Transcript Slide 1

Financial Code BLUE
Saving the Doctor
Patients as Consumers
Customers of Healthcare
Preparing for the Paradigm Shift
con·sum·er n.
One that consumes, especially one
that acquires goods or services for
direct use or ownership rather than for
resale or use in production and
manufacturing
The Faces of a Consumer
What’s happening to
healthcare…
What is moving us along this paradigm…
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (PPACA)
• Decrease the number of uninsureds
• Reduce the cost of healthcare
• Cover all applicants
• Offer same rates regardless of gender or preexisting conditions
Health Insurance Exchange
• Primarily what the health insurance exchange
will do is bring together private health
insurance companies along with a
government health insurance option to
compete for business among individuals and
small businesses. To be in the health
insurance exchange the health insurance
policies offered cannot exclude someone for
pre-existing conditions.
*Source: http://personalinsure.about.com/od/insurancetermsglossary/g/insuranceexchange.htm
"The Marketplace will offer much more than any
health insurance website you've used
before," HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
wrote in a blog post. "Insurers will compete
for your business on a level playing field, with
no hidden costs or misleading fine print."
Insurance executives are gearing up…
CDHP: Consumer Driven Health Plans
CDHP: Consumer Driven Health Plans
Insurance is changing…
The New Paradigm
Patient
Consumer
Customer
The old days…
…the new days
Definition of a Customer
cus·tom·er noun \’kəs-tə-mər\
Definition of CUSTOMER
1: one that purchases a commodity or service
2: an individual usually having some specified distinctive
trait <a real tough customer>
Examples of CUSTOMER
She is one of our best customers.
She's a pretty cool customer.
Origin of CUSTOMER
Middle English custumer, from custume First Known Use:
15th century
* http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/customer
What is a customer?
 Advocate
 Apathetic
 Assassin
* Satisfaction: How Every Great Company Listens to the Voice of the Customer, 2006, Chris Denove and James D. Power
IV
Why are customers important?
• It is six to 10 times more costly to attract a new
customer than it is to retain an existing one.
• A satisfied customer only tells five other people.
• An unhappy customer tells approximately 20
other people.
• It only takes 30 seconds for a customer to form
an opinion
* Customer Service in Health Care: A Grassroots Approach to Creating a Culture of Service Excellence, June
2004, Anne Lindstrom Coe
Let’s look at things differently…
Customers Drive Products and Service
Customers Drive Products and Service
Customers Drive Products and Service
Customers Drive Products and Service
Customers Drive Products and Service
Products are easy…
What about Healthcare…I don’t think patients are ready for this
stuff…
Customers Drive Products and Service
Customers Drive Products and Service
Customers Drive Products and Service
Hoots Memorial Hospital - Yadkinville
RP-VITA, or
Remote Presence Virtual +
Independent Telemedicine Assistant
Healthcare Service…Meeting customer
needs
Why do all of this…
The landscape is changing fast! What’s causing the erosion…
Social Media…Yes, I said it.
• 7 missed opportunities of not creating an online
presence
– http://www.amaassn.org/amednews/2012/04/02/bica0402.htm
• Patients want to use social media tools to manage
health care
– http://www.amaassn.org/amednews/2012/04/30/bisa0430.htm
• 4 ways social media can improve your medical practice
– http://www.amaassn.org/amednews/2012/06/25/bisa0625.htm
Technology
More smartphone points of interest…
• 31% of mobile-phone owners used it to look
up health information
• 19% of Smartphone owners have a health
app on their phone
• 18-29 were much more likely to use it than
those over 65
Tech giants split over government plan to
create a free nationwide Wi-Fi network
VS
Drive Thru Medicine?
The Virtuwell site offers treatment for about forty
conditions, including urinary tract infections, sinus
infections and conjunctivitis. Using algorithms, the
program makes patient and clinician phone
interactions available 24/7 and uses nurse
practitioners or physician assistants to provide
diagnoses, treatment plans, and prescriptions.
Source: http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/32/2/385.abstract
What’s possible…
IBM’s Watson interns at Memorial SloanKettering
Source: http://mobihealthnews.com/20255/ibms-watson-interns-atmemorial-sloan-kettering/
HITECH ACT/ ARRA
• Infrastructure shift opportunity
• Difficult to make change in organization
• Upfront investment with payback from the
Government
• The cost of doing business…
Electronic Medical Records –
Practice Perspective
• Utilize this opportunity to better understand
your patients and their needs
• Patient safety, quicker delivery of results,
organized and standardized
• Mine the data
• Be proactive…stratify the database, provide
information, help them know what they need
• Let them have access to their information and
participate in their healthcare
Electronic Medical Records – Patient
Perspective
• I want to be involved in my healthcare
decisions.
• I want instant results.
• I believe it is safer.
• I believe it is faster.
• Patient’s believe that the practice is up-todate, prepared and efficient.
• Perception is reality…remember, 30 seconds
to form an opinion.
mHealth Apps
Part of the solution for Stage 3…active patient
involvement/interaction…
Marketing/Branding
Retail Clinics and Walk-In Clinics…
• Nearly 1,400 stand alone retail health
clinics…double from 5 years ago
• PLUS 8,700 Urgent Care Centers
• According to Rand study...patients are 67%
less likely to go to the doctor the next time
after visiting a retail clinic
• Similar quality…lower costs
– average visit running about $50 less, at around
$110 as opposed to $166
Simple ideas
Don’t forget about first impressions!
• The Appointment
– Is it easy?
– Is it professional?
• The Waiting Room
– Is it Friendly?
– Is it neat and organized?
• The Greeting
– What’s behind the window…
* Source: http://www.physicianspractice.com/making-great-first-impression-your-medical-practice
Ideas for Retention…why do you
keep…?
-
Why do you bank at…?
Why do you eat at…?
Why do you get your teeth cleaned at…?
Why do you buy your groceries at…?
Why do buy your books online? At a bookstore?
What happened to the library?
Where do you go for your mammogram?
Where do you take your kids for a check up?
Who does your hair?
What church do you attend? Why?
Reality in the practice…
We have always talked about this but…
Healthcare is changing very, very rapidly.
Preparation is no longer an option, it will be a
requirement for future success. Hanging out
a shingle is no longer the only requirement
for success.
Cam’s Random Ideas…
A Daycare Center
Online Clinic
Video
Millennial Generation
Telemedicine Visit
Assisted Living Facility
Tattletale Pills
Accountable Care $
Assisted Living Facility
Staff
Measure of Physician’s
effort to continue work
Ancillary Service (Mammogram)
Internet Search Engine
Consumerism/Retail
Online practice
schedules
First available
appointment
Peter’s Laws
The Creed of the Sociopathic Obsessive
Compulsive
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If anything can go wrong, Fix it! (To hell with Murphy!)
When given a choice -- Take both!
Multiple projects lead to multiple successes.
Start at the top and work your way up.
Do it by the book...but be the author!
When forced to compromise, ask for more.
If you can't beat them, join them, and then beat them.
If it's worth doing, it's got to be done right now.
If you can't win, change the rules.
If you can't change the rules, ignore them.
When faced without a challenge, make one.
"No" simply means begin again at the next highest level.
Don't walk when you can run.
Bureaucracy is a challenge to the be conquered with a righteous attitude, an intolerance for stupidity,
and bulldozer when necessary.
When in doubt: THINK!
Patience is a virtue but persistence to the point of success is a blessing.
The squeaky wheel gets replaced.
The faster you move, the slower time passes, the longer you live.
Do this…not that.
Thank You
Thank
You
MSOC Health
(866) 347-0001
200 Timber Hill Place
Suite 221
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
www.msochealth.com