They don’t make medical diagnoses. They would never prescribe clinical treatment. They may not ever be in the same room as your patients. Still, your healthcare organization’s marketing team are on the frontline when it comes to improving patient outcomes. The rise of healthcare consumerism means patients have come to expect the same frictionless experience they often receive in retail and financial services. For healthcare providers who want to deliver an outstanding patient experience, this means using data and insights about patients’ lifestyles, behaviors and preferences to personalize the content, timing and frequency of your communications. By connecting patients to the right information at the right time, consumer-driven marketing strategies lift engagement and help patients access care, in turn driving improvements in patient outcomes. The benefits of a consumer-focused marketing strategy According to Gartner’s 2017 Customer Experience in Marketing Survey, 67% of companies said they compete on the basis of customer experience. This goes to show the growing importance of understanding customer interactions and how those can result in greater customer satisfaction, loyalty and advocacy. Healthcare providers can learn from brands in other fields that are already using data-driven marketing to create a better consumer experience and drive business growth. For example: Amazon makes it easy for customers to purchase additional items, with the use of ‘one-click’ buy buttons and helpful recommendations based on previous buying behavior Walmart Online reminds you when you’ve forgotten to add one of your usual household staples to your cart Twitter suggests news articles that may be of interest, based on what you’ve liked and shared before Google knows you’re more likely to respond to a nudge to sign up for Google Pay when you already have a Google account, because you’re already part of their digital ecosystem These brands use consumer insights to tailor content at every opportunity. They segment audiences based on lifestyle and behavioral data, so specific consumers only see the most relevant messages. In the same way, a consumer-focused healthcare marketing strategy can help providers attract new customers, provide timely and relevant information to current members, and boost brand loyalty. How to use consumer data to give patients the right content at the right time Whether you want to reach a busy parent seeking the best pediatric care for their child, or an elderly patient looking for advice on how to stay active—data and analytics can help you identify the consumers your health system wants to attract AND give them the most useful content as they move through your system as consumers. It’ll tell you whether a text message as they leave work at 6 pm would be most likely to garner a quick response, or whether a weekend email guiding them to their patient portal would be a better way to help them make informed decisions about their care. The essential ingredient here is reliable consumer data. Data that’s outdated, lacking key customer attributes or of questionable integrity is going to be unhelpful as a marketing tool. You must also maintain compliance with consumer privacy best practice. But when you’re armed with the highest quality lifestyle, demographic, psychographic and behavioral data, you can start to understand what the patient is thinking, feeling and doing at each point in their patient journey. What does daily life look like for your consumers? How much can they afford? Would they be likely to compare prices and shop around for services, or would they prioritize ease of use or quality? Do they prefer to handle ‘life admin’ on a mobile device or by phone? What time of day will they be most receptive to information from a service provider? When you know what information will be most helpful to your patients, you can create relevant content and segment your marketing campaign to deliver the right information, at the right time, in the right format. Once you’ve done that, analytics can also allow you to monitor and track the response to this tailored content, to evaluate and refine the strategies that are working best. Working with a data partner to leverage consumer insights Leveraging consumer insights is somewhat uncharted territory for many healthcare providers, but you don’t have to go it alone. Partnering with a reliable third-party vendor can help you navigate the world of data security and compliance and become nimbler in your communications with patients. Karly Rowe, Vice President of New Product Development, Identity and Care Management Products at Experian Health explains: “Understanding how the right data can transform your patient experience will continue to grow in importance for healthcare providers who want to make a successful play for market share. As the sheer volume of healthcare data grows at an astronomical rate, it’s essential to know how to draw out the most useful insights. You need to know where to source the highest quality data and how to deploy it effectively within your organization to drive proactive engagement with patients.” For organizations looking to improve patient retention and engagement, Experian Health offers access to datasets encompassing the most comprehensive resources for building strong relationships with your customers. By showing your patients you understand their health aspirations and offering the personalized experience they’re seeking, they’re more likely to continue logging in to their portals, showing up for appointments, and engaging with the services they really need to improve their health.
