What is your current percentage of collections coming directly from
patients? Greater patient deductibles, more high-deductible health
plans, and increasing patient copays have pushed patient collectibles in
many practices as high as 30 percent of overall collections — up from
10 percent to12 percent just a short five years ago. Have you taken a
serious look at how you are handling these private payments as part of
your overall revenue cycle? It is vital that practices have systematic
ways to address patient collections, in order to stay on top of their
revenue streams. The following strategies can help your practice collect
all that it is due:
1. Patient financial policies. If you already have a financial policy for your patients, then you should review it; if not, now
is the time to craft one. A basic policy should describe for your
patients what is expected of them in terms of paying for your services.
You should start by stressing the fact that your practice is providing a
service and expects to be paid. Additional details to include:
• Co pays are due at the time of service;
• Staff will ask for any outstanding patient balances at the time of service;
• Patients who are unable to make co payments at the time of their visit will be re-scheduled; and
•
Any extra costs incurred in attempting to collect balances due, e.g.,
collection agency fees, will be added to the amount owed to the
practice.
Each patient should be asked to sign a financial policy,
given a copy, and have a copy filed in their chart. It should also be
posted prominently on the practice's website.
2. Training front-desk staff. The
best and cheapest way to collect copayments is when the patient is in
your office. A trained staff member can ask for these balances using
prepared scripts such as "will the balance due be cash, check, or credit
card?" The most important point is to not give the patient the
opportunity to say "no!" Many practices keep credit cards on file,
which, if handled with appropriate security measures, work well. Don't
forget to train your staff on the best way to greet and collect from
your patients.
3. Patient discounts. Your staff members
should also be given guidelines agreed upon ahead of time by the
physicians for key situations. For instance, does your practice offer
the complete self-pay patient a discount at the time of service —
collecting from 25 percent to 50 percent of billed charges? Another
question to answer upfront is whether the patient will be seen if the
copay isn't collected prior to the visit. It is important for all your
physicians to follow the same policy. If your staff members are given
solid guidelines to follow, then there will be little interruption when
assisting each patient. If your patients understand your practice's
expectations (financial policy) upfront, then your collection efforts
will be that much easier.
4. Billing statements. If patient
statements must be sent it is important to define what a delinquent
account is, and when you will send outstanding balances to collections. I
suggest practices send only two statements: Send the first statement as
soon as possible after the patient visit and the second statement one
month later. Instead of using automatically generated statements
consider sending hand-written, invitation-style envelopes with notes
inside indicating the patient has been "invited" to pay the balance due.
Another option is to use different colored envelopes, in other words,
any way you can encourage your patients to open their statements rather
than simply throwing them away — as just another statement from the
doctor that can be ignored.
5. Tracking A/R. Tracking
accounts due on a daily basis will also help improve overall
collections. Start off by jotting down the expected amounts due from
each patient on the daily schedule, including copays, deductibles, and
past due balances. Then, at the end of each day generate a report on all
payments received and those that were not collected — make sure to
include the reasons for not collecting the full balance due. This
information is very useful for training staff to become more effective
at collections and also tracking patient activity.
These financial
concerns will only continue to increase, as will the pressure on your
practice to collect everything it is due. Making everyone on your staff
aware of the importance of prompt and accurate collections will invest
them in the health of the practice. Encourage managers and staff members
alike to take a serious look at how they are managing/contributing to
this piece of the revenue cycle.
No comments:
Post a Comment