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Whether it’s due to pressure from governing bodies or price-shopping health consumers, many healthcare organizations are being challenged with price transparency efforts. With so many moving parts to determine a patient’s financial liability, how can accurate patient estimates be provided in a timely manner? Giving patients the right pricing information at the right time Like many healthcare systems, Blessing Health relied on various printouts and spreadsheets of price lists from different departments of the hospital to provide patient estimates. Lists needed to be manually updated, and the staff often relied on outdated information. The process wasn’t standardized, and estimates were inconsistent across the enterprise. While Blessing wanted to make sure that patients were getting accurate information, the estimates didn’t consider a patient’s insurance information. Since patients weren’t understanding their true financial obligation, it caused frustration among patients and employees. In today’s competitive environment, it’s important to reduce instances in the patient journey that might cause irritation. A recent report from Trends in Healthcare Payments, notes that patients who are satisfied with billing are five times more likely to recommend the hospital. At a time when hospitals are being asked to do more with less and reduce the cost of care, manual processes and work must be reduced and automated with data to provide accurate information. Patient liability estimation is a complex process of calculating multiple components, not easily available to users, including insurance benefits, charges, contractual adjustments and provider discounts. If hospital staff are manually estimating the processes, they could be using outdated pricing lists which may not include application of insurance benefits, contract rates, and discounts. As consumers gain access to pricing information, health leaders should invest in data-driven technology that can provide consumers with accurate personalized estimates. Most healthcare organizations already have the basic data they need to use automated technology to construct estimates for basic services, including claims data, real-time eligibility and benefits information, payer contracts and charge description master (CDM) information. Blessing Health knew they needed to find a way to advise patients of their financial liability, as well as give staff a tool they could confidently use to request patient payments upfront to increase collections. They wanted real-time estimates that were personalized based on a patient’s insurance and contract information. To do this, Blessing Health reached out to Experian Health to integrate Patient Estimates into their Allscripts® workflow. What to look for in price estimator tools Healthcare organizations should implement price transparency and collection practices that are standardized across the enterprise. A pricing transparency tool eliminates the need for manually updating price lists, and removes the guesswork and tedious manual processes, which often result in outdated, inaccurate estimates. Price transparency software should also include reporting features that give greater control over the process and can be agile in managing transparency initiatives as well as track potential versus actual collections. A price transparency tool should highlight a patient’s financial situation, as well as their propensity to pay, allowing you to optimize your collection strategies from the start and get patients on the right programs. To help reduce traffic to call centers, a price transparency tool should be integrated into consumer-facing estimates that are personalized and available through a web portal or mobile app. Price estimation can help with patient collections Through an automated, data-driven process, Blessing Health is now able to provide personalized patient estimates that are 80 percent to 90 percent accurate. (Inaccuracies result from unexpected tests or procedures.) As a result, Blessing Health benefited from a 58 percent increase in point-of-service patient collections. Based on the cost to implement these services, Blessing Health experienced a 1,200% return on investment. After realizing success on the hospital side, Blessing Health implemented Patient Estimates for their physician group as well. — Learn more about how you can empower the patient financial experience.

