Tag: patient engagement

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  I attended the Fall 2019 Conference of the National Association of Accountable Care Organizations (NAACOS) in Washington D.C. and wanted to share some insights on how top-performing Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) are using data to drive improved quality and cost of care. Over the last decade, we’ve seen the number of ACOs surge. Propelled by the shift from volume- to value-based care, over a thousand ACOs operate across the U.S., bringing together groups of physicians, hospitals and other providers with a collective ambition to enhance quality of care, reduce healthcare costs and improve patient outcomes. While some ACOs participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program have succeeded in improving quality and realizing some savings for the program, the value-based model is still evolving, and results can be mixed. More dramatic and holistic moves will have to be made to convert today’s annual incremental savings of 1 to 2% to make a dent in the estimated annual waste of nearly $389 billion in administrative complexity and another $45 billion due to lack of coordinated care. So what separates the top performers from the rest? At NAACOS last week, speakers confirmed that the most successful ACOs are those that effectively shift care towards primary care physicians (PCPs) and away from acute settings and skilled nursing facilities, implement a process for continuous improvement and adopt a performance-first culture. This is easier said than done. Here’s my top recommendations to help ACOs leverage data-driven insights to lower costs while improving patient outcomes. Offering insights into member utilization of healthcare resources in real-time I recently worked with a client that needed real-time alerts of member activity including admissions, discharges, and Emergency Room (ER) visits. These insights enabled this client to proactively manage active member episodes of care, optimizing the setting and deliver of care for the member’s specific needs. For example, a member was frequently visiting the ER with complications from his Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) condition that the client’s care team was managing. This was a needlessly costly way to treat the symptoms. To help get their members the right care at the right time, this client started leveraging automated alerts for their members as they presented within the healthcare continuum. The next time this patient sought treatment in an out-of-network ER for their COPD, their primary care physician (PCP) received an alert about her patient as soon as they registered, before a doctor had even seen him, and certainly before an ER workup converted to an admission. The PCP called the attending ER doctor to share the patient’s history and ensured the ER physician that this patient would receive next-day follow-up care in the PCP’s office. Knowing that follow-up was in place and the patient wasn’t in immediate need of care, the ER physician discharged the patient home. Given that the average cost of an admission can run $22,000, and an outpatient visit less than $500, the savings delivered by this kind of care coordination becomes significant. More importantly, the member experience is much improved in that they get to go home instead of an unnecessary overnight stay in the hospital. And this is just one example—multiply this kind of episode management across all member encounters and consider the improved member quality of life across all attributed lives and the savings for the health plan or ACO in the aggregate. Real-time alerts provide a win-win for both patient and ACO by affording care teams the opportunity to optimize the setting of care for quality and cost. Care coordination for episode management To improve episode outcomes and reduce readmissions, visibility into the compliance of a patient’s post-discharge care plan through the duration of the entire episode is critical, so well-coordinated care requires that clinical context be shared between providers. A frequent barrier to this flow of useful data is that clinicians’ electronic health records (EHRs) aren’t always interoperable. To solve for this, some ACOs are attempting to move all their providers to a single EHR and care management module. However, for some this may not be an option. In these cases, ACOs can opt for Care Coordination Manager: a rules-driven, closed-loop messaging and distributed workflow orchestration platform that enables health plans, ACOs, allied health, and community partners to share and assign care plan requests across a diverse provider community. Care Coordination Manager is vendor-agnostic and able to populate EHRs and care management modules at the point of care with key clinical context. This flow of tasks and content supports high-quality coordination of care and management through transitions of care. Proactively address non-clinical barriers to health for improved patient engagement and health Another characteristic of top-performing ACOs is that they utilize a 360-degree view of their members to address potential barriers that prevent members from engaging in their own healthcare. These SDOH factors can include things like housing or financial instability, food insecurity, limited access to transportation or healthy food options, and other non-clinical factors. Only about 20% of costly health episodes are due to medical factors, so it’s vital for ACOs to incorporate a more comprehensive and actionable understanding of the social needs of the populations they serve. For example, medication adherence is a bigger challenge for a patient who may have difficulty getting to a pharmacy or understanding medication instructions. Identifying and mitigating these risks up front gives the patient a better chance of adhering to their prescribed regimen, which in turn gives them a better chance to stay healthy, ultimately lessening the disease burden and thus the cost of the ACO’s membership while improving the patient’s quality of life. ACOs can take a proactive, preventative approach to addressing these challenges by collecting and analyzing member data and using these insights to tailor interventions. Patient-supplied information through surveys, like PRAPARE, is a good starting point, but surveys can be limited by access to the patient as well as the patient’s ability or willingness to answer honestly. Additionally, unless mapped to structured data such as ICD-10 Z codes, survey data is challenging to scale for broader insights into the ACO’s membership. Instead, consider healthcare consumer data that’s sourced directly from a reliable vendor. Analysis of this demographic, psychographic and behavioral data allows you to flag patients based on need, so you can identify the best way to communicate with members to help them own their healthcare journey. For example, in a recent report by the Department of Health and Human Services’ (DHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG), one ACO described how asking patients with chronic conditions to make a daily call to a care coordinator led to 43% fewer emergency room visits and 47% fewer readmissions. As ACOs grow amidst pressures to take on downside risk and manage costs while improving quality—timely data collection, sharing, analysis and action will continue to provide the foundation of high-quality episode and population health management; along with engaging members and community partners in the healthcare journey. What’s clear from discussions at the NAACOS conference last week is that the opportunity exists to work smarter across many emerging payment models. Could data be the key to unlocking that opportunity? McLain Causey is Director of Product Management at Experian Health.

