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Published: November 21, 2025 by Adam.Lewis@experian.com, joseph.rodriguez

3-effects-of-rising-healthcare-costs-blog-2024

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Simplifying the billing process to alleviate patient financial pain points

Healthcare consumerism, which describes the ability of patients to shop around for the best value of care, has affected every aspect of the industry. Keeping up with those changes has challenged most institutions as patients become more savvy about healthcare costs and their choices.   But the freedom for patients to choose is only one side of the coin. The other is wrought with financial pain points that come with making the traditional billing model fit the new healthcare consumerism. For instance, organizations have to give patients precise cost estimates, but when patients change insurance coverage or companies change their policies and practices, providers struggle to keep those estimates accurate.   And patients who are hit with unexpected costs after they’ve received treatment are less likely to be able pay their bills. Hospitals and providers suffer from uncollected bills, which is compounded by claims denials.   Fortunately, the idea of healthcare consumerism inherently provides the solution to the pain. Emulating consumerism that's present in other industries, such as retail, means offering accurate and transparent pricing, eliminating uncertainty, and offering patients convenient and comprehensive financial options. Like other industries, healthcare already has a wealth of IT tools to make that possible.   Headaches for patients and providers   Simplifying financial pain points requires one significant change — hospitals and providers must deliver clear, simple information about what factors into their pricing. The first step is ensuring your system can keep up with the constantly changing details of insurance policies, supplier contracts, and everything else that affects those costs.   An automated IT solution can collect up-to-date insurance data, claims history, a patient’s financial situation, your organization’s price, and more before generating an estimate. When this data changes, estimates are no longer accurate, which is why healthcare pricing is so complicated. Therefore, tracking them and updating your system automatically can make it easier.   Most of the industry already uses analytics to some degree. Combined with automated financial data-gathering tools, those analytics can help organizations identify patients who are financially at risk and might qualify for additional funding options. Along with clear and accurate estimates, patients highly value a provider that cares enough to offer affordable financing options.   Alleviating those pain points   Keeping up with policy and other financial changes as quickly as they occur makes healthcare consumerism as beneficial for hospitals and providers as it is for patients. For example, Rocky Mountain Cancer Centers was able to reduce claims denials by 27 percent after implementing payer alerts and patient estimate solutions.   The same strategy helped the College of Medicine at Baylor University collect nearly $4.2 million in underpaid contracts, which it would have missed otherwise. Both organizations have also significantly boosted patient satisfaction with their financial processes, which has led to more positive experiences and reviews.   You can also alleviate financial pain points for patients and your organization by seeing healthcare consumerism as an opportunity instead of a burden. Patients demand the same level of cost transparency and certainty from every other industry. Healthcare organizations now have the incentive (and the means) to prove that they can offer the same level of service.