Published: April 23, 2019 by Experian Health

A recent Black Book survey of more than 500 healthcare networks revealed that hospitals in the U.S. have been painstakingly slow in adopting healthcare revenue cycle management (RCM) solutions. At the start of 2018, nearly 26 percent of hospitals had no viable solution in place, and 82 percent of them planned to make value-based reimbursement decisions without one.   For most hospitals, one of the biggest challenges in implementing RCM solutions is finding talent with the right skill set to handle RCM software difficulties. It’s a problem that even the largest healthcare delivery networks face and one that UCLA Health hospitals had to overcome. UCLA Health System Faculty Practice Group (UCLA FPG) employs more than 2,500 physicians with more than 220 primary and specialty practices.   Keeping up with payer contracts   In 2007, more than $4 million in revenue went uncollected at UCLA FPG. The group’s RCM pain points were typical of those in the industry. For example, the group was unable to keep track of over- and underpayments, which made it difficult to adhere to payer contracts. It was also difficult to manage appeals and track recovery as the volume of payer contracts grew and became increasingly more complex.   The difficulty UCLA FPG had in gathering and exporting information, in addition to the complexity and volume of contracts, left it with little negotiating power when dealing with payers. UCLA FPG's numbers continued to fluctuate until implementing Epic alongside Experian Health's Contract Manager.   Using this web-based solution, UCLA FPG has been able to automate and improve its revenue cycle due to the solution’s ability to continually monitor and update every payer contract. This has also helped the healthcare group stay compliant with all payer agreements by making it possible to catch errors faster.   Director of Revenue Integrity Measha Ford states: “We are able to catch Medicare overpayments faster with the contract management system. We recently integrated all our Medicare contracts into the system to have a lower risk of compliance issues since we only have 60 days to refund Medicare back once we identify an overpayment. Having this system, having that ability to load the contracts into the system to catch these potential risks, is very helpful.”   The UCLA network now has fewer administrative write-offs every year, faster AR collections, and reduced denials.   Experian Health's team maintains contract terms, fee schedules, and payment policies and makes sure every claim processed follows UCLA's contract terms. Online dashboards and reports help monitor reimbursement and reduce payment discrepancies through interactive graphs that expose source claim data and practice management system-specific data attributes.   Analyzing contracts before signing up   In addition to tracking and managing contracts, the group also knows exactly how a new contract or redefined contract terms will affect its bottom line. It has intel on real-world “what if” scenarios to provide insight into how various contract terms affect cash flow for the precise mix of services the group provides. It's also able to avoid unfavorable contract terms, as they are easily spotted through analysis.   Are health plans complying with your contract terms? Learn more about how we can help you find lost revenue with data-driven insight.  

Published: April 16, 2019 by Experian Health

Healthcare organizations have been forced to deal with billing challenges for so long that many might consider the struggle to simply be the price of doing business. Denied claims and contractual underpayments are regular occurrences in the payment cycle. And these issues can cause problems in the rest of the healthcare ecosystem when left unchecked. Fortunately, a robust claim scrubbing solution can reduce costs and speed up reimbursement. Healthcare billing costs can add up quickly. The estimated cost of billing- and insurance-related jobs at one large academic healthcare center ranged from $20 to $215 per patient visit, according to a study published in 2018. For years, the State of Franklin Healthcare Associates (SoFHA) was all too familiar with the challenges of the claims process. In 2010, the organization had to keep 12 full-time employees on its payroll devoted to the correction and resubmission of denied claims. When claims are denied, Crowe reports that it takes an average of 16.4 additional days for a hospital to receive payment. And those delayed payments are costly to healthcare organizations. Without the tools that enable a proactive approach, healthcare organizations' only option is to submit claims and then wait to correct the ones that are denied. SoFHA’s large network of 109 providers included a wide variety of specialties and services, from diagnostic imaging and internal medicine to OB/GYN and family practice. SoFHA needed a flexible presubmission claim scrubbing technology that would identify and correct errors before claims could be submitted. To overcome the obstacles in the claim submission process, SoFHA turned to Experian Health's Claim Scrubber. Claim Scrubber stood out to the group in two ways. The first was the price, as users pay a fixed monthly rate rather than pay for each transaction. The other highlight was the ability to build customized claim edits, which are available to all clients immediately when the tool is deployed. For Amanda Clear, SoFHA’s director of business services, that capability made all the difference. “With Claim Scrubber, I have the ability to go into the system and create my own edits,” Clear said. “Other systems either didn’t accommodate customized edits or required you to call, perhaps pay a fee, and go through a long process.” Plus, Claim Scrubber reduces demands on healthcare provider personnel because the tool comes with around 350 edits maintained by a dedicated content team. Payer-specific edits replace between 60 and 75 percent of an organization’s custom edits right away. Claim Scrubber ensures claims are correct and complete the first time they're submitted. Experian Health regularly updates its system with coding and payer changes. The tool adjusts for coding variances on claims submitted to Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance companies. It reduces denials and drives down rebilling costs for healthcare organizations. With Claim Scrubber, SoFHA generated a clear return on investment, and the group was able to expedite accounts receivable by 13 percent. Perhaps even more telling was the reduction in full-time claim correction employees that accompanied the adoption of Claim Scrubber — a change that occurred in spite of a growing volume of claims. By auditing claims and spotting errors before submission, Claim Scrubber can ease the burden of claims denials and allow healthcare providers to instead focus on their job of providing the highest-quality patient care. --- Learn more about how we can help you ensure all claims are complete and accurate before submission to the appropriate payer or clearinghouse.  