Published: September 30, 2019 by Experian Health

Last week, I spoke at the technology briefing of a national health plan group to give a presentation on the role of consumer data and patient identity in healthcare and how social determinants of health (SDOH) can help payers improve population health and lower costs. To illustrate the importance of leveraging consumer data for SDOH outcomes, I like to use the example of Vern. Vern is 78 years old, lives alone in a lower income apartment complex and hasn’t attended a wellness check in several years. Last month, he had an unexpected trip to the emergency room (ER) due to heart disease and continues to be readmitted for his condition. But why does he keep getting readmitted? Is it because he can’t afford his prescribed medication? Is he having a difficult time finding transportation? Or could it be that when it comes to healthy eating—buying fresh product on a weekly basis is challenging for him? These are some of the SDOH that could be contributing to Vern’s readmission—not solely his now heart disease. Had his care team known more about Vern, aside from his condition, they could have proactively addressed some of his barriers to care and prevented the ER admissions—saving them from costly care episodes and preventing negative outcomes for Vern. By utilizing SDOH insights, Vern’s care team can help ‘even the playing field’ for him by understanding his non-clinical barriers to health, what key things are driving those barriers, and what makes sense to address them.  All of this, of course, underpinned by an accurate identity (but, let’s talk universal patient identification another day!). With SDOH insights, Vern’s care team could have gotten him to his wellness checks, his condition would have been detected earlier and he would have received the services he needs proactively. This would save countless dollars in repeated readmissions, ER visits and other costs associated with a chronic condition that can’t get better when your members don’t have the luxury of prioritizing health over basic needs. To avoid these missed opportunities, many healthcare organizations are turning to consumer data to understand their patients or members better. Insights on SDOH are transforming the care experience for people like Vern, as well as saving money for patients and the healthcare industry. Here are three ways consumer data is driving improvements in population health and lowering healthcare care costs at the same time: Helping patients lead healthier lives Research shows that clinical care alone is not enough to safeguard a person’s health. Up to 80% of health outcomes are attributable to non-medical factors such as your financial situation, stability of living arrangements, access to transportation and healthful food options, amongst other things. Around 68% of Americans are affected by at least one of these SDOH, which can make prioritizing good health a challenge. When healthcare organizations are more informed of the SDOH impacting their patients or members, they can take steps to help prevent avoidable hospital visits, ED utilization, appointment no-shows and worsened conditions by encouraging and facilitating earlier intervention. For example, 1 in 8 Americans are food insecure.  If care teams are able to recognize when this is an issue for the people they’re caring for—they can look at partnering with community organizations, like a local food bank or meal delivery service, to address gaps in nutrition for better health outcomes. Reducing the financial burden of healthcare expenses In the U.S., healthcare has the world’s largest gross domestic product (GDP) spending (18%).  By helping your members overcome barriers to attending appointments and potentially discovering health issues sooner, the healthcare industry can reduce the costs of healthcare. For example, 3.6 million Americans miss out on medical care due to transportation problems. If care teams knew who they were and what specifically is impacting them ahead of time, they could step in to arrange transportation or offer alternative options, like telemedicine, so problems can be detected earlier. Not only is this better for the patient’s health, it’s better financially too—emergency room visits cost an average of nearly $2,000 while inpatient hospital stays come in at an average of $10,000. When 33% of ER visits are from those experiencing homelessness—the extreme condition of housing instability—it’s imperative that we consider more than a patient’s profile from a claims or clinical data perspective. Offering a better patient experience When healthcare organizations can see each patient as a whole person, they can offer better engagement plans that make prioritizing their health a smaller mountain to climb. Does your patient prefer information by phone, text or email? Do they use their patient portal? Are there other services they might benefit from, that can help improve their health in other ways? Armed with the right data, you can answer these questions and tailor your communications with each patient, ultimately helping them achieve better outcomes. What’s more, when you leverage consumer insights to improve your population health strategies, you’ll also create a better patient experience through improved care coordination, prompt referrals and timely information sharing—making the whole process better for everyone. Translating consumer data into intelligent business decisions With reliable consumer data sourced from Experian—an original-source provider and data steward when it comes to consumer privacy—you can learn more about your patients and make the right care management decisions to address the non-clinical barriers to health impacting the health of your members and your organization. Learn more about how to leverage consumer data to help improve outcomes for your patient population. Mindy Pankoke is a Senior Product Manager for Experian Health