Most healthcare consumers spend only a tiny fraction of their lives in the clinical world of medical appointments and procedures. Where and how they spend the rest of their time has a far bigger impact on their health and well-being. So why are some providers still relying primarily on clinical data to devise their care plans? Clinical data is crucial when it comes to a patient’s diagnosis and treatment options, but it tells you nothing about their ability to stick to a care plan when they get home. How do their living situation and lifestyle habits play into the physician’s treatment recommendations? Consumer data is the missing piece of the healthcare jigsaw. When providers have insights into their patients’ social and economic circumstances, they’re better placed to spot the factors that might hinder access to care, and offer a more holistic, tailored and effective support plan. The predictive power of consumer data Let’s imagine a single mom of two small kids, working two jobs. Her daily life is a race to get everything done on time, give her children what they need and still make ends meet within her weekly budget. When a reminder for her annual wellness appointment flashes up on her phone, she adds it to her mental to-do list. But by the time the appointment comes around, the stress of taking time off work and scraping together the cash for gas or bus fare means she puts it off. She doesn’t go. Six months later, she ends up in the emergency room with symptoms of a serious illness. Had her provider known about the barriers in advance, they could have supported her to get to her appointment and discover her illness sooner. As Dr. David Berg, co-founder of Redirect Health says, “the most important part of getting good results is not the knowledge of the doctors, not the treatment, not the drug. It’s the logistics, the social support, the ability to arrange babysitting.” Consumer data, such as car ownership, employment status, income level and family information can give you these insights early enough to take action. You’ll know whether your patients can get to their appointments easily, whether they can afford childcare, and a whole host of other factors that might affect their ability to stick to a care plan. And once you know those things, you can offer tailored support to give them the best chance of success. How to gather non-clinical insights According to PwC, around 78% of providers lack the data to identify patients’ social needs. Many have basic demographic information on their patient populations, but are missing the more sophisticated insights that could help them better support patients. It doesn’t have to be complicated, but there are a few considerations healthcare providers should vet as they gather and use consumer data to help drive care plan compliance: Evaluate the pros and cons of patient surveys The obvious way to find out more about your patients’ needs is to ask them directly. A survey at the point of registration can help you understand what barriers may prevent them from attending appointments, taking prescriptions or following other medical advice. However, surveys can be time-consuming and expensive to administer, and recording answers by hand can lead to errors. How a patient interprets the questions and how your team interprets the answers may affect the usefulness of the survey data. And a patient’s circumstances may change between completing the survey and trying to follow the care plan. This approach also only includes patients who manage to attend an appointment in the first place. Those without access to care such as the mom in the example above, would be omitted from the survey, so you would miss out on discovering how to help them. Tap data vendors to deepen your consumer insights A third-party data vendor can give you access to data on your patient population’s income, occupations, length of residence and other social and economic circumstances. When this data is packaged up for your care managers, it can be used to inform proactive, preventative conversations with your patients, to solve any non-clinical gaps in care. It’s more cost-effective than patient surveys and removes the risk of personal bias and interpretation. Ensuring the reliability and integrity of your data vendor can be a challenge. Data brokers often use consumer data collected in retail and other industries, which may not be completely relevant to your activities or collected in a way that meets the requirements for use in healthcare settings. It’s crucial to be able to verify the source of the data and confirm that individuals were told how their data would be used and given the choice to opt out. Always ask your vendor if they are an “original source compiler.\" Working with a data vendor in the health space, such as Experian Health, can help avoid these pitfalls, as they will have expertise in the appropriate use of consumer data in healthcare. Understand permissible use of consumer data to stay compliant To use consumer data successfully, you must have confidence in both its accuracy and your ability to safeguard patient privacy. For example, are your data collection processes compliant with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the California Consumer Privacy Act 2018 (CCPA)? Working with a data management partner who collects data directly from consumers means you can verify that all privacy requirements and opt-outs are in place. They’ll also help you scrutinize hundreds of public and proprietary data sources, so you use only the most relevant, up-to-date data to inform your decision-making. By evaluating and understanding these three areas, you’ll be able to leverage consumer data to tailor your patient engagement and support and make it easier for your patients to comply with their care plan. The more you are able to see and treat each patient as a whole, individual person, the better their health outcomes are likely to be. Consumer data lets you do that.
