Care Management

Learn how data and analytics can power patient-centered engagement strategies to improve population health and reduce healthcare costs.

How providers can streamline care to prepare for a “twindemic” of COVID-19 and flu

How can healthcare providers leverage technology to streamline care and prepare for a potential “twindemic” of COVID-19 and the flu?

Published: September 28, 2021 by Experian Health
4 ways to strengthen digital patient access

In this blog, we look at 4 different ways providers can strengthen digital patient access and create better patient experiences.

Published: September 7, 2021 by Experian Health
How COVID-19 changed the patient journey: A call for digital transformation

Learn about COVID-19’s impact on the patient journey and see how digital transformation is helping the healthcare industry recover.

Published: August 30, 2021 by Experian Health
The State of Patient Access 2.0: 4 opportunities to strengthen the digital experience

The State of Patient Access surveys patients and providers to see how patient access has changed since COVID-19. See the results!

Published: August 23, 2021 by Experian Health
Automating authorizations as patients return to care

Accurate and efficient workflows will be paramount as patient volumes rise. It’s time to rethink the manual processes that often result in delays, errors, and non-compliance.

Published: July 26, 2021 by Experian Health
Rescheduling COVID-deferred screening appointments with automated patient outreach

More than 40% of patients surveyed skipped medical care in the early months of the pandemic, according to a recent study by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Of those who needed care, 58% missed scheduled preventive care. Similar trends are observed in cancer screening, with appointments for breast, colorectal, and cervical cancers – in some cases dropping by around 80%-90% in March and April 2020, compared to 2019. Diagnostic testing for several cancers also plummeted, as did HPV vaccinations.   These trends aren’t unexpected: COVID-19 forced medical facilities to cancel or scale back services, while fear of infection and financial worries kept many patients away. But with most services operating at near-normal capacity again, and the vaccine program tipping the balance in favor of rescheduling care, preventative services are still lagging. Many patients remain reluctant to attend screening and wellness visits, despite the health risks associated with delaying care for potentially serious conditions.   Re-establishing a preventive care routine is essential. For patients, getting back on track with earlier diagnosis means more timely treatment and a better chance of recovery. It promises a better financial outlook for patients, payers, and providers alike, who all suffer higher costs when medical conditions escalate. And providers want to get their day-to-day business back on track to smooth out what has been a heavily disrupted workflow and revenue cycle over the last year.   Providers must reassure patients that returning to care is safe and necessary. Compassionate and personalized support will be key to making sure patients get the right care at the right time. Automated patient outreach strategies built on comprehensive patient data can help reverse the trends in forgone care.   How can data and automation support personalized patient outreach?   Kelly E. Anderson, one of the authors of the John Hopkins study, suggests that “physicians can mitigate some of the long-term harmful effects of this forgone care by proactively reaching out to patients who missed care, to try and reschedule the care either in-person or through telehealth.”   Automated outreach combined with easy patient scheduling platforms can help providers identify and invite healthcare consumers to get much-needed preventive care appointments back on track. For example:   Automation makes scheduling easy for patients and efficient for providers Online scheduling platforms allow patients to reschedule missed appointments at a time and place that suits them. A targeted outreach list of those patients most likely to need screening (for example, based on age, lifestyle, or health risk factors) can be used to send automated booking prompts and reminders by text message or interactive voice response (IVR). It’s simple and convenient for patients and reduces pressure on call center staff. Plus, it generates a wealth of useful real-time data on response rates to pinpoint areas for improvement.   With the right data, providers can direct patients to appropriate services For patients that can’t or prefer not to attend their usual healthcare facilities, directing them to telehealth services or alternative venues might be a good option. Similarly, patients with a medical or family history that suggests a higher risk of cancer ought to be prioritized for screening. But you can only do this when you know who those patients are, and what exactly they need. Social determinants of health can be a powerful tool to help providers determine a holistic view of patients’ clinical and non-clinical needs.   ConsumerView collates consumer data from over 300 million individuals, across multiple demographic, psychographic and behavioral attributes, so providers know more about the lifestyles and interests to be able to effectively resonate and engage. Data helps create a better patient financial experience Since many patients are worried about the loss of health insurance, outreach efforts might also involve pointing patients towards appropriate financial support. When socio-economic data reveals that a patient is struggling financially, providers can quickly check for missing coverage, offer tailored payment plans, and help obtain charity care if required.   Automated outreach can also deliver the upfront information about healthcare pricing that so many patients demand, and help staff collect faster patient payments by providing easy payment links through text and IVR campaigns. Consumer data can inform compassionate patient communications With the majority of patients opting out of scheduled appointments because of concerns about COVID-19 exposure, any invitation to reschedule care should offer plenty of reassurance about hygiene protocols. Some patients may need a gentle nudge to reschedule appointments, so if you can help them feel comfortable visiting facilities and tell them what to expect, they’ll be more likely to return.   Offering additional reassurance and support to communities who are traditionally underserved by healthcare services, or who have been harder hit by COVID-19, will be even more important. Best contact information, social determinants of health insight and ethnicity insight can support efforts to promote screening to groups who may face additional barriers to care.   With the right data, you can go beyond compassionate messages and choose an appropriate communications channel that’s the right fit for the consumer, too.   One thing that hasn’t been hindered by COVID-19 is the trend toward healthcare consumerism. Patients have a choice about which provider they use. Proactively supporting patients to catch up on missed care is a surefire way for providers to stand out as the easy choice.  