Nov 20,2018 by

Optimize your medical database for patient matching

In a recent healthcare information technology survey, more than 40 percent of chief information officers identified patient matching as healthcare’s top IT concern. And though a quarter of the respondents admitted it wasn’t a current priority for their organizations, they did say that it very much should be. There’s no shortage of reasons why, but the most pressing is the need to reduce medical errors, which account for over 250,000 deaths in the United States every single year. Case in point: Seventeen percent of CIOs acknowledged that errors in matching data with the right medical identities have led directly to adverse outcomes for patients. The numbers speak for themselves: Healthcare organizations must find more effective ways to manage the data within their networks. That begins with building a robust medical database that not only hoses data, but also knows how to match it with the proper patients. How robust EMPIs streamline workflows An enterprise master patient index (EMPI) is a database that can help you clean up your data and eliminate duplicate and inaccurate records. It uses algorithms to match exact data elements among disparate records, as well as elements that fall within an acceptable range of possible compatibility. Using technology that can apply an algorithm of probabilistic and referential matching methodologies will allow healthcare organizations to expand beyond the limitations of conventional single methodology matching, as both probabilistic and referential matching techniques provide a higher degree of likeliness. The system assigns these data points to unique identities that follow patients throughout the organization. Any new data generated within the network is also attached to this identity, meaning physicians, specialists, pharmacists, and other members of the patient’s care team can access and update it as needed. EMPI support tools and unique patient identities are building blocks toward creating a healthcare ecosystem that’s truly interoperable. According to an April 2018 survey by Black Book, hospitals with an EMPI report “consistently correct patient identification at an overall average 93 percent of registrations and 85 percent of externally shared records among non-networked providers.” Unfortunately, not all healthcare systems possess the IT infrastructure to support these programs. And as long as some organizations fail to integrate similar platforms, providers won’t reap the benefits of industry-wide interoperability — and patients will continue to suffer. Whether it’s a frustrating billing mix-up, privacy breach, or a detrimental (or even fatal) misdiagnosis, many errors can be successfully prevented with an EMPI. Filling in the holes The goal of such a system should be to standardize data entry and access within each healthcare organization, as well as across the entire industry. Such a network could protect, govern, and match unique patient identities across every discipline and every aspect of their care continuum. But in order for the system to achieve these goals, you need to be sure you’re feeding it relevant, recent patient information. To ensure you have enough patient data to build an EMPI that accurately matches profiles, ask yourself these questions: 1. What kind of medical care have my patients received before this visit? When patients enter a new hospital, they’re given a brand-new identity, or patient number, that’s only relevant to that healthcare system. The identity you assign them within your own organization doesn’t provide any insight about what they’ve experienced before their current visit — and that’s the crux of the matter. When patient information is siloed within a specific system, you have no view of the patient’s medical history. But when it’s shared across systems and fed into a more dynamic and interoperable data management system, patients will ultimately receive better care. 2. Who are my patients when they’re not “patients”? It’s important to understand who patients are when they’re not in the hospital. Yes, they’re husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters. But some could be physically fit, while others haven’t seen the inside of a gym in years. Some might get regular checkups, but others cannot afford to see a physician regularly. All of these traits factor into your patients’ identities. With a comprehensive EMPI, you can tie them together to understand the environmental and socioeconomic factors that influence your patients’ health. You can then identify what social determinants of health need to be addressed or could potentially influence the efficacy of certain treatments. 3. Can we identify patients without a picture ID? Biometrics such as fingerprints and iris scans are more secure forms of identification than a photo ID. They’ll not only make it easier to identify patients, but will also offer heightened security against fraud. That being said, even biometric identification isn’t 100 percent secure unless it’s part of a database, such as the EMPI, that accurately matches patient identities with relevant medical data. Accepting that the healthcare industry needs better data management and patient-matching strategies is the first step to realizing those goals. EMPIs have shown organizations the value in universal patient identities. Now, they simply need comprehensive databases that are robust enough to keep patient identities consistent across the entire healthcare ecosystem.