Published: April 9, 2019 by Experian Health

The United States’ health system has become the most expensive in the developed world, and high administrative costs are a big factor. They account for more than 25 percent of spending on hospital care, making American healthcare administrative costs higher than any other country. Much of the problem comes from the complexities of payment. With public health programs, private insurers, and patients themselves all splitting the bill, it’s difficult for hospital administrators to determine who pays what in each situation. Especially during patient registration, they are bogged down by the time-consuming process of verifying patients’ eligibility for insurance and other programs. For these reasons, Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital decided to focus on improving its patient registration process. The private nonprofit safety net hospital in South Los Angeles serves a high-need community and sees about 300 patients per day. Manually checking in all those people meant that MLKCH’s administrative team had an overwhelming workload. The hospital needed an integrated solution. Automation simplifies hospital patient registration The hospital’s staff was spending a significant amount of time checking different payer websites and making phone calls to determine each patient’s eligibility for insurance and various programs. Then, the benefits information had to be copied and pasted into the hospital’s non-integrated platform, which was another slow process that often resulted in inaccuracies. Quality assurance to find and correct those errors was a manual process, too, taking up more of the administrative team’s bandwidth. To free up resources and reduce errors, the hospital wanted to automate its verification processes, streamlining its registration, quality review, and more. MLKCH also needed its hospital patient registration software to work well with the Cerner system it already used. It decided to implement Experian Health’s eCare NEXT® platform. “We decided to use Experian Health’s software within Cerner versus a couple of the products we were looking at, at the same time, because it truly integrated within Cerner,” said Lori Westman, patient access manager at MLKCH. “When we presented this to our CFO, he liked the fact that it was integrated within Cerner; he didn't want us to have to go out to another third-party payer to pull information back. It's all about time and the time we can save on our registrations. That was the biggest selling point — the integration within Cerner and its seamless registrar on the back end. To the team, it's just another program they're working with in Cerner.” The software from Experian Health automates registration and financial clearance, among other patient access processes, which account for up to 80 percent of manual preregistration tasks. The system assesses patients quickly, replacing the information-gathering that staff has traditionally done. For MLKCH, which sees many returning patients, if a patient is already in the system at check-in, eCare NEXT pulls up his or her eligibility automatically when an administrator accesses the account. This saves several minutes, making it a notable patient registration process improvement. The system also eliminates a large portion of redundant tasks. When using the platform to check eligibility with one plan, eCare NEXT also searches for other applicable plans. For example, MLKCH treats a large Medicaid and managed care population, so checking a patient’s eligibility required visits to both the state’s and the health plan’s websites. But eCare NEXT will verify both automatically. Additionally, the fact that eCare NEXT integrated seamlessly with Cerner has improved the hospital’s patient registration process. Because the two platforms work together, patient data has become more accurate and the quality assurance process is less cumbersome. MLKCH was able to implement new QA standards after staff became familiar with the automation tool. The team also found that the enhanced data from eCare NEXT can shape user education and pinpoint areas for further improvements. And while there were some concerns that a new platform would take a long time to adopt, the rollout of the patient registration system was smoother than expected. The administrative team got a robust solution with exceptional support to ensure users have every resource they need. Ultimately, implementing an automation tool eliminated MLKCH’s most time-consuming registration tasks, allowing staff members to focus only on the tasks that needed their attention. This made their jobs easier and more efficient while also reducing training needs and improving compliance. The registration process became much faster. Automating preregistration tasks and eligibility verifications has also ensured MLKCH’s administrators have more accurate eligibility information. This integrates with Cerner to increase the quality of patient records. But the most important benefit of improving the patient registration process has been how it affects patients. These time savings get passed on to them in the form of quicker registration and less hassle proving eligibility. Using eCare NEXT has not only helped the hospital's administrators, but it has also allowed MLKCH to enhance patient service. Westman adds: “We get fewer denials because we're getting true verification data, and our patient volumes continue to increase. So the fact that we can take off two to three minutes, at least, on half of our registrations is speeding up the work for the team, and the turnaround time is much better for the patients.” Need to streamline your patient access department? Learn more or schedule a demo with us today.

