What happens when you put a group of healthcare experts in a room and let them talk? A lot of information coming at you fast! At our recent Healthcare Leadership Event, BerryDunn’s experts and guests covered a wide range of challenges and solutions for healthcare leaders. Here are just a few of the takeaways. View all the session recordings.
Revenue cycle optimization: Manage and minimize denials from all angles
In the revenue cycle roundtable, our diverse group of experts each had a different perspective on how to decrease, manage, and prevent denials.
- On the front end, patient access teams should focus on being proactive about the collection of patient guarantor and insurance information in order to qualify patients for services ahead of time.
- On the back end, you need a dedicated person or team focused on tracking and managing denials, with regular meetings with your revenue cycle team.
- Both the end of the PHE as well as the influx of Medicare Advantage plans are causing a major uptick in denials. Many patients who were covered by Medicaid during the PHE are no longer covered (and may not even realize it). The diversity of Medicare Advantage plans can cause confusion over what services are covered due to the differences between each plan.
- On the Home Health side, optimize technology to meet regulatory and billing requirements for Medicaid and other insurers, which would include Electronic Visit Verification. The right technology can help agencies gain efficiencies and decrease denials.
Get your credentialing and enrollment house in order to minimize risks
Credentialing and enrollment are critical areas within the revenue cycle. When it’s not done correctly, it can cost an organization hundreds of thousands of dollars in denials, non-compliance, and provider dissatisfaction (think recruitment costs).
Healthcare organizations should recognize that credentialing and enrollment requirements are variable by state, payer, accrediting bodies, and organizational standards. Understanding these varying requirements is key in staying compliant and maximizing revenue, particularly for multi-state organizations.
Involving representatives from legal, compliance, and risk can help you manage these challenges, as can a periodic outside review of an organization’s credentials verification, enrollment, and onboarding processes, particularly for newly-onboarded physicians.
Navigate labor market shifts in healthcare finance
Like nearly all industries, the healthcare field is losing leaders and experienced staff due to higher-than-normal attrition, aging out, and consolidations. Here are some tips to focus on for improving the culture of finance teams to help retain finance leaders and staff members, as well as minimize the disruption from a leadership departure.
- Create an environment that incentivizes leaders to stay.
- Keep the lines of communication open. Frequent communication between staff and management will allow everyone in the department to stay connected and build trust amongst each other. Answer emails in a timely fashion. Walk through the department weekly to say hello. During departmental meetings, ask staff to share and actively lead the agenda. Management should welcome questions from the staff and intentionally solve problems together. Employees want to feel appreciated and integral to the department, and if they do, they will have more reason to stay.
- Provide education and training on a regular basis. Meet with your team monthly to review operational results and how the various metrics such as patient bed volumes and payor reimbursement mix correlate to the financial results. Encourage high-performing employees to participate in industry-specific associations and community events. Share knowledge and build relationships through formal mentoring and meetings with a trusted advisor. Healthcare organizations that provide valuable training will better retain their high-achieving finance leaders.
For business planning, focus on what is in your control
For organizations that may be thinking of acquiring or selling their business, be aware that in the current economic climate with rising interest rates, there may be a significant impact on your organization’s value. Did you know that every 1% rise in interest rates can equal a 10% decrease in value? In turbulent economies, it’s important to focus on what is in your control to add and protect business value, including:
- Assess the maturity of your business systems. Improving your technology systems, for example, can help you get information quicker, which helps you make better decisions and be more efficient. This can positively impact your bottom line.
- Examine your financing models. If you’re relying on lines of credit, higher interest rates are costing you. You may want to tighten up your expenses and lessen your reliance on lines of credit or generate cash to pay off higher-rate loans.
- Readjust your staffing models. Is there a way to readjust staffing to reduce high expenses, such as the cost of travelers?
- Be aware of the impact of interest rates on all of your operations.
Be proactive about patient communication as the PHE unwinds
As the public health emergency comes to an end, there will be a large impact on patient coverage. With Medicaid redeterminations underway, as many as 15 million people may lose coverage. It’s more important than ever to have processes around obtaining patient information, as well as educating patients on alternative options. For example, do your patients realize that there is a special enrollment period available for marketplace health insurance? For Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospitals (DSH), be prepared for a potential drop in Medicaid days and reimbursement. Be sure to monitor this closely to stay in compliance.
Get more insights, presentations, and recordings from our Healthcare Leadership Event 2023.