Nov 08,2018 by

4 ways to secure patient portals

Not every healthcare organization embraced electronic medical records (EMRs) at first. But the incentives and regulations put in place by Meaningful Use and the Affordable Care Act have made it necessary to implement them. Now, organizations are not only embracing EMRs, but also making it easier for their patients to access and manage them through remote portals. According to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, approximately 63 percent of patients who used portals did so at their doctors’ recommendation. Despite the growing popularity of patient portals, there are still more than 25 percent of patients who refuse to use them for fear of jeopardizing their data. Considering the sensitive nature of their protected health information (PHI), along with the nearly 5.6 million health records that were compromised last year, those fears are more than reasonable. What can providers do? Hackers have honed in on the healthcare industry for two main reasons: the treasure trove of valuable information in medical records and a sometimes dated approach to cybersecurity. In fact, between 2009 and 2016, more than 30 percent of all big data breaches occurred within healthcare systems. Without proper encryption methods, login redundancies, and detection tools, portals are almost as easily accessible to hackers as they are to authorized users. As their usage grows, that lack of security will become an exponentially greater threat to patients’ PHI and identities. “Many of us are accustomed to keeping the same name and password with our accounts, and as we know, that information is very lucrative to the right individuals," says Victoria Dames, Director of Identity Management for Experian Health. "While it's our due diligence to constantly change them, there are certain scenarios where maybe we forgot to change them or we don’t regularly login and that password may sit idle. When that happens, you want to make sure that you have the right technology in place to be able to catch somebody potentially logging in, trying to impersonate a patient.” Providers can’t lower the value of PHI to make it less attractive to hackers, but they can protect it more effectively with up-to-date cybersecurity measures. These four tips can help organizations bring their patient portal security up-to-date and keep their networks safe from unauthorized access: 1. Automate the portal sign-up process. Automating the initial sign-up process can stop false enrollments into the portal at the source. When implemented correctly, the automation will only require the patient to enter a few pieces of information, and then the software can confirm the user’s identity on the back end. 2. Leverage multilayer verification. After patients have signed up to access the portal, using multilayer verification can ensure all future sessions are equally secure. For example, two-factor authentication adds additional protection on top of conventional login credentials. In addition to a password or PIN, users also have to provide something personal such as a cell phone number, ZIP code, fingerprint, iris scan, or more. If the user’s device, account ID, and/or password are compromised, two-factor authentication can ensure the organization’s network remains safe. 3. Keep anti-virus and malware software up-to-date. Multilayer verification protects users’ direct access to portals, but there are other, more frequent vulnerabilities that also need attention. For instance, HIMSS Analytics recently found that 78 percent of providers experienced ransomware and malware attacks last year. Email is the avenue of choice for malware, and these attacks constantly evolve to slip past conventional security measures. If anti-virus software is outdated, it remains vulnerable to every new iteration of malware that attacks the network. Most solutions allow for automatic opt-ins so updates are downloaded and installed as soon as they’re made available. 4. Promote interoperability standards. When primary care physicians, specialists, and healthcare payers talk to one another throughout the course of a patient’s care, it isn’t always through email. When their systems aren’t compatible, they can’t communicate as clearly and securely as they need to. Interoperability makes it possible for disparate systems to share medical histories and patient data while making that data easily understandable on either system. Because interoperability is essential for improving the continuum of care, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services provide standards for healthcare organizations to promote it. More patients and providers are optimistic about using technology to improve the healthcare experience. However, one in five patients remain so suspicious of healthcare data security that they refuse to even divulge some information to their physicians. Fortunately, with the right tools, organizations can effectively strengthen portal security and boost the confidence their patients have in them.

Oct 16,2018 by

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How healthcare providers can prepare for flu season