Published: April 2, 2019 by Experian Health

Healthcare providers should be able to focus on what's important: their patients and the care they need. However, providers and their staff must spend much of their time on administrative tasks. A study by AMA Prior Authorization revealed that providers are spending two business days per week just completing prior authorizations. That doesn't even account for other administrative tasks. Meanwhile, providers rely on more payers and plans than ever before, which is often tied to their clinical performance, and patients are becoming increasingly more responsible for the cost of their care. This is leading to an increase in operating losses per physician of 17.5 percent of net revenue in 2017. Providers must prioritize their revenue cycle efficiency if they want to remain financially solvent in the ever-shifting healthcare field. To safeguard its revenue, Schneck Medical Center in Indiana, the only hospital serving four counties, wanted a way to optimize claims follow-up by identifying and targeting the claims needing attention as quickly as possible. This was especially important because an estimated 10 percent of the population lacks insurance and 13 percent lives in poverty in the primary county the medical center serves. Schneck's goals were to: Ensure denials did not exceed 3 percent of net patient revenue. Achieve the estimated total net preventable denials of $3.2 million or a 2 percent increase to operating margin. Reduce denials by confirming patient insurance eligibility, verifying medical necessity, and obtaining prior authorization when appropriate. Makenzie Smith, director of patient financial services at Schneck, said that industry pressures to reduce healthcare expenses and provide a better patient experience are what drove the healthcare organization to look at the revenue cycle technologies and processes it had in place. A better denials management system The denial management process can be cumbersome, especially for community hospitals like Schneck. It takes up too many resources and far too much time. Schneck was looking for better denial analysis reporting and automation software so it could more effectively manage denials and significantly increase collections. The organization's search led to Experian Health's automated approach to tracking the root causes of denials and identifying the trends in order to improve procedures. The software tool provided a comprehensive solution and allowed Schneck to optimize its claims workflow with remittance detail and analytics. It now helps the medical center identify denials, holds, suspends, and zero pays and uses electronic remittance advice and claim status transactions to identify appeals won or lost with payers. This allows Schneck to identify and target the claims that require immediate attention. The payoff With executive leadership buy-in and support, Schneck created a new, better process for claims denial management by: Reviewing preventable denials with customized queues in real time. Identifying directors with staff responsible for checking a patient's benefits and obtaining prior authorizations. Reviewing all denials over $500 in the revenue cycle department. Establishing a schedule for reviewing denials each month. Schneck's new streamlined process and real-time visibility into denials data has allowed staffers to work on denials more efficiently. The ability to link denials to a specific staff member in a specific department has further streamlined the process. The relationship between the front and back office has improved because both sides have achieved a better awareness of processes. With the right denial analysis and automation, healthcare organizations like Schneck can manage denials effectively and increase collections significantly.

Published: March 19, 2019 by Experian Health

It's no secret that claim denials cost healthcare organizations. They take about 16 more days to pay out than claims that have not been denied. On average, this delay in payment equates to one percent of a healthcare organization’s cost structure.   Final claim denials — or claims in which the payer never pays the provider — lowers a typical hospital’s annual net revenue by 1.9 percent. These tack on additional administrative costs because of the work it takes to close them.   The good news is that 76 percent of claim denials are eventually paid off — but the staff time it takes to get the payments can be costly.   Claims roadblocks   Experian Health recently worked with a large healthcare organization that manages more than 200,000 claims per month, which exceeds $1 billion in claims dollars. The organization has almost 50 hospitals in its network, as well as urgent care and cancer care centers, which creates a large number of transactions and claims to process. This includes Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, worker's compensation, managed care, and more.   Before partnering with Experian Health, a number of errors were leading to denied claims, including discharge-not-final-billed errors, claims errors, stop bills, late charges, clearinghouse edits, and other factors that created roadblocks. But claims automation helped turn things around.   Automation reduces errors   Automation provides benefits to healthcare organizations and patients because it speeds up evaluation, ensures correct and timely billing, and reduces the number of manual touches needed for each claim.   According to the Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare, manual processes slow down claim reimbursement. People take an average of four minutes to process claims, but automation reduces this to three minutes.   Although a minute doesn't sound like much, it translates to thousands of hours saved for a healthcare organization that processes 200,000 claims each month. Automation also frees up time for billing teams to focus on more pressing tasks.   How organizations can benefit   By automating, this healthcare organization could ensure clean claims by utilizing an expansive library of national payer edits and implementing custom edits. This eased the follow-up process because teams had detailed insight into claims status, an analysis of denial reasons to efficiently process them, and automated workflow and payment posting to handle splits and contractual adjustments.   One of the biggest reasons this healthcare organization partnered with Experian Health was the ease of implementation with its medical records system, Epic. For example, ClaimSource easily loaded customized edits and the edits library into Epic, tracked and corrected claims, found and repaired issues with the system build, and created opportunities for cross-training and centralized reporting.   Long-lasting results   Through this automated process, the healthcare organization now has detailed insight into its claims management process and can monitor rejections data, review effectiveness, and find ideas for even more system automation.   Through its partnership with Experian Health, this healthcare organization has improved its claims metrics across the board. It improved its acceptance rate by 10 percent, and it became an Epic top performer for claims acceptance, averaging a 99 percent acceptance rate. It has also increased its clean, paid claims percentage by over 10 percent.   Start automating to streamline your claims process.

