Loading...

Is your patient access department ready for flu season?

Published: November 19, 2019 by Experian Health

Flu season came early to Australia this year, with more influenza hospitalizations compared to last. And 93% of reported cases were the more dangerous Influenza A strain. If you’re wondering what this has to do with your healthcare organization, the answer is that generally speaking, flu season in the U.S. often mirrors what’s just happened in the southern hemisphere. In short, get ready. The number of cases in Australia has U.S. health officials gearing up for a challenging flu season over the next few months.

Although flu activity is currently low in the US, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) expect this to increase in the coming weeks, particularly as Australia experienced an unusually severe early flu season this year.

For healthcare organizations, this will likely translate into extra demands on staff and services, crowded emergency rooms and higher rates of admission. Your organization most likely already has a robust winter health contingency plan in place. Still, there may be new ways to use data analytics and technology to increase efficiency, so you’re as prepared as possible. Are you ready?

Three ways technology can help providers prepare for flu season

  1. Create a flu-preparedness patient engagement strategy

At this time of year, patients can be exposed to many misconceptions about flu and how to prevent it. A helpful way to make sure your patients are informed about how to protect themselves against illness is to communicate the risks, encourage vaccinations and promote preventative behavior.

Consumer data can help you to deliver personalized messages to patients in a time and format that suits them best, segmenting your patient groups according to risk status. Whether you’re contacting them through their patient portal, email or in-person touchpoints, a tailored approach will create a more reassuring patient experience, while allowing you to target your information campaign to the right people at the right time.

  1. Promote telehealth services

More hospitals and pharmacies are turning to telehealth systems to help manage flu season. Patients can log on to watch information videos and have virtual consultations with physicians without being exposed to germs in the doctor’s office. Reducing the number of patients showing up to access services in-person can help relieve pressure on services, while minimizing the risk of infection spreading. Check in with your telehealth provider to make sure everything is in place to provide your patients with the virtual care and advice they need.

  1. Streamline patient registration

With more patients likely to be coming through the doors, the last thing you need is a time-consuming registration process hindered by lengthy and often unnecessary eligibility checks.

Automating registration, financial clearance and other patient access processes can eliminate many manual tasks, save time and reduce errors so there are fewer denied claims. At such a busy time of year, your patients, staff and bottom line will thank you!

How one Los Angeles hospital streamlined patient registration to manage flu season

Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital in Los Angeles worked with Experian Health to streamline patient registration and insurance verification. With a high-traffic emergency department and limited front-line staff, manual quality assurance and multiple payer website checks were creating bottlenecks and inaccuracies that took up more time to fix.

Using Coverage Discovery, the hospital was able to improve efficiency in insurance verification, while Registration QA saved time in validating patient and payment information. In addition, eCare NEXT® helped automate workflows and generate data insights for further improvements—integrating seamlessly into the hospital’s existing Cerner® system.

Speaking about the improvement made ahead of last year’s flu season, Lori Westman, patient access manager at MLKCH, said:

“We have a lot of returning patients to our emergency room, so once we check that patient in, their eligibility automatically runs in the background and our staff doesn’t have to go into another website to check their eligibility. This has saved us two to three minutes of our registration time.”

“We average about 300 patients every 24 hours. Heading into flu season, they’re expecting to hit a 400-per-day volume, so the fact that we can take off two to three minutes at least on half of our registrations is going to speed up the work for the team that much faster, to have a turnaround time that much better for more patients to come through.”

Find out more about how we can help you streamline your Patient Access processes, so your organization is fighting fit for this year’s flu season.

