BUILD ON WHAT YOU’RE CURRENTLY DOING:
1. Add physician hours – add evening or weekend hours; start your office hours earlier and end hours later.
2. Reduce physician time off – decrease vacation or change weekly days off to 1/2 days off.
3. Set a minimum number of providers to be in the office seeing patients at all times the office is open.
4. Have each provider add one new patient visit to his/her schedule weekly.
5. Add ePrescribing to recoup additional Medicare revenue and streamline prescribing (there are free ePrescribing software packages available, but evaluate them carefully so they don’t add more complexity to the system instead of less.)
6. Report PQRI measures to recoup additional Medicare revenue.
7. Charge patients an out-of-pocket fee for completing patient forms – disability forms, etc. and reserve office visits for treating patients.
8. Choose an EMR that qualifies your practice for the ARRA money (although it has been widely promoted that in a larger practice, an EMR and its associated work will cost more than you will get from the government.)
9. If you are in an underserved or rural area, check to see if there might be grants or funds available locally, in the state or federally, for adding a service to your practice.
10. If your practice does Independent Medical Exams (IMEs), reviews records or depositions, make sure that your fee schedule for such services is current and that the fees are collected before the physician provides the service.
ADD TO YOUR CURRENT SERVICES:
11. Allergy testing & treatment
12. Dispensing pharmaceuticals
13. Dispensing nutriceuticals
14. Dispensing Durable Medical Equipment
15. Group patient visits
16. Coumadin Clinic
17. Heart Failure Clinic
18. Diabetes Education Classes
19. Add primary care to specialty care practices
20. Add specialty care to primary care practices
21. Research
22. Joint Ventures with other practices or hospital
23. Lease space to other entities
24. eVisits (virtual visits or email visits)
25. Elective procedures or services
26. Mid-level providers
27. Walk-in clinic
28. Occupational medicine: drug screens, employment physicals, etc.
29. Hospitalists
30. Medical Director of local nursing homes
31. Complementary & alternative medicine (CAM)
32. Aging in Place services
33. Social worker
34. Concierge practice
35. School team physician
EVALUATE YOUR REVENUE CYCLE MANAGEMENT:
36. Are you renegotiating payer contracts regularly?
37. Do your scheduling staff know how to educate patients about what payers you have contracts with and are in network with and what the patient’s financial responsibility will be?
38. Do staff know what typical new patient charges are to tell the patient?
39. Do you check every patient’s eligibility for insurance benefits immediately prior to every service?
40. Do you have patients sign a financial policy to acknowledge what they are responsible for based on their payer type?
41. Do you copy the patient’s insurance cards at every visit, or at least compare their current card to the card you have on file? Are you able to scan patient insurance cards and driver’s licenses into your practice management (PM) system?
42. Is your PM system able to download the information from the scan into the patient registration screen? If not, do you have a way to confirm that demographic and insurance information has been entered correctly from the cards?
43. Are your charges being posted daily?
44. Does the person who provides the service, or a documentation coding specialist, choose the CPT and ICD9 code?
45. Is the documentation for the charges being completed within 24 hours of the service?
46. Is your encounter form up-to-date with current CPT and ICD9 codes; do you order smaller batches of them so you can change the codes as new services are added in the practice?
47. Do you check the CPT and ICDD9 matching to make sure the codes are valid for the year, the codes adhere to NCCI and LCD edits before you finalize the charges?
48. Do you regularly audit medical records for coding and documentation and give providers feedback on where coding could be improved?
49. Are you using ABNs for Medicare patients who want services that Medicare might not pay for?
50. Do you file claims daily?
51. Do you correct claims daily when they are rejected at the practice management, claims clearinghouse or payer level?
52. Do you correct claims daily when they are rejected at the claim level and are not paid for for reasons that can be corrected?
53. Do you have your contract allowables in your PM system so you know when you are not being paid correctly by contract?
54. Do you appeal unpaid or underpaid claims?
55. Do you check recoupments or requests for refunds from payers and make sure they truly should be refunded?
56. Do you send insurance and patient payments to a lockbox to be scanned and stored digitally for your staff to post from?
57. Do you make payment arrangements in the office for balances after insurance has paid, or payment plans by drafting credit or debit cards?