Published: February 21, 2019 by Experian Health

The healthcare industry is starting to embrace the use of consumer data to help achieve better treatment outcomes, engage patients in meaningful ways, market to health consumers, and identify social determinants of health among their patient population. As consumers now spend an estimated $3.5 trillion annually on healthcare in the U.S. (approximately $10,348 per consumer), they expect the healthcare industry to create modern and innovative experiences for their care journey. Those experiences can only be created through data-driven insights. When it comes to the world of data, where can we start? What if we could use health data and other variables like socioeconomics to predict missed appointments, noncompliance with medications, and patient trajectory over time? By learning how to apply data analytics to practice management workflows, we will improve the delivery of patient care by zeroing in on the best in social determinants of health. Data insights can also forge stronger customer and patient relationships, foster brand loyalty, and drive decisions around how to interact with consumers in ways that consider their lifestyles, attitudes and preferences. Those insights help deliver tailored messages to patients that are relevant to every stage of their journey. And what about applying credit data to create a personalized, nearly invisible, payment experience for patients? As patients express that paying their bill is a top pain point in their health journey, we look to use the right data insights to fuel collection strategies by offering patients financial assistance and payment plans at the point of service to ensure a positive patient financial experience. The right data can transform patient and consumer experiences in healthcare. However, it’s important to have access to clean, original-source data, as well as analytics to gain insights that drive decisions and achieve results. Household data, marketing data, credit data and of course healthcare data can all offer a more complete view of today’s healthcare consumer. If you are attending HIMSS19, join us in booth 2033 to hear one of our presentations on using data in the patient experience to earn CE credits.  

Published: February 8, 2019 by Experian Health

  Healthcare runs on revenue, and claims denials can put a big dent into the budgets of healthcare providers — between 5 and 10 percent of claims submitted by healthcare providers are denied. This adds up to billions ­of lost dollars each year for providers in the U.S.   The good news? Ninety percent of claims denials are preventable when healthcare providers automate revenue cycle functions. In fact, providers could gain an estimated $9.5 billion by automating the claims management processes. And money isn’t the only thing to be saved — companies could also have more time to work on other processes.   The problems facing one Oregon healthcare provider   Monitoring claims and cash flow is difficult for any healthcare organization, as the staff at Summit Medical Group Oregon — Bend Memorial Clinic (BMC) knows. Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC found its team consistently waiting for payer response, which often forced its overall operations to drag.   After 30 to 45 days of submitting claims, if Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC did not receive payment, staff members would have to reach out to payers to determine whether they had received the claim. They also had to determine whether the claim was in the process of adjudication, as well as any other steps the staff should take in order to get the claim processed, according to Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC business analyst Sean Schlappy.   These manual processes not only create lags in claims reimbursements, but also take up a lot of staff time. The Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare found that processing claims manually takes an average of four minutes, while processing automated payments takes an average of three minutes. So Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC decided to implement software solutions to improve acceptance rates.   The tools used for improvement   One product Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC implemented was Claim Scrubber, which ensures all claims submitted are accurate before they're sent to the payer. Because it can be integrated with most practice management systems, this service allows employees to set up notifications in the healthcare provider's work queue. It also provides detailed dashboards and reports to quickly recognize trends to improve medical coding and reimbursement rates.   Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC additionally turned to Enhanced Claim Status, which provides employees with status requests based on the payer’s adjudication time frame, improves productivity, and ensures timely and accurate payments. This tool reduces the amount of time staff members must spend interacting with the payer, and it generates work lists of claims with actionable data.   By transitioning most of its coverage information upstream, Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC was able to obtain more accurate data during the initial patient introduction and registration. Using this technology, Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC also improved the patient experience.   Using technology for clean claims   After implementing Enhanced Claim Status in conjunction with other services from Experian Health, Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC gained a 15 percent reduction in accounts receivable days and volume. And the healthcare organization now has a 92 percent primary clean claims rate, and its claims denial rate has dropped to 7 percent.   Integrating several tools is helping Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC in the long term, Schlappy says. Summit Medical Group Oregon – BMC has increased payment processing and reduced claims denials, and, most importantly, it's producing cleaner charges.

