the patient is at the time of service. The staff registering patients need to
have deep knowledge and skills to understand and communicate to the patient the
due amount for the services they are getting. Registration staff should perform
well by taking patient demographic information along with understanding and
communicating the financial responsibility of the patient based on the services
rendered. (Note: the practice owners that implement POS collections are more
successful in collections when the provider performs the registration).
- Payment
Arrangement Policy
Payment policies matter. When practice allows
patients to opt for an option to make time-based payments or discounted amounts
may motivate the responsible party to pay the debt which otherwise would go
unpaid. This is specifically necessary while working with uninsured or
underinsured patients. Many times, time-based arrangements are allowed through
a structured plan when the patients call to inquire about their accounts. The
provider’s payment arrangement policy should be generously disclosed at the
time the services are rendered and through other clear written and verbal
communications.
- Patient
Follow-up Programs
Patient
follow-up programs are more than the traditional written communication; they
have action steps to actively reach out to the patient/guarantor. Successful
programs give priority to patient follow-ups based on an algorithm of elements
that help the patient to consider their propensity to pay; hence, identifying
where follow-up efforts should be focused. For standard practices, these
follow-ups generally happen once a month through phone calls and emails.
- Online
Patient Portals
Offering
patients an easy way to pay bills via any form of the online portal is an
acceptable practice and rapidly becoming a general practice. Providing payment
options as a portal and using current technology is attractive to all patients,
but particularly, to younger generations. Just like we talked about the patient
statements, it is necessary to have user-friendly online patient portals that
offer the patient deep information about the nature of their bill. Another
crucial part here to note is the importance of using a patient portal that
follows the highest standards of security, to protect your patient’s
information and to meet HIPAA compliance requirements.
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