Flu season is rapidly approaching, which means healthcare providers must ramp up their preparedness efforts. What can they do to ensure they're ready to meet the seasonal surge in demand? Recent data from the southern hemisphere, often a forecast of what's to come in the US, suggests that this year's flu season will likely be similar to last year. The CDC warns that while “we cannot predict what will happen in the United States this upcoming season, we know that flu has the potential to cause significant illness, hospitalizations and deaths.” With hundreds of thousands of people hospitalized each year, providers must find ways to prepare for rising patient volumes and manage the risk of infection among patients and staff to keep services running smoothly. Making it as easy as possible for patients to book and attend vaccination appointments will be critical. Digital patient access will be the key to streamlining patient care. Using digital tools to prepare for flu season 2024-25 As services face increasing pressure, digital and automated tools can help healthcare providers prepare for flu season by easing staff burdens. More patients mean more appointments to schedule, more registration forms to fill out and more people in waiting rooms. Opening the digital front door helps manage high volumes by allowing patients to complete more access tasks online and prevent bottlenecks. Here are three strategies to implement to support staff and patients through a challenging season: 1. Manage infection risk with online self-scheduling An online patient scheduling platform has two clear benefits – it relieves pressure on staff during busy times and gives providers control over patient flow. Fewer calls need to be made by call center agents. No-shows are less likely because patients can book, reschedule and cancel appointments, and receive automated reminders, which makes the best use of physicians' time. Online scheduling also plays a part in infection control as providers can incorporate screening protocols to identify patients with symptoms of COVID-19 or flu, and manage their onward care pathway appropriately. Empowering consumers to take control of their healthcare with a patient scheduling system might encourage vaccine registrations, which could help reduce the burden on health services when staffing shortages remain stubbornly high. What's more, patients now expect the flexibility and convenience of scheduling appointments at a time and place that suits them. Experian Health's 2024 State of Patient Access survey found that six in ten patients want more digital tools to manage their healthcare. This indicates a growing demand for easy, simple and transparent processes. Watch the webinar: See how IU Health used self-scheduling to manage increasing patient volumes with less staff – and gain insights on using digital scheduling to scale operations beyond flu season. 2. Offer mobile registration to manage demand Should patient volumes increase, patient access staff will be under even more pressure than usual. Anything that can reduce the administrative burden will be a win. Experian Health's Registration Accelerator allows patients to complete intake forms and insurance checks through their mobile devices before stepping through the door. Their details can be pre-filled automatically, reducing the risk of error. This creates a quicker, more efficient patient registration experience that minimizes issues for staff to resolve. Mobile-enabled registration is also far more appealing for patients, who'd rather complete registration from the comfort of home than sit in a waiting room filling out lengthy forms. Plus, it reduces in-person interactions, thus minimizing exposure to infection among staff and patients. Given that 89% of patients say digital or paperless pre-registration is important to them, providers that offer online patient intake solutions will have a clear advantage in attracting potential new customers during times of high demand. In practice: See how West Tennessee Healthcare replaced clipboards with clicks with Registration Accelerator. 3. Reduce no-shows and increase engagement with automated patient outreach Providers must communicate proactively with patients to keep them in the loop as the situation evolves. With an open rate of 98%, text messages are a direct and convenient way to communicate quickly with patients. Automated patient outreach can increase vaccination rates by notifying patients about flu shot availability and offering a direct link to schedule an appointment. Automated reminders reduce no-show rates and help ensure no slot goes unused as patient volumes increase. Messages can also include tailored instructions for specific at-risk groups to emphasize the importance of timely vaccination and provide directions. This approach helps manage patient flow, increase patient satisfaction and ensure providers are prepared for the seasonal surge. Contact Experian Health today to learn how digital patient access solutions can help healthcare providers prepare for flu season in 2024. Learn more Contact us