Published: January 30, 2019 by Experian Health

As of January 1, 2019, thousands of hospitals in the U.S. are being required to post an online list of the cost of their services due to a new requirement by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). However, amid growing confusion about which fields are required or what format the list of standard services needs to be in, many health systems feel this new law will only create confusion among patients. One health system described the new requirements as, “It would be like walking into a car dealership looking at a new car, asking the salesman how much the car was going to cost and having them hand you the parts catalog. Obviously, when you have the parts catalog, you don't know what parts are in your car or which ones you're going to use or how much labor is going to go into making the car." While posting the list of prices is required by CMS, some health systems have invested in the needed technology to make it easy for patients to shop online for care. For example, in an interview with Modern Healthcare, El Camino Hospital explains they “launched a consumer self-service tool in May 2017, after about a year of development work with Experian Health. Since then, more than 3,000 people have visited the hospital's website, selected one or more of about 90 medical or surgical services they were interested in, entered their insurance information, and received an instant out-of-pocket cost estimate the hospital claims is 95% to 99% accurate.” Health systems like El Camino Hospital know that patients want to avoid costly surprises, and they should be able to understand their financial obligations upfront, including deductibles and copays. In fact, McKinsey research found nearly three-quarters of participants were worried about healthcare expenditures. Legislative help The new CMS requirement is only one of a few initiatives in the works from a legislative standpoint. In an effort to help patients, some members of Congress are trying to bring attention to the topic. A bipartisan group of U.S. senators in 2018 wrote a letter to healthcare stakeholders and experts requesting information in an effort to learn more about price transparency as they considered possible legislation on the matter. Also in the letter, the senators cited the lack of state laws and regulations requiring healthcare providers to make that information available to patients. More than 40 states were cited by the Catalyst for Payment Reform and the Health Care Incentives Improvement Initiative in 2016 because they were deficient in healthcare transparency legislation. And that same report found that some patients were paying thousands of dollars more than others for the same procedures, depending which healthcare provider they used. Alleviating patient stress Transparency in billing creates more satisfied patients because they know how much they will be paying for services, which makes it easier for them to budget. Going to the hospital is usually a stressful time for patients and their families. An easy way for healthcare providers to alleviate that stress is to help patients understand their costs upfront Most healthcare organizations already have the basic data they need to use automated technology to construct estimates for basic services, including claims data, real-time eligibility and benefits information, payer contracts and charge description master (CDM) information. Experian Health has the technology to help healthcare organizations convert this information into patient costs through Patient Estimates. This kind of transparency provides several benefits to both providers and patients. Online estimates published on healthcare provider websites give patients access to the information any time, including late at night and on weekends. And these estimates can be obtained confidentially, so patients who may be uncomfortable asking about certain procedures can find that information on their own. And that helps them be more relaxed about making appointments and scheduling treatments because they have confidence they won't face billing surprises. This feel-better result of having prices at their fingertips has a clear benefit for the healthcare providers as well. Patients are able to plan and pay for services, decreasing unpaid balances for hospitals and other healthcare providers. Ability to budget for healthcare costs Patients who know what to expect can budget wisely and actively take charge of their healthcare bills. They go in with their eyes open, which leads to improved revenue cycle management. In the end, both the patient and the hospital get what they want. With Congress and state legislatures looking at transparency in healthcare, providers can expect to see more of these rules. Healthcare organizations can get ahead of them with software like Experian Health's Patient Estimates. Healthcare consumers don't like surprises in their billing. Price transparency gives them the information and peace of mind they need to secure healthcare services and be assured that they know what they will be paying for them. Learn more about how Experian Health can help you achieve price transparency for your patients.  

Published: January 15, 2019 by Experian Health

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