Published: September 24, 2019 by Experian Health

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.

Published: September 17, 2019 by Experian Health

For many patients, the unknown cost of unexpected care is a source of anxiety: two-thirds of Americans are “very worried” or “somewhat worried” about being able to cover unexpected medical bills. No wonder, when around 56% say they wouldn’t be able to afford an unexpected bill over $1,000. In cases where insurance doesn’t cover the entirety of the bill, responsibility for paying the balance falls to the patient. The lack of price transparency leads to confusion and stress for patients, and unnecessary administrative costs for providers, who are left to chase payments from growing numbers of self-pay patients. Moving towards more transparent pricing Traditionally, patient billing has been calculated at the end of the revenue cycle, after insurance adjustments have been made. In recent months, a push for meaningful price transparency is emerging as a result of consumer demands about the cost of care, pressure from governing bodies, and bipartisan support for a legislative solution to surprise billing. In response, healthcare organizations are increasingly looking to move patient billing to the front of the revenue cycle, to give consumers greater clarity about what to expect when their bill arrives. Estimating patient liability is far from simple. It calls on front office staff to make complicated calculations based on insurance benefits, charges, contractual adjustments and provider discounts. If staff are doing this manually, they may find themselves using outdated pricing lists that don’t include current insurance information, rates and discounts. So how should providers ensure their front office staff have the right tools in place to give accurate, personalized estimates for each patient? Data-driven technology can help reduce surprise billing Data-driven technology that automates, simplifies, and unifies the revenue cycle can ensure timely communication on billing between healthcare providers and insurers. This means your front-office team can base estimates on accurate, up-to-date information. To reduce the risk of errors creeping in, price transparency and collection practices should be standardized across the enterprise. A pricing transparency tool eliminates the need for manually updated price lists and removes the guesswork that often leads to mistakes. It can also include reporting features that let you track potential and actual collections, so you have greater insight into the opportunities for revenue cycle optimization. Helping patients navigate the cost of care As patients bear more out of pocket payment responsibility, they expect a better consumer experience. Creating an optimal patient collections strategy and frictionless experience is ever more important. Full transparency calls for accurate and up to date pricing to be available to patients before they receive care, along with a detailed breakdown of what their insurer will cover. When they know what the difference is, they’ll know upfront how much they’re likely to need to pay. Additionally, clear and proactive communication around the billing process can help eliminate the shock factor, improve the patient collections process, and create a better patient financial experience all round. You could provide a text-to-mobile experience that delivers a text message with a secure link to the patient’s estimated bill. Or you might integrate a price transparency tool into your patient portal or mobile app, that lets patients see a personalized cost breakdown based on real-time pricing and benefit information, alongside methods for secure payment. A price transparency tool can also help you gather insights into a patient’s financial situation and propensity to pay, so you can optimize your collection strategies from the start and get them onto the right program. El Camino Hospital in California set an organizational objective to improve price transparency. Terri Manifesto, Senior Director (Revenue Cycle) says: “We decided to do a soft launch of a patient estimator tool, and the very next day, even without advertising it yet, our patients found the tool on the website and started using it. The feedback was excellent. We’re providing a lot more estimates than we could before because it’s 24/7 and patients can use it on their mobile device, their laptop or their desktop. Some advice I’d give other hospitals is to think of the patient when you’re deciding what to do to best communicate your prices. What would the patient want?” Working with a partner such as Experian Health lets you combine industry-leading technical expertise and payment tools with your own knowledge of your patients, so you can create the best payment experience for your consumers. Using data-driven technology, you can work to eliminate the pain of surprise bills and promote price transparency, resulting in greater revenue opportunities and customer loyalty.