Oct 22,2024 by Experian Health

Finding insurance coverage without SSN

Finding previously unidentified insurance coverage is a high-stakes treasure hunt for healthcare providers. If patients are unaware of active coverage or eligibility for Medicare and Medicaid, they will be left footing a bill that could have been covered by a payer. If they can't afford it, their account may end up being written off to bad debt, and providers will miss out on reimbursement opportunities, leaving millions of revenue dollars on the table. Hunting down missing or forgotten coverage on the spot is a challenge for providers, particularly if the patient does not have a Social Security Numbers (SSN) or the payers in question do not use SSNs to verify eligibility. It's a problem worth solving though and can improve the patient financial experience while preventing avoidable revenue loss. The shift away from Social Security Numbers Historically, providers have used demographic information like Social Security Numbers (SSN) to verify patient identities and locate coverage information. Without a unique patient identifier, SSNs were a stable way to link a person's health information across multiple health systems and payers. However, the use of SSNs for identification and verification purposes has dropped in recent years due to concerns about patient privacy and the risk of identity theft: SSNs give identity thieves a mechanism to assume a person's identity and access financial information and health records illegally. Moreover, SSNs are unreliable identifiers, as it is possible for more than one person to use the same number. Recognizing the need for more secure and trustworthy identifiers, many payers have moved away from SSNs. In 2018, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services began the process to remove SSN-based Health Insurance Claim Numbers (HICNs) from Medicare cards, replacing them with Medicare Beneficiary Identifiers (MBIs). These are now the primary means of checking a person's identity for Medicare transactions like billing, eligibility status and claim status. Similarly, many health plans also shifted away from using SSNs as primary identifiers, instead opting for member IDs or other secure identifiers to verify and track coverage for their members. Find billable coverage with historical data With demographic searches on the decline, providers need a more efficient and reliable way to search for coverage. As a data-driven company with a historical repository of claims data, Experian Health is uniquely positioned to help providers search for coverage. Combining search best practices, multiple proprietary databases and historical information, Experian Health's Coverage Discovery® locates patients' billable commercial insurances that were unknown or forgotten, and combs through Medicare and Medicaid coverage. This flags accounts that may have been destined as a write-off or charity and maximizes reimbursement revenue by identifying primary, secondary and tertiary coverage. Not only do fewer accounts go to bad-debt collections, but providers can automate the self-pay scrubbing process. In 2022, Coverage Discovery tracked down billable coverage in almost 30% of self-pay accounts and found more than $64.6 billion in corresponding charges. Closing the coverage gap caused by Medicaid disenrollment Coverage Discovery offers another important benefit: helping providers offer additional support to patients on lower incomes who find themselves without Medicaid, at least for a short time, following the end of continuous enrollment. As of July 2023, more than 1.6 million Medicaid enrollees were disenrolled. Providers can use the tool to confirm whether Medicaid coverage remains in place, or to uncover any additional billable government or commercial insurance that could give patients peace of mind. Patient Financial Clearance can also help screen patients for Medicaid eligibility before or at the point of service, then route them to the Medicaid Enrollment team or auto-enroll them in charity care if appropriate. Case study: Read the case study to find out how Luminis Health used Coverage Discovery to locate $240k in billable coverage each month. Leverage technology to locate unidentified coverage Thanks to advanced tools like Coverage Discovery and Patient Financial Clearance, it's much easier for providers to locate alternative coverage options for patients, using multiple sources of data. These tools leverage secure identifiers and comprehensive searches across databases, allowing providers to reclaim revenue that may otherwise go unclaimed, and reassuring patients that they won't be left holding an unexpected bill. Find out more about how Coverage Discovery can help find previously unidentified coverage and reduce bad debt.

