Summary:
As we approach the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, medical practices will be facing a myriad of operational challenges necessary to continue practice operations while providing patient care in a multi-faceted manner.
"When the ordinary retreat, the resilient reinvent"Steve Gleason/New Orleans Saints (#37)
As we approach the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, medical practices will be facing a myriad of operational challenges necessary to continue practice operations while providing patient care in a multi-faceted manner.
The focus of the medical practice of the future will include increased utilization of telemedicine and remote patient monitoring capabilities for both patient and physician/provider convenience and greater attention to the revenue cycle management activities of the practice to increase operating cash flow. We explore the action steps required as a part of the Medical Practice Continuity Plan to ensure the efficient provision of healthcare services to patients, regardless of specialty, while sustaining the financial viability of the practice.
Let me tell you a story about how resilience can help us overcome tragedy in the face of life during and after the coronavirus pandemic.
As you may recall, New Orleans was the epicenter of destruction during and after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. While this epic storm devastated property and life as it had been known, it truly fractured relationships as tens of thousands had to relocate to various cities since they had no homes, jobs and needed to enroll their children in new schools. Yet, through sheer determination and the will to return to their beloved city, the majority of New Orleanians have returned and developed a stronger and more progressive city.
The sentinel event which captured the spirit of New Orleans and return to some sense of normalcy occurred on September 25, 2006 when the New Orleans Saints returned to the Mercedes Benz Superdome for the first time in over a year on Monday Night Football to face their division nemesis, the Atlanta Falcons. While the Saints have always represented the soul of New Orleans, this setting could not have been more perfectly scripted. After the Falcons received the kickoff and went three and out, and after only 90 seconds into the game, Steve Gleason (#37), a special teams stalwart, blocked the punt and teammate Curtis Deloatch returned it for a touchdown! To this day, those in attendance, including the announcers, said they have never heard a collective chorus of sheer joy any louder than on that September night.
While the Saints were pre-destined to win, this was more than a football game. It signified the rebirth of a city. In fact, there is a statue entitled "Rebirth" near the southeast corner of the Mercedes Benz Superdome which memorializes this iconic play. Sadly, approximately 5 years after this game, Steve Gleason discovered he had ALS. During his 9 years of battling this devastating disease, Steve has become a champion in the fight for a cure and epitomizes the type of person we all aspire to be through his love of life and gifts of encouragement and hope.
Thus, analogues to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, when we are able to return to operating medical practices toward the end of this pandemic, what will "normal" look like? We must return to the fundamentals of operating practices and focus on improving and reinventing certain areas for operational improvement, those being (1) Reimbursement Systems, (2) Billing and Collection Processes, (3) Accounts Receivable Management, (4) Operations Improvement and (5) Practice Growth. Let's examine how we can use these five levers for performance improvement to increase practice profitability even greater in the days ahead.
The process for implementing sustainable change in medical practices in the post-pandemic future involves the following:
I. Reimbursement Systems
Implementation of Telemedicine Services
The silver lining of the pandemic has been the rapid proliferation of telemedicine visits and consults. Over a matter of weeks, we have seen a transformation in the future of healthcare delivery out of necessity in being sequestered from human interaction and the public has quickly accepted the benefits of telemedicine. While telemedicine is thought to be mostly used by primary care providers, there are services that specialists can provide via telemedicine, such as follow-up of various disorders (i.e. post-op/procedures), pre-visit consultations, etc. As medical practices become more sophisticated in their use of telemedicine, they may want to explore the development of formalizing their telemedicine programs, such as using video conferencing products, free video chat apps, electronic signature software for patient forms and consents, etc. Physicians must also be mindful that there is competition in the telemedicine arena by proprietary companies (i.e. TeleDoc) as well as various local physicians and corporate medical practices.
Medical practices have begun to realize the benefits of performing patient assessments (within limits) through telehealth visits, online digital visits, remote patient monitoring and telephonic evaluation and management (E&M) services. In addition, practices have begun providing other telemedicine services such as Medicare Annual Wellness Visits (AWV) and Chronic Care Management (CCM), etc.