Published: July 2, 2021 by Experian Health
Enriching patient identity management with social determinants of health

Knowing that clinical care accounts for only a portion of health outcomes, understanding how patients are affected by social determinants of health (SDOH) continues to gain attention as a critical factor in care delivery. COVID-19 has thrust the issue even further into the spotlight, with socially and economically vulnerable groups hardest hit by the pandemic. At the same time, the expansion of telehealth services over the last year has benefited some marginalized groups, who may feel uncomfortable visiting health facilities or may, for example, sometimes face challenges finding transportation to and from their visits. What’s clear is that when it comes to mitigating the impact of COVID-19’s lingering effects, patient identities based on clinical data alone simply won’t cut it. Providers need a holistic view of patients – both clinical and non-clinical.   Many providers do not have updated contact information for the patients they want to engage, in addition to missing patient-level insights such as housing, food, access to technology, transportation and financial stability data that could help better engage patients. Given the many complicated personal and structural barriers that may exist to accessing healthcare, providers lacking SDOH data in patients’ records are risking avoidable readmissions, unnecessary ED visits, poor care quality ratings and denied reimbursements.   Understanding patient needs and preferences via lifestyle factors – like occupation and technological knowledge – helps providers improve engagement, outreach and access. The results can be game-changing.   The benefits of an enriched, more robust patient record with SDOH Improved certainty of patient needs to achieve healthy outcomes Whether it’s missed appointments, lack of engagement, deferred treatment, or failure to comply with care instructions – if SDOH is the cause, providers need to know.  An enriched patient record that includes clearly defined SDOH risks and insights to those risks is invaluable.   For example, if a patient record includes recommended engagement strategies suggesting medication delivery, or ensuring medications are with the patient at discharge, due to the patient’s difficulty accessing a pharmacy, negative outcome risk is reduced. Significant provider blind spots that might otherwise interfere with desired health outcomes can be eliminated or extensively mitigated with access to this kind of data.   Consumer data gives additional insight useful in risk stratification efforts, allowing care teams to get granular and proactive if, for example, a patient’s lifestyle makes office-hour calls impossible, or if a lack of transportation requires the patient be informed that telehealth is available. Additionally, the data can flag if the patient prefers reminders by text, voice message or email. These considerations make a difference; 80-90% of modifiable contributors to healthy outcomes for a population are regularly attributed to the social, economic and environmental factors that comprise SDOH.   Connecting the dots can improve care coordination SDOH data doesn’t just help flag general access issues; it can also help providers dig into specific challenges that may warrant referrals to community programs or additional staffing support. SDOH data may lead to the discovery that a patient is struggling to access healthy, affordable food and prompt a conversation about getting referred to an in-network nutritionist or local food partnership.   Patient-specific information can be merged with consumer databases covering a range of socio-economic data, initiating proactive conversations with patients that can solve non-clinical gaps in care.   Clarity of the “why” behind patient insights, for better communication and engagement Someone experiencing financial instability as a result of pandemic-related unemployment will expect a different financial conversation than someone who has lived in poverty for their whole life. Further, two patients with high readmission risk can have completely different social determinants of health impacting that risk.  Knowing that patients are affected by SDOH is only one piece of the puzzle. Understanding the bigger picture helps create a whole picture and enables personalized, sensitive, and helpful communication.   A turn-key SDOH solution that helps define the “why” behind the score avoids analysis paralysis and enables a quick, effective engagement strategy based on what really matters to patients. Supplementing patient surveys with consumer data is also important, as it provides deeper insights and recommendations for engagement strategies.   Of course, a connected system only works when the patient identity is accurate and tracks them from service to service. With a universal identity manager, you can have confidence that your teams are all working from a complete, current and insights-rich view of each patient.   Find out more about how Experian Health can help your organization make sense of SDOH data for better patient identity management and a more personalized patient experience.  

Published: May 6, 2021 by Experian Health
Driving member engagement with health plan data analytics