“Build it and they will come” might work for 1980s movie characters, multinational coffee franchises and beloved sports teams, but it’s not a great engagement strategy for most consumer-facing organizations – especially in healthcare. Take patient portals, for example. Giving your patients a way to access their health records can help improve their health outcomes, increase compliance with care plans, and create a more positive healthcare experience overall. But do your customers know the portal exists? Do they know how it could serve them? Do they trust it? You’ve built it, but how many patients are actually logging on? In 2017, over half the US population had access to a patient portal. Around half of those people used it at least once in the previous year. Of those who didn’t, 59% said it was because they didn’t feel they needed to access an online medical record, and 25% were worried about privacy and security. This tells us two things: If healthcare providers want to increase the number of patients using their portal, they need to proactively communicate the benefits to those patients, and healthcare providers could do more to reassure patients they take portal security seriously. If patients discover that using the portal is better than not using it, and that they can do so securely, they will be more likely to log on. You can address both in your patient engagement and marketing strategies. Perhaps the better mantra is: “if you solve their problem and tell them about it, they will come”. Balancing portal security and patient convenience Your patient portal is more than just a platform for patients to access test results, sort out bills or schedule appointments. It’s a way to nurture the patient-provider relationship. And at its heart, that relationship is about trust. One way to build trust is to ensure your portal meets the strictest of security measures without creating an excessive admin burden for patients. You can do this with a security strategy that layers up several protective measures to help you tackle common areas of vulnerability, including weak ID verification, over-reliance on password-protection, and failure to encrypt sensitive data. A few practical ways to keep your patient portal secure include: using ID verification when someone signs up for the portal using device intelligence and identity proofing when a user signs in to the portal deploying extra security checks where the risk of identity fraud is higher putting systems in place to flag and respond to security breaches as fast as possible. A solution like PreciseID® can help you take care of your patients’ privacy and security behind the scenes. They’ll see just enough to reassure them that you’re taking their security seriously, without any protracted log-in process that puts them off using the portal altogether. Marketing your patient portal so more patients benefit from it Solving your patients’ concerns about security is just one route to boosting portal utilization. Another important way to ensure more patients use and benefit from the patient portal is to actively encourage them to access their online records regularly. Research suggests individuals who are encouraged to use their online medical record by their provider are almost twice as likely to access it, compared to those who weren’t actively encouraged. So how do you convince your patients of the benefits of regularly logging on? That it’s not just a convenient way to manage their medical journey, but could result in better health? The answer lies in consumer data – the lifestyle, demographic, psychographic and behavioral information that gives you a fuller understanding of what drives your patients. Experian Health’s ConsumerView data analytics can capture insights that let you reach out to your consumers with the right message, in the right way, at the right time. Do they live a busy lifestyle? Reassure them that the portal can save them time. Are there lifestyle factors that may hinder their adherence to medication? Encourage them to use the portal to make sure their prescriptions are up to date. If you discover your consumers are big social media users, you might target your portal engagement campaign through those channels. Equally, if a consumer doesn’t have any social media accounts, there would be no point investing in Facebook ads. Personalization makes your patients feel taken care of, leading to greater trust, loyalty and satisfaction. Increase patient portal engagement today In the wake of consumerism and IT transformation across many other industries, a tailored and digitally secure healthcare service is a must. “Consumers now expect to be provided with a turnkey, individual experience that is fast and seamless,” said Kristen Simmons, Experian Health’s senior vice president of strategy and innovation. Your patient portal must be seen to provide a valuable and secure service. While there’s a way to go to increase the number of patients making full use of portals, the tools exist to support healthcare providers’ engagement goals. Learn more about how your organization can leverage consumer insights to improve patient retention and engagement.
