Tuesday, June 27, 2017

The Patient-Centric Revenue Cycle (is good for business)


The Patient-Centric Revenue Cycle (is good for business)

A big chunk of common sense is missing in the discussion surrounding American healthcare.  It could be that the right people are not doing most of the talking and decision-making. Talking heads around the subject of how to fix healthcare in the United States clutter up the conversation to the point that most Americans are left  just hoping that - somehow  -  everything will shake out and settle in so they can go about their lives and confront all the other worries they have in life. Many well-intentioned people have attempted to make incremental changes or tweaks. Healthcare providers are spending nearly 65% of their budgets on administrative costs and personnel to keep up – which means that less than 40% of healthcare provider resources can be dedicated to innovation.  Perhaps it’s time to think in a radically different way.

The question that none of the surveys are asking is, “How does the cost of healthcare services, the information you received prior to receiving services, and the care you received from the Finance/Billing Department after your care affect your feelings about your overall experience?”  Yet, every American family has at least one story of frustration with healthcare that has roots in costs, billing, and insurance. According to a 2012 survey1 done by Mark Blankenship of Opinion Access for the American Health Care Association, more than 50% of Americans had a negative or very negative impression of for-profit healthcare systems, and less than 15% felt very positive about for-profit healthcare systems. Surprisingly, less than 1/3 of respondents felt positively about not-for-profit healthcare systems, too.  Everyone is purporting their expert opinions and no one – NO ONE – is listening to the angst of Americans as patients and caregivers. The fact of the matter is that a patient’s perception of their healthcare is materially related to their overall perception of healthcare services. More importantly, patient concerns and/or frustration with healthcare billing, insurance , co-pays, deductibles, and non-covered services are reflected in their overall opinions of the hospital, their doctors, and the surveys they fill out.

Americans don’t really care about the details of the ACA, AHCA, or whatever acronym is applied.  What Americans, and all of the other people in the world who count on being able to find quality care and innovative technology in U.S. hospitals, care about is to have a means to affordable, quality healthcare.

Make no mistake. Americans are passionate about how decisions and regulations made in Washington affect them personally. Who they see, however, as frustrating them are the people in front of them.  Even when patients are very pleased with their medical care and the hospital facilities, their first impressions, when they sit down to register,  and their last impressions, when they receive their bill,  color their opinions about the healthcare organization overall. 

Health is personal. Bills are personal.  When a patient has a reason to seek treatment for a health condition, their doctors and nurses are part of their team; champions and experts who comfort and cure.  Then the bills start rolling in and patients feel that suddenly they are alone and the hospital is in an adversarial relationship with them.  As industry regulations and insurance restrictions have pressured  financial positions, healthcare organizations have spent a great deal of time and effort to educate clinical staff about the revenue cycle. It is important that we also teach “bedside manner” to the Finance Department.

Medicare changed healthcare delivery and reimbursement in 1965. Medicaid changed healthcare delivery and reimbursement more expansively. Medicare part D changed healthcare delivery and reimbursement yet again;  taxing Medicare budgets substantially – as well as providing fertile ground  for  pharmaceutical and durable medical equipment costs to rise. The ACA fundamentally changed the relationship between physicians and patients, shifted control of healthcare decision-making, and added new layers of administrative burden to healthcare providers.  Good intentions all, but from 1965 forward healthcare providers have struggled to keep up with administrative costs and responsibilities.

In more than twenty years of working in healthcare, I’ve had the opportunity to talk to hundreds of patients, physicians, and healthcare workers.  The revenue cycle matters! It took years for hospitals to understand that the revenue cycle was important to the fiscal health of the organization. It seems that the fact that the revenue cycle – or at least the impact of the revenue cycle – is just as important to patients.  

Patients need to be able to make informed decisions about their healthcare, and they also need to be cared for after services are received and the bills start rolling in. In order to provide patients with realistic cost estimates for patient out-of-pocket expenses prior to care, healthcare providers need to be able to access in real-time, according to their individual contracts with insurance carriers, exactly what the patient’s benefits are for the proposed treatment plan. To underscore that statement;  that means  insurance carriers need to provide current balances for patient deductibles met and accurate assessments of coverage according to the patient’s benefits for ALL services – not just the most-utilized or the procedures paid at the highest rates. For example, cancer treatment benefits are not available on insurance websites.  