Related Posts

Why do we use it? lorum fuga. Et harum quidem rerum facilis est et expedita distinctio. Nam libero tempore, cum soluta nobis est eligendi optio cumque nihil impedit quo minus id quod maxime placeat facere possimus, omnis voluptas assumenda est, omnis dolor repellendus. Temporibus autem quibusdam et aut officiis debitis aut reru Column boxes Testing the Lates post MoreinformationWhere can I get some?Where does it come from? ply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry\'s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap int HeadingsContent it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for \'lorem ipsum\' will uncover many web sites still in their infancy. Various versions essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsu Related Posts

Published: February 6, 2025 by QA MarketingTechnologists

You may also like: Supercharge your COVID-19 vaccine management plan with digital solutions “Experian Health’s ability to move quickly and adapt their self-service platform to schedule vaccines for patients has been an invaluable improvement not only for our operations, but to the patient experience. The power to schedule the vaccine’s second dose after the first is administered helps us deliver on our commitment to providing reliable, quality care.” - Julie Frahm, director of consumer digital products at Sharp HealthCare The unpredictable nature of patient volume is a large part of what makes scheduling for the COVID-19 vaccine so difficult. Before now, providers haven’t had to manage mass appointment slots and registrations tied specifically to vaccinations. And even with those features streamlined, providers are still unsure of the best way to reach out to patients who are eligible for the vaccine to prompt them to schedule their appointment. Already a user of Experian Health’s Patient Schedule solution, Sharp HealthCare turned to online self-scheduling to improve patient access to the COVID-19 vaccine. With the solution in place, patients of Sharp HealthCare who are eligible for the vaccine can schedule their first dose online via computer or mobile phone. After answering a short set of questions, the scheduling solution will guide patients to a calendar of available day and time slots for receiving the first vaccination. After the first shot is administered, Sharp HealthCare staff can schedule patients for their second dose onsite, prior to leaving the office. Patients of Sharp HealthCare are consistently utilizing online self-scheduling to book appointments for their vaccinations. More than 1,000 vaccinations were scheduled in the first three weeks of online self-scheduling being available to patients. The ability for provider staff to help book the second dose of the vaccine for patients has also helped Sharp HealthCare deliver on their commitment to quality care, further ensuring the efficacy of the vaccine for each and every patient. Patients are also enjoying the expanded use of a self-service digital service, especially for a process that has been widely known to, at least thus far, be a detriment to the patient experience. Discover how Patient Schedule can improve vaccine management.

Published: March 26, 2021 by Experian Health

Other blog posts in this series: Segmenting your patient population for the COVID-19 vaccine Engaging patient segments with convenient, secure scheduling solutions Authenticating portal access with automation As the vaccine management process continues to ramp up, providers are focused on how to administer the vaccine to as many people as quickly and efficiently as possible. While certain features like online self-scheduling have helped to speed this process up, especially for those locations that are servicing thousands of patients per day, there are portions of the intake process that are being left behind that will consequently cost providers in the end. We interviewed Dustin Whittier, senior director of product management at Experian Health, about how providers can increase reimbursements for both the vaccine itself and the administration of the vaccine.  How will the volume of patient traffic and offsite administration of the vaccine challenge the reimbursement process? What we’re seeing, particularly at some of these large-scale roll outs, is the entire registration process being stripped. With so many individuals presenting at once for the vaccine, on site staff have significantly less time than usual to collect patient information such as insurance. Many are focused on capturing the bare necessity to quickly and efficiently serve patients. Some are even choosing to forego collecting insurance entirely. Obviously, rushing through the eligibility and insurance process, or bypassing the process itself, will have an impact on a provider’s ability to submit for reimbursement. The ability to confirm identify insurance after the fact may be feasible for a small number of patients, but at this volume, it is nearly impossible. Think of the volume a major vaccine pop-up site might see in a single day, maybe upwards of 20,000 patients. Imagine having a backlog of 20,000 patients to identify and confirm insurance for. It’s a nightmare. What can be done to mitigate these issues? A tool like Coverage Discovery automatically finds available coverage that was previously unknown or forgotten, whether Medicare, Medicaid or commercial insurance. Scans for coverage can be done in bulk, before or after services are rendered, helping providers better identify insurance for patients receiving vaccines. Providers are not only paid faster but can also avoid the collections challenges of self-pay receivables. Interested in learning more about how Experian Health can help supercharge the COVID-19 vaccine management process?

Published: March 23, 2021 by Experian Health

Categories

Subscription title JR New new

Description This is a test

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Archives

Subscription title

Description
Subscribe