58. Do you have a policy of not sending statements?
59. Do you collect the patient’s portion of the service at the time of service?
60. Do you collect fees for elective services prior to providing these services?
61. Can your patients make payments online through your website?
62. Do you file a claim with a patient’s estate if they have died?
63. Do you accept cash only from patients who have passed bad checks?
64. Do you accept cash only from patients who have filed bankruptcy with your practice?
65. Do you inadvertently see patients who have been dismissed from your practice?
66. When adding a physician to the practice, do you timeline the credentialing appropriately so the physician can see patients with insurance as well as those without?
67. If your new physician is only partially credentialed with payers, do you have him/her see the patients with payers they are credentialed with and add payers to their schedule load as the credentialing comes through?
68. Do you meet with representatives from your largest payers monthly to establish relationships and bring problems to their attention? (the squeeky wheel theory of payer relations)
69. Are you pre-certing everything that needs pre-certification or pre-authorization or pre-notification to be sure the service will be paid?
70. Are you receiving payments via electronic funds transfer (EFT)?
71. Are you receiving explanation of benefits (EOBs) or remittance advice (RA) electronically?
72. Are you posting your RA electronically?
73. Are you protecting your practice from embezzlement? (see my post on this here.)
74. Is someone in the practice responsible for staying current on changing coding requirements for Medicare, Medicaid, Tricare and commercial payers?
DECREASE EXPENSES:
75. Eliminate overtime. Evaluate the need for additional staff (part-time?) vs. overtime.
76. Send some staff home (sometimes called “low census”) when there are no patients to be seen.
77. Use volunteers. Tap into the local hospital volunteers, or recruit and train your own.
78. Hire an after-school student employee to do routine jobs.
79. Discontinue paying staff for inclement weather closings when the practice is not open.
80. Shop everything. Negotiate existing service contracts. Do not assume anything is non-negotiable. Negotiate the rent.
81. Get rid of yellow pages advertising. It rarely brings you new patients and is primarily a place to look up phone numbers. You will still get your white pages listing free with your phone service.
82. Utilize pre-employment testing to make sure job applicants have the skills you need.
83. Shop postage machines or look into stamps.com.
84. Join a group purchasing entity (hospital, professional association, etc.)
85. Improve your accounting cycle. Invoices and statements are matched up with packing slips and negotiated prices. Use purchase order numbers.
86. Get the payment discount by paying on time or early – ask vendors for an on-time or early payment discount.
87. Make sure office supplies are not going home with the employees. Make sure office supplies that are ordered are “really need” and not “sure would be nice.”
88. Remind patients of their appointments to decrease no-shows. Call patients who no-show and attempt to reschedule (unless they feel better!) Track no-shows and evaluate the reasons for them.
89. Consider charging for no-shows or dismissing patients for no-shows.
90. Have a good recall system in place. If patients leave without scheduling a needed follow-up, make sure that they are called if they have not scheduled within a certain amount of time. Keep track of annual wellness visits and remind patients to schedule them.
91. Take advantage of any discounts offered by your malpractice carrier by completing risk management surveys and having speakers give annual updates on decreasing malpractice claims. Some carriers give discounts for managers who are members of MGMA or Fellows in the ACMPE.
92. Evaluate any discounts on services or products offered by your physicians’ professional associations and societies.
93. Evaluate your leases – are those big old copiers and faxes worth paying for a service contract?
94. Consider speech recognition/voice recognition and eliminate transcription.
95. Review your computer maintenance contracts. Are you paying for maintenance on equipment or software that is no longer being used?
96. Take advantage of online CME for physicians, midlevel providers, clinical staff and managers.
97. Make plans to attend face-to-face seminars well in advance to take advantage of early enrollment discounts and good flight deals.
98. Evaluate outsourcing. Think about outsourcing transcription, coding, billing, pre-authorizations, credentialing, switchboard, payroll, accounting and medical records copying.
99. Replace your answering service with an answering machine educating patients on the limited reasons for calling after hours and giving the number of the physician on call.
100. Destroy archived financial and medical records that you are paying to store, once you have ascertained that they exceed the required time limit.
101. Hold a brainstorming session with the staff and ask for their ideas for increasing revenue and reducing expenses. The people on the front lines will have excellent ideas. In return, do not nickle and dime the staff to death by charging for coffee, reducing parking stipends or eliminating uniform allowances. Keep in mind that for your rank and file staff, having to pay for their own uniforms or paying more for parking might be a deal-breaker that causes them to search for work elsewhere. Try to focus on the bigger items for savings and make sure the staff know you are trying to keep their small benefits in place in appreciation for their work.