Published: September 3, 2019 by Experian 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.

Published: August 27, 2019 by Experian Health

When nearly 80% of health outcomes can be traced to non-medical social and economic factors, we need to look beyond the medical world to improve them. Perhaps a lack of transportation prevents a patient from attending an appointment, or juggling two jobs makes it difficult to collect a prescription. Maybe a patient’s care plan calls for lifestyle changes that are simply unrealistic in their current circumstances. When life gets in the way, there’s only so much the physician can do. Creating and maintaining a healthy, happy population truly takes a village – from your clinical team to the community resources around your organization. For many healthcare providers, there’s probably a lot more going in their ‘village’ than they realize. Do you know who your patients really are, beyond their lab tests? Do you know what nearby services are at your disposal to help you offer the best possible care? Knowing your patients and your health improvement ‘village’ means you can offer a personalized experience to your patients, to improve their care management and ultimately help them achieve better health outcomes. 3 ways to tailor care management for better patient outcomes Let’s imagine two patients, who have both recently broken their wrists and been treated in your facility. Gene is 71 years old and David is 34. From the clinical perspective, it might be reasonable to assume that David, being younger, should simply receive discharge directions and a time for a follow-up appointment, and be on his way. Gene, being older, might require a series of follow-ups. But thinking of the village analogy, is there more you could learn about Gene and David to engage with them in a way that’s tailored to their specific needs? Here are three ways social determinants of health data can help you do just that. Use non-clinical data to get to know your patients Non-clinical data can help you learn more about your patients and the lifestyle factors that might affect their health. This allows you to address issues like excessive healthcare utilization, preventable readmissions, no-shows and low patient engagement. Surveys at the point of registration are one way to get fresh socio-economic insights. But these can be cumbersome to implement, and findings can be limited by the nature of the questions. You might also review geographical and community-level data to discover your local population’s income, housing situation, employment status, and so on. This can be useful for population-level care planning, but it’s not patient-specific. A better way is to analyze securely collected marketing data for more specific and accurate information. This could tell you that Gene’s living situation actually has a minimal impact on his ability to access care, healthy food and reliable housing. Additional follow up appointments may still be appropriate, but perhaps less urgent. By contrast, you might find that David has limited access to care because he lives alone and far from public transportation. His lifestyle suggests he’d be unlikely to prioritize getting gas to drive to a follow-up appointment over getting to work. In this situation, a remote health appointment might be the better plan. Know your community resources Once you know what David and Gene might need, you can point them towards any appropriate community resources to increase their chances of a quick recovery. Of course, to do this, you need to know what and where these resources are. For example, can you link David to an appropriate home health or telehealth program, or is there a non-emergency medical transportation service in your area to get him to his appointments on time? If Gene needed support to follow a healthier diet, would a local food bank be available? If either had an unstable living situation, would you know which local or national housing coalitions could help put healthcare within reach? Tools such as NowPow, Aunt Bertha and Healthify exist to connect the dots between patients, providers and wider community resources, and close the gap in holistic care. Be proactive and preventative by holding conversations with your care teams prior to seeing patients When you have reliable insights and data analytics to anticipate what patients like David and Gene might need, you can work with your care teams to develop a shortlist of options ahead of time. In this way, they’ll have realistic and ready-to-use solutions to give the patient right there and then. To truly get the most out of social determinant of health data, your care coordinators need easily digestible patient profiles which they can understand and use in a split-second. Bringing the whole patient into the care plan Healthcare is growing more and more sophisticated in identifying ways to better manage care for patients by using data science and machine learning to predict health events. These insights help coordinate care plans that are preventative and proactive. Essentially, it’s about knowing your patients as well as possible, and being able to quickly match them to the services they need. ⁠— Discover how we can help you leverage social determinants of health data for your patient population, so you can bring in the whole ‘village’ of resources to support them on their healthcare journey.