Development of Coding Compliance Program
Conduct Evaluation and Management Coding Utilization Analysis (including telemedicine codes) in order to determine compliance against CMS Audit Standards and determine areas of potential undercoding or overcoding.
Performance of Documentation Chart Audits to ensure appropriate documentation and medical necessity vis-a-vis procedural coding.
Conduct and document educational sessions in order to review the outcome of this assessment process to satisfy compliance requirements and establish an action plan for improvement
Conduct professional fee schedule review to determine reimbursement by the top CPT-4 codes by frequency for the top 10 payers
Detect opportunities for fee schedule adjustments and/or negotiation with managed care companies
Conduct reimbursement validation analysis to determine contract compliance by insurers and document payment at contracted rates
Consider outsourcing Medicare Annual Wellness Visits (AWV) and Chronic Care Management (CCM) if practice lacks internal resources to provide these services
Perform charge/collection/adjustment analysis by payer to determine gross collection rate (GCR) and net collection rate (NCR)
Target payers for re-negotiation
Consider opting out of specific contracts depending on revenue value to practice
Focus on risk-stratified care management (value-based care) programs, i.e. ACO's, MSSP, MIPS, etc.
Cautiously approach these programs regarding the qualifying criteria pertaining to the determination of incentive payments v. payback requirements
II. Billing and Collection Processes
Monitor upfront collections regarding co-payments, deductibles, outstanding balances and non-covered services
Set monthly targets
Establish acceptable turnaround regarding submission of initial claims and rebilling of denied/rejected claims
Develop claim denial and rejection follow-up processes
Monitor weekly
Track reasons
Provide ongoing education to reduce frequency
Assess impact of delayed cash flow
Monitor credit balances to ensure prompt repayment of Medicare and Medicaid overpayments within 60 days
Failure to refund overpayments will result in false claim penalties
Assess cost/benefit of in-house v. outsourcing of Revenue Cycle Management activities
Must examine both costs to provide services against effectiveness of performance metrics
Develop system for tracking compliance with patient payment plans
Ensure consistent performance by responsible staff members regarding insurance verification/eligibility and pre-authorization processes
Maximize information system capabilities
Formalize/standardize financial policies and procedures
III. Accounts Receivable Management
Utilize the 80/20 analysis in managing the Accounts Receivable Aged Trial Balance By Payer
Approximately 20% of insurers will represent 80% of Total A/R dollars
Focus on the A/R ATB for the 20% in order to gain the greatest impact in the shortest amount of time
Adopt strategies for collection of patient balance accounts
Patient payment plans
Utilization of third parties, i.e. collection agencies, credit bureaus, small claims court, etc.
Early Out Program
Outsource all patient balance accounts
Develop monthly audit of A/R ATB regarding insured accounts at 60+ days
Review notes for each claim and information needed to complete claim or reason for non-payment if claim is complete
Review charge/collection/adjustment ratios by payer to detect areas of low reimbursement and/or delayed payments
Quarterly monitoring of collection agency performance regarding patient balance accounts and determine acceptable performance metrics
Feasibility of outsourcing 90+ insurance accounts
Feasibility of outsourcing all patient balance accounts through Early Out Program
IV. Operations Improvement
Develop Business Continuity Plan to prepare for recovery from losses in patient revenue, ongoing labor costs and supply expense
Continue to explore Federal/State financial assistance programs
Manage supply inventory on hand to meet patient demand, but avoid excessive inventory and supply expense through monitoring usage and assurance from vendors about reasonable turnaround time for supplies and pharmaceuticals
Ensure availability of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Implement formal Medical Practice Compliance Program
Increased scrutiny regarding HIPAA Privacy and Security Standards with telemedicine
Develop "Disaster Recovery Plan"
Notify patients when safe to return to practice and conditions under which patients will be seen onsite
Notification Process
Social/print media
Email patients
Referring physicians
Hospitals
Community agencies
Critical vendors
Consider adding extended hours access to routine and urgent care via telemedicine
Explore all options for outsourcing non-clinical services
Assess feasibility of continuing current ancillary services v. developing new modalities
Review Physician/Provider Compensation Program
Adjustments necessary in base salary, incentive compensation (quantitative v. qualitative), etc.