Patient identity is the backbone of the entire healthcare system. It\'s how the pharmacist knows they\'re handing over a prescription to the right person. It\'s how the physiotherapist knows what happened during a patient\'s knee surgery a few months earlier. It\'s how the hospital’s billing office knows they\'re mailing a patient\'s bill to the right address. In short, it\'s how you know who your patients are. When something goes wrong with patient identities, the negative impacts can be far-reaching: from a bad patient experience or worrying patient safety issues, to an operational nightmare or avoidable expense to the provider. Incorrect and mismatched patient records can lead to patients getting the wrong medicine or treatment, delayed treatment, or missed follow up. Clinicians may be forced to make medical decisions without seeing a 360° view of the patient in front of them. And potential data breaches arising from misidentification can leave providers exposed to both financial and legal challenges. All of this is compounded by the fact that providers often don\'t know the scale of the problem. A healthcare IT survey in 2018 found that while 66% of Chief Information Officers in healthcare organizations considered patient matching among the highest priorities for their leadership team, only 18% actually knew the figures for mismatched and duplicate records within their own organization. That\'s not including the potential for identification errors being passed between different healthcare providers. In fact, up to half of all patient records may not be linked correctly. So why do these identity mismatches occur and how can you prevent them? Understanding the root causes is the key to solving for patient misidentification. Top 9 reasons for patient misidentification According to a Ponemon Institute study of more than 500 nurses, clinicians, IT staff and finance leads across the US, common causes of patient misidentification include: Incorrect patient identification at registration, where the patient is linked to the wrong records throughout their interaction with the service provider Inability to find the correct record for the patient, when queries result in multiple or duplicate records, or no record at all Time pressure when treating patients – clinicians can waste up to 30 minutes per shift searching for correct health records for patients Insufficient training and awareness, with staff failing to follow protocols correctly, or those protocols being substandard in the first place Too many duplicate records in the system, with misidentification occurring when the search query returns multiple records with the same name or date of birth Human error Inefficient information-sharing between departments or workflows Over reliance on DIY solutions, which may not quite meet the mark in identity management Patient behavior, where patients themselves may submit false information in order to access treatment not otherwise available to them. How to avoid and fix mismatched patient records Writing in the Patient Safety and Quality Healthcare journal about the need to create a culture that encourages proactive risk assessment to prevent patient misidentification, Patricia Hughes, Robert Latino and Timothy Kelly say: \"Too often, patient identification errors only receive their due attention after a serious mistake occurs, such as one that results in patient harm. These “sentinel events” persist despite numerous technological advances and initiatives to focus attention on the issue... The good news is that patient identification errors are highly preventable with the right identification analyses, workflows, and safeguards in place.\" Providers need to look at past errors and understand why they happened, implement safeguards such as the Safety Assurance Factors for EHR Resilience (SAFER) checklist, and support staff to use identity matching and verification tools with confidence. Using the right tool for the job Traditional matching tools (such as manual processes, an enterprise master patient index, or a homegrown data matching solution) are no longer sufficient, due to the volume of data to be matched and the varying quality from each source. As patient records are increasingly spread across multiple systems and departments, all with different systems and reliability, providers should explore how Universal Patient Identifiers can build a more connected data ecosystem. This approach creates the most complete view of patients from reliable health, credit, and consumer data sources, and can significantly reduce the challenges arising from mismatched records. For example, Experian Health\'s Universal Identity Manager platform spans hospitals, health systems and pharmacy organizations, processing more than 550 million health records. By integrating patient information from sources beyond your own enterprise-level data, you\'ll be able to more accurately match, manage and protect patient data, and root out the causes of misidentification before it even happens. Learn more about patient matching methodologies and how you can improve your data records.