Published: August 13, 2019 by Experian Health

Experian Health announced it has acquired MyHealthDirect, a SaaS-based company specializing in digital coordination solutions in scheduling. We interviewed Jason Considine, Experian Health general manager of patient engagement and collections, to learn more about the acquisition, as well as opportunities arising in healthcare due to the rise in consumerism. What led to Experian’s interest in MyHealthDirect and the ultimate acquisition? We’ve had a relationship with MyHealthDirect for several years. Experian Health has been reselling the MyHealthDirect solution since 2017, and we’ve long recognized that their platform’s digital care coordination capabilities would be a great match with our existing solutions. MyHealthDirect's platform links patients with the right providers, offering online scheduling tools and referral coordination to ensure more timely access to care for patients. These solutions have proven to increase appointment and referral rates, improve call center efficiency, reduce no-shows and enhance the overall patient experience. By coupling this technology with our Experian data, we can ensure patients are getting the care they need in the management of chronic diseases and wellness programs. This acquisition evolves our core revenue cycle management capabilities and helps us make gains in the patient engagement space with all-new innovative offerings. You referenced “digital care coordination.” What does this mean and how does it apply to healthcare? Digital care coordination, as it applies to the MyHealthDirect suite, is comprised of self-scheduling, call center, referral coordination and automated outreach solutions, making it easier for people to access healthcare. By combining these scheduling solutions with Experian’s existing digital patient engagement solutions, we can deliver a seamless consumer-centered experience – from serving up an estimate, to streamlining the registration process, to providing consumers with the ability to pay their healthcare bills via multiple channels. Today’s healthcare consumer expects a turnkey, personalized, on-demand experience. When you think about the best engagements we all enjoy in retail, financial services, travel and entertainment, the expectation is that the healthcare experience should be no different. We need to arm consumers with the ability to streamline their healthcare and make it easier for them to access care. Why is the scheduling component so key in the overall patient journey today? Scheduling is the one of the very first steps of the care journey and booking an appointment has traditionally been a poor experience. Common frustrations include not being able to reach the provider, finding out that no appointments are available, or being forced into a time-consuming three-way call between the health plan and provider. Without fast and easy access, patients may not be able to get the care they need. When healthcare plans use technology to better connect patients to needed care, quality scores for patient experience rise and efficiencies are gained. Can you give us an example on how more automated approach to scheduling could lead to better health outcomes for the consumer? Sure. Take for instance an individual who is living with diabetes. It is important for this person to have regular check-ins with their provider to monitor their condition and adjust care plans accordingly. If this person is challenged to see their provider, or doesn’t have regular appointments booked, they could run the risk of becoming an unhealthy diabetic, being faced with additional health challenges. By tapping into digital appointment scheduling, a provider or payer could create an automated outreach plan to make the scheduling hassle-free. Appointments could be streamlined and scheduled directly on the phone via IVR or text, and appointment reminders can be delivered. How do you see providers responding to the rise in healthcare consumerism? It’s no secret that healthcare costs are rising, and consumers are increasingly bearing more of those costs. Providers, therefore, are telling us they need to deliver a better experience. They are asking for digital technologies to gain rich insights into consumer behavior and then adjusting their care delivery plans accordingly. They recognize that consumers have a choice on where to take their healthcare business, so they need to compete. In the case of scheduling, MyHealthDirect conducted some research and revealed 66% of patients would switch providers for more convenient access. In that same study, 77% of patients think the ability to book, change or cancel appointments online is important. My point? Those providers and payers investing in on-demand tools to interface with their consumers will win, simplifying many of the administrative tasks associated with healthcare. — Learn more about scheduling solutions.

