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Proper Management of Medicare/Medicaid Overpayments to Limit Risk of False Claims
2015-01-28    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
January 28, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9AM AKST | 8AM HAST Topics Covered: Identify [...]
EhealthInitiative Annual Conference 2015
2015-02-03 - 2015-02-05    
All Day
About the Annual Conference Interoperability: Building Consensus Through the 2020 Roadmap eHealth Initiative’s 2015 Annual Conference & Member Meetings, February 3-5 in Washington, DC will [...]
Real or Imaginary -- Manipulation of digital medical records
2015-02-04    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
February 04, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Orlando Regional Conference
2015-02-06    
All Day
February 06, 2015 Lake Buena Vista, FL Topics Covered: Hot Topics in Compliance Compliance and Quality of Care Readying the Compliance Department for ICD-10 Compliance [...]
Patient Engagement Summit
2015-02-09 - 2015-02-10    
12:00 am
THE “BLOCKBUSTER DRUG OF THE 21ST CENTURY” Patient engagement is one of the hottest topics in healthcare today.  Many industry stakeholders consider patient engagement, as [...]
iHT2 Health IT Summit in Miami
2015-02-10 - 2015-02-11    
All Day
February 10-11, 2015 iHT2 [eye-h-tee-squared]: 1. an awe-inspiring summit featuring some of the world.s best and brightest. 2. great food for thought that will leave you begging [...]
Starting Urgent Care Business with Confidence
2015-02-11    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
February 11, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Managed Care Compliance Conference
2015-02-15 - 2015-02-18    
All Day
February 15, 2015 - February 18, 2015 Las Vegas, NV Prospectus Learn essential information for those involved with the management of compliance at health plans. [...]
Healthcare Systems Process Improvement Conference 2015
2015-02-18 - 2015-02-20    
All Day
BE A PART OF THE 2015 CONFERENCE! The Healthcare Systems Process Improvement Conference 2015 is your source for the latest in operational and quality improvement tools, methods [...]
A Practical Guide to Using Encryption for Reducing HIPAA Data Breach Risk
2015-02-18    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
February 18, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Compliance Strategies to Protect your Revenue in a Changing Regulatory Environment
2015-02-19    
1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
February 19, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Dallas Regional Conference
2015-02-20    
All Day
February 20, 2015 Grapevine, TX Topics Covered: An Update on Government Enforcement Actions from the OIG OIG and US Attorney’s Office ICD 10 HIPAA – [...]
Events on 2015-02-03
EhealthInitiative Annual Conference 2015
3 Feb 15
2500 Calvert Street
Events on 2015-02-06
Orlando Regional Conference
6 Feb 15
Lake Buena Vista
Events on 2015-02-09
Events on 2015-02-10
Events on 2015-02-11
Events on 2015-02-15
Events on 2015-02-20
Dallas Regional Conference
20 Feb 15
Grapevine
Articles Uncategorized

Patients are consumers, too. Your portal strategy should embrace both

patients
Patients are consumers, too. Your portal strategy should embrace both

Patient engagement is easy, right? Just create a portal and tell patients it’s there.

Of course, no one who puts a little thought into this idea believes it can be so simple. Healthcare isn’t “Field of Dreams,” after all. We can build it. They still might not come.

But we still need to try and understand why, as this 2014 Health Affairs study found, the increased use of EHR technology has not created a parallel increase in electronic communication among patients and clinicians. In short, if patient portal use is an accurate indicator, how do we get patients engaged and hold their attention?

One key issue might be that we’re not in agreement on what patient engagement is and what it is not.

“Although highly supported by technology and its significant innovative leadership contributions, patient engagement is not an IT, HIT, regulatory, or vendor-driven initiative, but rather it is a patient-facing, patient driven strategy,” writes UPTONGROUP President Richard Upton on the KevinMD blog.

Patient engagement, says Tom Giulianni, MD, is not the same as a patient-centric model, which would certainly employ a patient portal to enable certain tasks, but it will also do a lot more.

