Understanding Revenue Cycle Strategy How to Optimize Process and Performance



Similar documents
Revenue Cycle Objectives Challenges Management Goals and Expected Benefits Sample Metrics Opportunities Summary Solution Steps

What Every Medical Practice Must Do to Optimize Workflow and Maximize Revenue While Decreasing Costs

Empowering healthcare organizations with data, analytics and insight

Revenue Cycle Management

Optum Intelligent EDI. Achieve higher first-pass payment rates and help your organization get paid quickly and accurately.

HFMA MAP Keys Patient Access Measure:

How a Pre-Service Center at MetroHealth System Improved Satisfaction, Efficiency, and Revenue

Revenue Cycle Management Excellence Easily improving bottom line!!!!!

EMDEON REVENUE OPTIMIZATION SERVICES

Seven revenue-driving best practices

The Power of Business Intelligence in the Revenue Cycle

Provider Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) and Proposed Solutions

5 KPIs That Require Revenue Cycle Managers' Attention. Devendra Saharia FEATURE STORY. healthcare financial management association

The following online training module will provide a general overview of the Vanderbilt University Medical Center s (VUMC) technical revenue cycle.

Revenue Cycle Assessment

Revenue Integrity Strategies

Top Ten Questions. Time and Energy. Robin Bradbury

Provider Solutions. Sutherland Healthcare Solutions

Trusted Partners for. Revenue Cycle Solutions

Provider Solutions. Sutherland Healthcare Solutions

BILLING COMPANY STANDARDS

Conifer Health Solutions Tenet Investor Webinar

9/28/2015. HFMA s Patient Friendly Billing Focus. Initiatives: Best Practices. Agenda. Iowa Hospital Association Annual Meeting October 6, 2015

Avoiding the Claims Denial Black Hole: Strategies to Accelerate and Maximize Claims Payments

Days in Accounts Receivable Days in Accounts Receivable Greater Than 120 Days Adjusted Collection Rate Denial Rate Average Reimbursement Rate

BILLING MANAGER INDICATORS: HOW DOES YOUR ORGANIZATION STACK UP?

CONNECTIVITY. Connectivity. Solutions. Insight. Electronic Remittance Advice. Technology Eligibility Verification. Challenges Providers Face

Rycan Revenue Cycle Management Solutions Overview. Target Audience: Evident and Healthland May 18, 2016

Revenue Cycle Management. A Primer for School Based Health Care Centers Presented By Jane Speyer, Senior Billing Manager OCHIN

EMDEON REVENUE CYCLE MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS

How to Improve Your Revenue Cycle Processes in a Clinic or Physician Practice

6 Critical Impact Factors of Health Reform on Revenue Cycle Management Pyramid Healthcare Solutions Thought Leadership Series

Revenue Cycle Responsibilities. Revenue Cycle. Objectives 4/9/2013

Revenue Cycle Management

6 Critical Impact Factors of Health Reform on Revenue Cycle Management

The Financial Case for EHR/RCM Integration. White Paper. The Power of Clinically Driven Revenue Cycle Management. Presented by

Michael Orseno Director Regent Revenue Cycle Management Karen Franklin Client Manager ZirMed October 23, 2015

Better Analysis of Revenue Cycle and Value-Based Purchasing Data Improves Bottom Line

Protect and Improve Profitability in Your Practice. Positioning Your Organization for a RAC Audit

Revenue Cycle Management

Managing and Enhancing Hospital Revenue Cycles 1

6 Critical Impact Factors of Health Reform on Revenue Cycle Management

HOW TO PREVENT AND MANAGE MEDICAL CLAIM DENIALS TO INCREASE REVENUE

Accelerating your Revenue Cycle: From Patient Encounter Through Account

Real Time Adjudication of Healthcare Claims

Practice Name. Job Description Billing, Insurance and Coding Specialist

Management Report Services. Staff Training and Education Services

University Healthcare Administrative Policy

The ROI of IT: Best Billing Practices

ACCOUNTABLE CARE ANALYTICS: DEVELOPING A TRUSTED 360 DEGREE VIEW OF THE PATIENT

Revenue Cycle Management Process

CHAPTER 17 CREDIT AND COLLECTION

Our Journey to the MAP Award. Thursday, March 19, 2015

About Cardea. Revenue Cycle Management Best Practices for Public Health Programs. Revenue Cycle. Public Health Programs & Revenue.

Shellie Sulzberger, LPN, CPC, ICDCT-CM. Coding & Compliance Initiatives, Inc.