As Spotify and Amazon can attest, digital technology plus personalization is a winning formula. Consumers want anytime-anywhere access to the services and products they enjoy, without having to sift through irrelevant information. They want tailored recommendations that will make their life easier. More than eight in ten consumers say they’re more likely to choose businesses that treat them like a person instead of just a number. The pay-off for business—and health plans—is huge: by paving the way for better services, better relationships and a better consumer experience, personalization boosts profits, too. There’s one challenge: delivering personalization requires data. Health plans that want to offer a member-centric experience need the right insights to build a complete picture of what individual members need and want. Yet many health plans are forced to work from stale or incomplete data, notably when CMS hands over a new list of members or a new employer signs on to the plan. A system like that makes it nearly impossible to provide meaningful personalization, and consequently, the member experience suffers. With originally sourced data and consumer insights, health plans can fill in the missing links in member profiles and maximize opportunities to improve the consumer experience. Here, we look at how three specific data-driven strategies could help your health plan attract and retain satisfied members and demonstrate digital excellence by using personalization to drive improvements in communications and care. Personalize member communications for maximum engagement By looking beyond simple demographic data and clinical information, health plans can discover what really matters to members. Consumer data provides detailed insights about the kind of content that will resonate most with the member’s lifestyle, interests and health circumstances. Health plans can tailor their marketing messages accordingly, by highlighting articles about the treatment of relevant medical conditions or sending reminders ahead of annual check-ups.Health plans can also discover when and how to communicate with members so they’re most likely to respond. When member profiles reveal who prefers an email or a text and when, health plans can elicit higher levels of engagement, improve the consumer experience and see better results from targeted outreach campaigns. Make improvement decisions based on the most relevant data Consumer insights can also be used to develop improvement plans that zero in on exactly what members need for the best possible health outcomes. Combining insights on patient behavior patterns with an understanding of the challenges facing individual members means health plans can segment members, so the right support goes to the right place.For example, efforts to drive up medication adherence are going to be far more successful if based off accurate and current member profiles. Specific members can be sent automated, personalized reminders to fill out prescriptions in good time before they run out. Compare that to a “spray and pray” awareness campaign using generic messages that are likely to be ignored. Data-led improvement strategies are operationally efficient and create a better experience for members. Help members overcome social barriers to health Finally, when member profiles include a snapshot of how social and economic factors influence their ability to access healthcare, health plans can take action to offer support. Closing the gaps in care that arise when a patient fails to turn up to their appointment or ends up being readmitted to hospital, can often involve quite simple solutions. If data suggests the member has small children, but there’s no other adult in the household, it makes sense to cross-promote childcare services. Similarly, if the member isn’t known to own a car, a health plan could offer information on free transportation.Understanding these social determinants of health can help health plans offer proactive support so members enjoy better health outcomes in the long run. Experian Health’s rich datasets give health plans access to member-level insights on more than 330 million consumers, with data analysis and automation tools to help make business decisions based on the most relevant, current data. Contact us to find out how we can help provide the personalized experience members are looking for.

Published: April 6, 2021 by Experian Health
Q&A: Optimize reimbursements by submitting cleaner claims

    Many thought the end of COVID-19 was in sight with the availability of a vaccine, and while that is somewhat true, an entirely new set of issues has arrived: how to properly administer and manage the vaccine. Now that a COVID-19 vaccine is approved and underway, providers need to execute a medical billing and coding strategy to sustain vaccination efforts. We interviewed J. Scott Milne, senior director of product management at Experian Health, about what’s changed and what providers can do to prepare. How can providers ensure that vaccine administration codes are billed correctly? The ICD-10 and CPT codes for the COVID-19 vaccine haven’t existed until now, which means providers have a new set of codes to learn and unfortunately, those codes seem to change or update almost daily. As more vaccines are introduced, more codes are also introduced, and not just for the vaccine as a whole, but for each specific dose of the vaccine. For example, dose one of the Pfizer vaccine will have a code that differs entirely from dose two of the Moderna vaccine. Keeping up with these changes isn’t only difficult for provider staff, who are likely already stretched thin, but they certainly don’t want to run the risk of submitting a claim with incorrect information. The errors are what result in denials or undercharges. A solution like Claim Scrubber ensures code sets are current on a daily basis – a necessity for times like these – but applies an extensive set of general and payer-specific edits before preparing the claim for processing. That means claims for vaccine administration are error-free before submission to the payer or clearinghouse. Providers can eliminate undercharges, boost first-time pass through rates and do away with costly, time-consuming rework. But proper coding is only the first piece of the billing puzzle. The second piece is to verify the accuracy of payment received from third-party payers. How can providers ensure that third party payers will reimburse at the contracted rates? Providers can certainly get reimbursed for administering the vaccine, but there are a lot of moving parts to keep up with. For example, both Medicaid and Medicare will reimburse providers for administering COVID-19 vaccines, but the percentage of what is covered will differ by carrier and the reimbursement rates can vary both by state and type of arrangement. Reimbursement rates will also vary amongst private payers. Then there is the variation in reimbursement based on vaccine type and dosage -- vaccines that require a single dose may be reimbursed at a rate different than those that require two doses. Even without the vaccine rollout underway it can be a headache for hospitals and health systems to manage multiple payer contracts and reimbursement methodologies. A solution like Contract Manager will pinpoint variance in reimbursement quickly and easily, accurately pricing claims and comparing actual allowed amounts to expected amounts. It is a tool built to adapt to changes within the industry, so providers can capitalize on emerging reimbursement schemes and changes in payer payment policies. It can also help identify sources and patterns of errors so recurring issues can be promptly resolved. The end result: the provider organization can the payer revenue that is due for vaccine administration. Interested in learning more about how providers can optimize vaccine-related reimbursements?     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 Optimizing reimbursements by capturing missing coverage

Published: March 30, 2021 by Experian Health

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