Develop actionable monthly financial/operational reports
Develop effective patient recall system, particularly for patients not seen within latest 12-month period
Follow-up with no-show patients to attempt to re-book appointments
Explore ways to improve patient volume capacity through improved scheduling
Embrace digital healthcare solutions in every feasible aspect of practice to increase efficiency
Establish benchmarks for physician/provider productivity and share through individual monthly reports
Conduct Provider Compensation/Productivity Analyses to ensure fair market value compensation for hospital affiliated physicians/providers
Track charges, collections, expenses and net profit/loss by patient and by WRVU
Review Personnel Policies and Procedures to determine areas of potential savings, i.e. employee benefits such as PTO, etc.
Address policies related to furloughs and deferral of compensation in times of emergency
Assess cost/benefit of IT support
Review patient flow/patient process redesign options to promote efficiency
Conduct internal training and education regarding areas for regulatory compliance
Assess office space requirements/lease needs as practice increases utilization of telemedicine and other offsite services, i.e. business office operations
Develop operating/cash flow budgets to reflect changes in patient care delivery (telemedicine) and support services (offsite coding, business office operations, scheduling, etc.)
Assess cost/benefit of remote patient monitoring via telehealth
Develop Asset Management Plan
Repayment of SBA loans (if applicable)
Consider Bank Line of Credit (LOC)
Establish capital reserve account
Consider joining national Group Purchasing Organization (GPO) through professional societies
Review mix of personnel, i.e. FT, PT, contract labor, RN/LPN v. MA, etc.
Assess capability of integrating telemedicine software with current MIS/EMR v. standalone system
V. Practice Growth
Consider practice mergers regarding development of larger single specialty or multi-specialty group
Assess economies of scale
Benefits of standardization/centralization
Explore sale of practice to hospitals, FQHC's, Private Equity (PE) companies, etc.
Assess benefits of participating with various physician networks, i.e. ACO's, clinical integration networks, etc.
Explore opportunities for contracting with hospitals to provide specific services, such as call pay, medical directorships, clinical co-management arrangements, etc.
Consider feasibility of concierge model for Primary Care physicians and certain specialties with chronic disease patients, i.e., Cardiology, Endocrinology, Pulmonology, Nephrology, etc.
Develop marketing plan/budget
Use of social media
Website development/enhancement
Use of patient portal
Address differences between primary care v. specialty care in terms of target markets
Review frequency of CPT-4 and ICD-10 codes to determine types of patients currently being seen in practice
How can practice redesign benefit targeted procedure and/or diagnosis codes (patients)?
For specialty practices, conduct Physician Referral Analysis to determine number of referrals by physician by total charges and payer mix
Conduct Patient Origin Analysis to determine the geographic distribution of patients and potential areas for office expansion
Development of E-Business Strategy for practice, i.e. telemedicine, increased use of IT resources, social media, etc.
Develop Practice Strategic Plan
Conduct SWOT Analysis (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats)
Determine future areas of focus/development
Determine what to STOP doing/offering
Assess benefits of participating with a Management Services Organization (MSO)
Cost/benefit of providing various services in-house v. outsourcing
Review Payer Contracting Organizations to determine the benefits of continuing certain arrangements
Indeed, the practice of medicine in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic will allow practices to reinvent themselves. While most of us live in a comfort zone and are unwilling to change, “necessity is the mother of invention” and true innovation takes place outside of our comfort zone. In life, real growth usually results from difficult times. We should all learn the lessons from this tragedy and apply them toward providing healthcare in a much smarter and more convenient manner while improving the quality of life of both patients and those dedicated to healing them.
"When the ordinary retreat, the resilient reinvent"Steve Gleason/New Orleans Saints (#37)
Contact Details:
John W. McDaniel, MHA, Founder and ChairmanPeak Performance Physicians LLC909 Poydras Street Ste 2600New Orleans LA 70112800-764-2633 peakjwm@gmail.com
Topics
Environmental Influences
Financial Management
Performance
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