Self-Pay Collection Strategies in a New Era of Healthcare. How data analytics improves collections under Obamacare

Proven Practice Management and EHR Solutions

Beyond the Basics: Accelerating the Revenue Cycle Through Advanced KPI s

Capacity Management: Patient Throughput and Case Management Improvement. February 25, 2015

Granville Health System

Policy: Charity Care Application Policy # 4.70 Department: Patient Access Policy Manual: USMD Hospital Revenue Cycle Manual Effective date:

Medical Billing. You need to streamline your Medical Billing today! Copyright Pradot Technologies Private Limited. India. United States of America

Patient Access. The Big Opportunity

Electronic data interchange and proactive services for Centricity revenue cycle management customers

4C s Clinic Billing and Collection Policy

Portfolio Reviews: Unleashing the Power of External Data Sets and Predictive Analytics TRANSUNION WHITE PAPER TRANSUNION HEALTHCARE WHITE PAPER

Preparing Your Revenue Cycle for ICD-10. Carrie Aiken, CHC Compliance and Consulting Manager

Patrick A. Sorrentino, MS 304 Juliana Lane ~ Bloomingdale, IL Work Phone (630) Home Phone (630) Cell Phone (630)

Our Billers Collect More & Faster

Electronic data interchange and proactive services for customers using revenue cycle management solutions from the Centricity portfolio

Effective Revenue Cycles Are No Accident

Electronic Transaction Savings Opportunities For Physician Practices

12 16 Memorial Physician Network Billing Cycle Audit Report

Independent Insurance Eligibility Verification A Cost/Benefit Review for Immunization Billing

Tennessee Primary Care Association: 2014 Annual Leadership Conference

Revenue Cycle Management: It Takes a Village. Problem Statement

Transformational Data-Driven Solutions for Healthcare

10/14/2015. Common Issues in Practice Management. Industry Trends. Rebecca Lynn Hanif, CPC,CPCO,CCS, CMUA AHIMA Approved ICD-10-CM/PCS Trainer

Revenue Cycle. An operational overview and some ideas of how to negotiate the complex roads ahead. HFMA ROAD SHOW SUTTER CENTER FOR HEALTH PROFESSIONS

5 MUST-TRACK METRICS FOR PRACTICE PROFITABILITY

Reimbursement Solutions for the Mobile Healthcare Industry

INSURANCE BILLING & COLLECTIONS PROCEDURES

How automation helps steer the revenue cycle process

Healthcare Revenue Integrity Strategies

Transcription:

Understanding Revenue Cycle Strategy How to Optimize Process and Performance White Paper 1.800.4BEACON BeaconPartners.com BOSTON CLEVELAND SAN FRANCISCO TORONTO

The revenue cycle can no longer be seen as a simple process of being paid for services rendered. At the basic level we have people, processes and technologies that intersect to recoup monies from patients and third parties. Revenue cycle staff must be knowledgeable about the policies and procedures as they pertain to physician practice management. Policies and procedures must be well written and clearly defined to guide staff to the proper ends. Processes and workflows should be clearly laid out such that staff accountability can be demonstrated. Additionally, the technologies that are available in today s market further demonstrate the need for well educated staff and clearly defined processes. This white paper focuses on identifying key targets in the people, processes and technologies of the revenue cycle that will lead the revenue cycle manager to improved performance in benchmarking, accountability and revenue. Further Complexity While basic blocking and tackling skills are required to maintain staff proficiency, it is the integration of Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Claim Scrubbers, Electronic Remittances, ICD-10 Implementation, Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), CCI updates and regulation changes and provider-based billing, among other influences, that add a level of sophistication and complexity to the revenue cycle. Though the routine processing of claims requires strict monitoring and control, organizational hierarchies typically allow soft technology to report to Information Technology (IT), with the often poor results falling on the revenue cycle manager s shoulders. Integration and interoperability become focal points for the seamless exchange of data among systems for insurance verification, auto-charging of facility and professional fees and the use of a single MPI (Master Patient Index). The revenue cycle manager now more than ever must communicate across occupational skills to identify signals of trouble in performance and exact appropriate remedies. Avoiding a revenue cycle breakdown means reducing the number of hand-offs among individuals and departments, further streamlining the cycle and eliminating errors. Appropriate communication flows and aligned responsibilities among department heads and revenue personnel are vital to revenue cycle health. All facets of a medical practice must revolve around the revenue cycle. What is the Revenue Cycle? The following graphic defines the revenue cycle for our discussion. Encounter management Documentation Charge capture Charge entry Charge capture and coding HIM Utilization management Claim submission Third-party follow-up Rejection avoidance Back End Editing Claim submission Account follow-up Customer service Cash posting Contractual posting Denials management Payment variance Front End Scheduling Demographics Insurance verification Eligibility checking Financial counseling Financial counseling Transaction posting Patient access Contract management Scheduling and prearrival Appeals 2 3/12