Published: August 8, 2019 by Experian Health

“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. 

Published: July 16, 2019 by Experian Health

The President, members of Congress and consumer advocates are all demanding price transparency within the healthcare universe.  The major push of late is President Trump’s executive order that will be issued in June 2019; while critics hope this initiative will fade, the topic has been on the industry radar for many, many years. How did we get to today’s scenario? We have a robust perspective on this subject at Experian Health because we’ve been working with healthcare organizations offering various solutions that inform consumers about the costs of their care for more than 10 years. We brought to market the first iteration of our current Patient Estimates product back in 2008, responding, in part, to the growing issue of medical debt and inherent risk to providers not getting full payment for services. The challenges presented by medical debt are well documented, but the important point to focus on is that as long as Americans continue to lack the ability to pay for their care and health organizations struggle with collections, the push towards price transparency will continue. Perhaps this is much needed progress? Since 1957, nearly 75% of Americans have consistently reported being insured but unable to pay their medical bills, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control. Now, more than 50 years later, many legislators hope mandated price transparency will alleviate the surprise factor of medical costs and spur a more competitive environment. In 2008, helping patients understand their costs was intended to improve providers’ collections success. The term ‘price transparency,’ with additional connotations (e.g. better experience for the patient, improved efficiencies), popped up about the same time as the introduction of very high deductible health plans. The phrase started gaining traction following passage of the Affordable Care Act, and as patients were responsible for more of their medical costs. Add in the rise of consumerism within healthcare and Americans’ digital lifestyles, and it’s no surprise there are calls for pricing to be as easy to understand as they are in the retail space. We harness the power of data and analytics to fulfill these needs in the marketplace. The healthcare industry was ripe for change more than a decade ago, as evidenced by the desire of organizations to leverage what we could offer. While there is continued debate on the transparency topic, the good news is today’s data-driven technology can create a patient financial experience that is friendly, understandable and accessible, delivering the good-faith estimates many consumers, legislators and the industry-at-large wish to see. Consumerism drives price transparency expectations Ultimately, the financial aspect to care is a key component to consumers’ satisfaction with a provider. This realization began to bubble to the surface over the last several years. In fact, Experian Health conducted research last year to understand consumer pain points during the healthcare journey. Consequently, it was no surprise when the study revealed consumers’ biggest frustrations and challenges – above clinical areas – is dealing with the financial aspects of healthcare: 90 percent of respondents ranked worrying about paying their medical bills as a very important to extremely important pain point. 30 percent acknowledged the challenges of determining what financial support options (e.g., payment plans, government grants, and hospital charity care programs) are available 90 percent reported significantly underestimating the costs associated with major medical procedures (e.g., knee replacement) The takeaway from this study is clear: consumers want a streamlined payment process that builds confidence and provides peace of mind. We know that healthcare providers want to increase the efficiency and success of their collections efforts. Ultimately, everyone benefits from clarity around pricing. So whether government-mandated or not, there is no denying that price transparency, in some form, is here to stay and a transformation in the industry is taking hold. Experian Health is leading the way to innovations that will help healthcare organizations thrive in this new era. By leveraging our expertise in data and analytics and our understanding of healthcare costs, we can help patients successfully navigate their financial obligations from primary care appointments through subsequent diagnostic procedures and surgeries. The potential is there for everyone to benefit from an evolved, modern system. Related Articles: How Blessing Health System personalized estimates to improve patient satisfaction

Published: June 24, 2019 by Experian Health

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