It would be awesome if insurance carriers made it possible for patients to estimate their own benefits according to their plan for the prescribed treatment ahead of their arrival for treatment.  Preferably, patients should be able to access an estimate for their out-of-pocket expenses through their insurance carrier website and/ or by telephone using current customary charges from the healthcare provider’s website and reimbursement rates based on their insurance carrier’s contract with their specific healthcare provider.  Many healthcare providers allow patients to estimate their costs based on the provider’s usual charges for a particular service, but the patient still has to then review their coverage and any claims they have already submitted in the current year and make additional calculations. Even the savviest of patients can get lost in all of that.

·         Insurance companies already have access to this information, broken down by individual providers, and even by individual patient,  according to claims received and reimbursements paid.

·         Insurance plans also have access to current records on how much deductible patients have individually met at the time of estimate,

·         as well as contract information related to the patient’s specific responsibilities for co-pays, maximum out-of-pocket, etc.

·         The patient’s insurance plan sees all claims from all healthcare providers, and is therefore at an advantage to be able to relay accurate information to patients.

·         Insurance plans need to improve the knowledge-base, and in most cases improve access to their beneficiaries’ actual contracts and benefits to their customer service front line, so that communication with patients who request estimates of benefits via telephone or have questions about their benefits receive substantive and accurate information.

·         The relationship between a patient and their insurance plan is between those two entities. Insurance companies are responsible to their beneficiaries to pay claims in the manner agreed by contract.

·         Healthcare providers have a solemn responsibility to the patient to explain fully to the patient the proposed treatments, side effects and expected outcomes. They are also responsible to be accountable for questions patients have about why the cost of their care is what it is, and what plans, programs, grants, or arrangements the healthcare organization can make available to assist patients with out-of-pocket expenses. 

In defaulting all explanations to patients concerning what their insurance will and won’t pay for to the healthcare provider, the insurance companies quite deftly abdicate responsibility and patients see the healthcare provider as both their hope for care and their adversary for the cost from the beginning.

The second half of caring for our patients throughout the revenue cycle again belongs jointly to insurance companies and healthcare providers; but falls most heavily to the finance teams of the healthcare providers.  Healthcare providers need to

·         Provide clear and easily navigable information for patients to find average charges for procedures

·         Meet with patients one-on-one prior to all elective procedures to establish payment plans and outline charges for services

·         Provide access and avenues to available financial assistance; including grants, outside services, and Medicaid applications

·         Establish policies and provide copies to patients for expectations for payment and financial assistance

·         Train registrars, financial counselors, customer service, and collectors in empathy and monitor for consistent behavior aligned with organizational values

·         All Patient Access staff should be well-trained in available assistance, financial policies, and escalation for special circumstances and patient questions or concerns

·         Provide patient statements that are clear and easy to understand in layman’s terms

·         Reach out personally to patients who have outstanding bills in a friendly way to reinforce the relationship, verify that the patient is aware of pending due dates and still able to meet them, and ask if they have any questions – and reliably connect the patient with their physician’s office if medical questions come up.



 Once treatment has been delivered to the patient and the bills start rolling in, patients should already have clarity concerning their financial obligations and an established relationship with at least one (and preferably more than one) person in the finance department who is assigned to follow their account and respond to questions.  Patients should be able to pull an itemized statement of their charges on line or easily request them through a direct phone line.



A third point, though perhaps not more than wishful thinking today, would be to streamline the insurance billing process altogether.  The United States is the only healthcare system in the world that uses ICD-10 coding for purposes of healthcare reimbursement.  What would happen if patients received, as they have been requesting for at least as long as I can remember, a single statement for all services rendered – or in the case of chronic conditions one statement each month – instead of separate statements from individual providers for individual services? CMS already requires monthly claims for Medicare patients,  and coordinated care by multiple providers is already a fact. To further streamline patient billing, (and I fully expect to hear “pooh-pooh” from many voices – but just consider and humor me here) it should also be entirely possible to collect into one billing statement all care a patient receives regardless of patient status.  All physician orders and charges are already time-stamped, so in theory a patient who arrived through the ED, went to surgery, subsequently  admitted as an in-patient  post-op would still be able to receive one bill for an entire episode of care.   

In the end, the patient has to be allowed to return to the center of the equation for  American healthcare.  Regulations , ever-decreasing reimbursements, exploding demand, and insurance interests have dominated the conversation and driven the focus of healthcare providers for a generation.  The revenue cycle matters to healthcare organizations for their fiscal health, but more importantly, the revenue cycle matters to patients because to them it’s personal.







 1    Mark Blankenship, Opinion Access, Survey Results submitted to American Health Care Association,