The Pyramid Effect As more processes are automated, a natural hierarchy, or pyramid, of the dollars to be collected is formed. The more difficult dollars at the top are often hard to tap, while dollars at the bottom of this pyramid tend to flow in more easily using current automation levels. Effort Lost Revenue A/R Dollars Easy Dollars While recovering the easy dollars is good, it is not sufficient. Logically, while most operations are built to focus on the bottom of the pyramid, the most successful practices involve advanced workflow processes to address the more difficult dollars at the top. It is most often how well revenue is retrieved at the top of the pyramid that marks the difference in success versus failure. Measuring and Monitoring The revenue cycle manager must take a comprehensive look at his/her own performance by examining all of the business processes involved in moving a patient through the system and ensuring that the provider is being paid appropriately. These business processes, including upfront patient referral and scheduling, patient registration and insurance verification, medical records coding, utilization management, billing, and follow-up activities associated with collections, are all part of the revenue cycle. The monitoring and ensuring of the quality of each of the processes and functions is vital. Without oversight and feedback to all contributing departments on the quality of performance, the cycle cannot be optimized. The old adage of measure twice cut once may be appropriately applied; we must be careful when using measurement and benchmarks as calculations can be made using different formulas. Improved accounts receivable (A/R) days may be achieved by increasing payments or writing off balances. We must measure, monitor and retool the workflow to minimize errors and maximize revenue. There are five key benchmarks to measure the health of your revenue cycle: 1. Cash flow All improvements in workflows and decisions on contracting and policies affect cash flow. Incremental increases in cash flow should be measured. This can be better explained in tracking First Pass Payment Rates. Improvement in First Pass Payment Rates improves cash flow and reduces costs. 2. Denial and bad debt rate The former usually leads to the latter. Align write-off codes to their denial categories. If a charge is denied due to untimely filing, the subsequent write-off should be defined as an untimely filing write-off. 3. Days in receivable Properly calculated and compared to national benchmarks, improvements can be measured. 4. A/R greater than 90 days Reductions will improve your cash flow. Be wary if a strong referral to collection agency policy is implemented. You should not allow the referral amount to be written off the books. This will improve the AR >90 days, but will it improve cash flow (item 1)? 5. Lag days This is the time between the date of service and the date of actual billing. Compare inpatient and office charges to national benchmarks. Improvements will provide a timely submission of charges and may provide a significant one-time increase in cash flow. Deny, Deny, Deny Denials will show you where improvement in performance can have the greatest impact. Breakdowns usually occur in three common areas; the first area involves patient referrals and scheduling. When patients are referred from one caregiver to another, the information that is passed along is often inconsistent or incomplete. Scheduling systems are set up to capture a minimum amount of information on a computer screen. Therefore, schedulers are focused on filling in these screens, rather than capturing the patient information most needed to send out the bill. A second set of breakdowns typically occurs when staff gathers patient information at preregistration. This includes verifying patients insurance, determining whether care needs to be authorized or securing payment sponsorship for patients who do not have appropriate financial coverage for their care. Rather than obtaining this information in advance, staff often collect it quickly when the patient arrives for care, resulting in incomplete or inconsistent information. A third set of problems that ultimately delays billing and revenue collection arises when care concludes and/or after service has been rendered. One example is the failure to collect insurance co-payments and deductibles before patients check out. Another is incomplete medical record information that either delays initial billing or forces an insurer to deny the claim. Staff assigned to follow up on unpaid bills often have other responsibilities as well. And, typically, they do not have the information they need or a systematic process in place to resolve outstanding balances 3