Sep 13,2023 by Experian Health

6 effective revenue cycle strategies for healthcare providers

Compared to other industries, healthcare tends to be more resilient to economic turbulence. But the weight of the pandemic, labor shortages, rising costs and increasingly complex reimbursement structures are squeezing hospital margins. A Kaufman Hall National Hospital Flash Report in July 2023 found that many hospitals underperformed, and the gap between high-performing hospitals and those struggling continues to widen. Providers must find new and effective ways to improve revenue cycle management, should any new uncertainties emerge. With pressure mounting to increase efficiency and reduce expenses, more providers are turning to automation and artificial intelligence (AI) to eliminate unnecessary manual work and optimize revenue cycle management processes. For example, Stanford Health Care leveraged automation to reduce their cost to collect. Banner Health improved patient collections with transparent price estimates. Schneck Medical Center zeroed in on claims management and incorporated AI to reduce denials. In the face of a cashflow crunch, healthcare providers increasingly turn to data-driven revenue cycle management (RCM) strategies that span the entire patient journey. This article lists six of the most effective income-generating digital RCM strategies that providers are using to maximize profits. Building blocks of a healthy revenue cycle At its core, revenue cycle management is about ensuring providers are fully reimbursed for the care they provide. The true ROI is much broader – efficient financial and administrative processes for patient billing, claims management and collections contribute to better care, satisfied patients, high-performing staff and good financial health. Realizing these benefits calls for revenue cycle processes built on three principles: Efficiency – streamlining processes to reduce resource utilization across the entire billing cycle Accuracy – ensuring all patient and claims data is correct and complete to avoid denials and delays Transparency – giving patients, providers and payers relevant and timely information, so they can act with confidence in each financial transaction. To achieve this, providers are moving away from slow, costly manual systems. Digital RCM tools are becoming non-negotiable. 6 data-driven strategies for effective revenue cycle management 1. Increase efficiency in patient access Revenue cycle management starts when the patient books their appointment and ends when the final bills are settled. Claim denials and delayed payments often arise from data errors and miscommunications in the early stages of the patient journey, which means patient scheduling and registration processes are critical to streamline RCM. With automated, data-driven patient access tools, providers can simplify tasks across the patient journey, so patients can move from one stage to the next with as little friction as possible. Fewer errors mean delays and disappointment are more easily avoided. Automated registration and online self-scheduling can also lead to savings through more efficient use of staff time and reducing the number of appointment no-shows. Experian Health clients find that online tools allow them to make relatively minor adjustments to their workflows, with a major impact on productivity. 2. Deliver accurate and timely patient billing Patients want the payment process to be as painless as possible. In multiple surveys, Experian Health has found that patients are worried about the cost of care, while 63% of providers believe patients frequently postpone care because of cost concerns. Clear, comprehensive estimates, billing and collections practices can make it easier for patients to navigate their financial journey. And with the end of continuous Medicaid enrollment, it's likely that more patients will find themselves unsure of their coverage situation, and in need of greater support to manage the financial process. For Stanford Health, the key to improving revenue cycle management centered around patient billing and collections. To achieve the dual goals of improving the patient experience and increasing collections, they used data-driven insights and automation to remove uncollectible accounts, prioritize accounts with a high propensity to pay, find missing coverage and reduce the manual workload. Collections Optimization Manager helped Stanford Health identify the best possible collections strategy, by scoring and segmenting patient accounts with the highest propensity to pay. Coverage Discovery® supplemented this strategy by checking for any unidentified primary, secondary or tertiary coverages that can potentially reduce self-pay amounts and avoidable charity designations. As a result, Stanford Health achieved a $4.1m increase in average monthly payments and efficiency gains of $109k per month. 3. Provide transparent price estimates Experian Health's State of Patient Access 2023 report suggests that fewer than three in ten patients know how much their care will cost in advance, while nine in ten consider it important. Delivering accurate pre-care estimates to help patients plan for bills could therefore be an easy win to improve the patient experience and recoup more revenue. Banner Health used Patient Estimates as part of a wider strategy to improve patient collections. This solution generates detailed estimates of the patient's financial responsibility along with recommendations for payment plans and financial assistance, if appropriate. Listen in as Becky Peters, Executive Director of Patient Access at Banner Health, talks about streamlining the patient registration process and improving patient access with pre-care estimates. 4. Effective claims management Perhaps the biggest opportunity to improve revenue cycle performance lies in claims and denial management, which accounts for a major proportion of wasted healthcare dollars. Summit Medical Group Oregon–BMC paired Enhanced Claim Status with Claim Scrubber to submit cleaner claims the first time and avoid lost revenue. These tools help providers submit accurate claims and monitor claim status to prevent denials and resolve issues quickly. For Summit Medical Group, this led to a 92% primary clean claims rate, and a reduction in accounts receivable days and volume by 15%. Experian Health also offers a new solution that leverages machine learning and artificial intelligence for predictive reimbursement. AI Advantage™ uses AI to predict and prevent claim denials based on historical claims data. In the first six months, this solution helped Schneck achieve a 4.6% average monthly decrease in denials and decreased time spent on denials by 4x. 5. Easy ways to pay (plus clear pricing and payment policies) How easy is it for patients to pay? This simple but important question points to another vital element of effective revenue cycle management. A compassionate and convenient patient payment experience that matches consumer experience in other industries can encourage earlier payments. Easy digital options are especially important for millennial and younger patients: research by Experian Health and PYMNTS found that 60% of younger patients are looking for digital services. Experian Health's patient-friendly payment tools are designed to help patients navigate their financial responsibilities with confidence and ease. For example, PaymentSafe® allows providers to securely collect payments anytime, anywhere, including mobile payments and patient portals. 6. Operational efficiency with automation, data and analytics RCM processes generate vast amounts of data, providing valuable insights into the organization's operational performance, revenue trends and areas for improvement. Being able to parse and translate this data into actionable insights is essential to determine the right strategies to pursue to optimize financial performance. But this in itself can be a major lift. Revenue Cycle Analytics is a web-based tool that breaks down data into actionable insights across billing, reimbursement and payer performance, presenting KPI data via comprehensive dashboards. Effective revenue cycle management strategies from start to end From labor shortages to rising costs, healthcare providers are finding creative ways to manage cash flow. While each healthcare organization’s needs and goals are different, understanding these six key strategies of successful revenue cycle management can help hospitals manage their revenue cycles more effectively and efficiently, while responding to new uncertainties. Find out more about how Experian Health helps healthcare organizations leverage automation and AI to streamline processes and boost revenue cycle performance.

Aug 16,2023 by Experian Health

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