“There are lots of other little things a practice can do to provide a positive experience that makes them want to come back and helps them feel more engaged in their own wellness and can even improve outcomes,” Giulianni says in The Health Care Blog. “This consumer-like experience is really what patients want not just a portal.”

Think, for a moment, about your relationship as a consumer with other businesses. You get order confirmations and delivery emails when you buy something from Amazon and other online retailers. Special offers and requests for feedback on your customer experience appear in your inbox. Online sites regularly upgrade functionality and user options to your benefit.

Chances are, the relationship you have with your physician resembles none of these.

This enhanced idea of patient engagement often includes the concept of patient as consumer for very logical reasons. In 21st century America, we are all consumers to a greater or lesser extent. We expect commercial enterprises to earn our business and make us feel valued. Technology simply strengthens this expectation.

But healthcare and medicine are not the same thing as selling books online. The patient-as-consumer idea also divides providers, as the following examples demonstrate.

Shirie Leng, MD, writing on the KevinMD blog, says patients are not customers, offering these points:

  • Patients are not relaxed, having a good time and simply comparing available options.
  • Patients often have not chosen to buy a healthcare service and are not paying for it.
  • Patients are not buying a product from which they can demand a positive outcome.
  • The patient is not always right.
  • Patient satisfaction does not always correlate with the quality of the product.

Contrast that stance with the position of David Lee Scher, MD, who argues that, especially with the advance of healthcare IT, patient engagement means consumer engagement for five reasons:

  • Patients have choices.
  • Patient satisfaction counts.
  • All stakeholders in healthcare are looking for market share.
  • Mobile health technology success hinges on social engagement.
  • Most mobile health technologies are patient-facing.

They’re both right. I mean, look at each set of bullet points and imagine a scenario in which it is true. It’s not hard. Some patients have choices and some do not. Some have mobile health technologies, as Scher mentions, and some do not.

“Sometimes we view ourselves as patients, including when we await surgery for an acute, inflamed appendix,” writes Robert Pearl, MD, in a Forbes magazine piece that effectively captures the conflicting personas we’ve all embodied at various stages in the healthcare experience. “And at other times, such as when we compare the costs and benefits of different health insurance plans, we’re clearly consumers. But most of the time we are both.”

So, is it possible to come up with a universal definition and a set of recommendations for patient engagement? No, not really. The definition will depend on the provider, the facility and the patient/client base seeking treatment/services.

Still, most providers can up their game. Hospitals and physician practices need to explain how patients benefit from a patient portal, then make it easy to enroll in and use it. Clinicians can promote portal usage to each patient on every visit. Administrators should establish policies that define message response times, test result release times and internal processes for routing messages and responses.

Because patient portals aren’t currently wowing anybody, healthcare IT has to up its game, too. For starters,polling data shows patients want the ability to schedule appointments, pay bills and view records online. Make that the functional starting point. In a broader sense, healthcare IT vendors also have to make EHRs and portals more straightforward and easy to use.

Think of the patient portal as a tool, because that’s all it is, in a broader patient engagement strategy. Yes, the tool has to be functional, but it also has to be used correctly.

As Shahid Shah explains in Healthcare IT News, in some ways EHRs have to resemble customer relationship management (CRM) tools (think Salesforce) and “… support outreach, communication, patient engagement, and similar features we’re more accustomed to seeing from marketing automation systems than transactional systems.”

The comparison seems apt, especially because CRMs and other marketing and sales-enabling tools don’t close deals, they just make it easier to organize and find information, much like an EHR.

In the end, the implementation of EHRs, changes in payment models, the emergence of new concepts like medical homes and accountable care organizations—all are efforts to move toward healthcare based on quality instead of services and fees. If quality is the goal, then patients are going to evaluate that quality, and in the new paradigm you want that evaluation to be positive.

Can we engage people through the patient portal in a way that appeals to them as both consumers and patients? The lack of strategy for appealing to both personas could prove the difference between the success and failure of portals and other patient-facing technologies.

Irv Lichtenwald is president and CEO of Medsphere Systems Corporation, the solution provider for the OpenVista electronic health record.

Source Medsphere