in an appropriate and timely manner. Providers that have redesigned their revenue cycles have found that the dollar value of bills that should have been sent out for payment, but were delayed for an unresolved deficiency, is typically three times higher than they estimated. Denials reveal the health of the revenue cycle. Capturing denial information can sometimes be a difficult task for organizations. Even with the advancements in technology and system capabilities, it is not unusual to see organizations with very limited, if any, understanding of their denials and the dollar impact. Organizations must take full advantage of technology tools to analyze their financial health. Capturing, analyzing and disseminating denial information are important elements in the process of denial management. We need to distinguish between controllable versus uncontrollable denials for this discussion. Controllable denials are those denials that could be avoided if steps were taken to fully understand the extent of coverage that the patient has or may not have or whether or not the claims were filed according to payer guidelines. Examples of controllable denials are: The patient cannot be identified with the information submitted The patient is not covered by the insurance plan billed on the date of service Controllable denials will include: Coding error Inaccurate eligibility No authorization/no referral obtained Not medically necessary Provider enrollment is not valid Registration error/unable to identify Untimely filing Uncontrollable denials fall under circumstances that are beyond the control of the provider. Examples of uncontrollable denials are: Patient paid directly Co-pay or deductible has not been met The payer is requesting information from patient Retooling for Improved Performance A smoothly functioning revenue cycle requires clearly delineated work processes that prioritize all activities and measure performance at each step. Redefining work processes and flow and retraining employees are the keys to improvement. To keep the revenue cycle functioning appropriately, staff must know what they should be focusing on; they should have all the information they need in front of them. Establishing work volume and quality goals also helps drive productivity and improve results. It is important to have information available at several levels of detail, from the account level up to the employee, department and then the entire revenue-cycle level, to improve accountability and demonstrate how each individual and each step in the cycle has an impact on overall performance. A revenue cycle operating at peak performance becomes a strategic resource for helping providers combat the widening gap between increasing costs and declining reimbursement. A healthy revenue cycle not only ensures the provider is getting paid for the care and service delivered, but also provides revenue to help reduce expense cuts and financial losses while improving long-term viability. High performers have an organizational strategy and culture that elevates the importance of the revenue cycle. High performers master areas important to their particular circumstances. They do not necessarily focus on the same revenue cycle areas as others, but they target those elements most crucial to their success. Simply put, they are good at what they need to be good at. High performers accelerate improvements. High performers are not just good at setting goals; they take action and execute strategies to achieve these goals. Organizations that have comprehensively redesigned their revenue cycles typically see a range of benefits, including: A 2 to 4 percent increase in annual net patient revenue that is sustained year to year Reductions of up to 25 percent in administrative, bad debt and charity care write-offs A/R levels decreased by 15 to 30 percent or more Significant improvements in employee productivity and morale and patient and physician satisfaction Inclusive to an organization s revenue cycle strategy should be people, processes, technologies, metrics, communication and culture. Here are some steps to improve these factors in your organization: People Apply high standards to hiring Emphasize education Take a career approach to revenue cycle positions Leverage compensation and work arrangements for employee satisfaction 4

Process Use formal structures to obtain stakeholder input Target revenue cycle improvements around the consumer experience Adopt established improvement methodologies, including those not traditionally used in healthcare Technologies Selectively use technology for interactions with customers Manage for investment value Dedicate IT staff to the revenue cycle Metrics Measure and report frequently Look beyond traditional metrics for success Develop and enforce systems of accountability around monitoring and reporting practices Communication Drive a positive scheduling/registration experience Provide estimates of financial obligations Promote financial assistance Support clear and simple billing and collections materials Recognize the importance of external communications Culture Support the revenue cycle at the highest level Garner appreciation for the revenue cycle from nonfinancial staff Demand high performance Celebrate success Make innovation a priority Conclusion Although organizations pursue a variety of strategies to attain revenue cycle excellence, results of the research are clear: high performance does not just happen. Those providers that are making good on efforts to realize patientfocused and value-driven revenue cycle processes have done so by instilling organizational commitment to their goals. Efforts must reach beyond the business office. Revenue cycle performance is affected by everyone throughout the organization, with success dependent on support from health information management, physicians, nurses and IT, to name only a few. As such, key actions will be needed from revenue cycle leadership to attain the widespread support vital for achieving high performance. Beacon Partners is one of the largest healthcare management consulting firms in North America. We focus on helping organizations improve operational, clinical and financial performance to deliver the highest level of patient care. For more than two decades, healthcare leaders have chosen Beacon Partners to optimize clinical productivity and financial performance, ultimately leading to improved quality, safety and patient outcomes. Our team of industry executives, physicians, nurses, administrators, allied healthcare professionals and analysts brings a unique, multi-disciplinary approach to the challenges healthcare organizations face today. For more information visit Beacon Partners.com. Connect with us on: 1.800.4BEACON BeaconPartners.com BOSTON CLEVELAND SAN FRANCISCO TORONTO 5