Value-based payments are changing the healthcare financial landscape. In fact, by 2020, value-based reimbursement is projected to represent 83% of your revenue, up from just 14% in 2010. There’s no denying that clinical operations will become crucial to your hospital’s bottom line. Now more than ever, it’s important to engage with clinical leaders, arming them with the data, tools, and processes they need to make sure you’re adequately reimbursed for the care you provide.
Here are three ways to increase engagement with your clinical teams:
1. Data Benchmarking
One of the first steps in integrating clinical operations into the financial mix is gaining a comprehensive picture of your documentation and coding performance. The best way to quickly spot your biggest opportunities to improve revenue capture is through data benchmarking. With a holistic view of your financial health—in comparison to your peers—you can identify unspecified code usage, opportunities for greater specificity under ICD-10, and any physician training initiatives that may be needed to help fill documentation gaps.
2. Physician Training
Your physicians can be reluctant to change. In the transition to a value-based care world, however, change is imperative. With analytics, you can engage physicians around data they find meaningful and actionable. You can then create physician champions and drive appropriate documentation specificity by offering detailed analytics and benchmarking data around the diagnoses that matter to them.
3. Ongoing Monitoring
As healthcare evolves, it’s important to develop a plan and process for ongoing monitoring of documentation, coding, and compliance. With a holistic view of your data, you gain complete visibility into how your clinical performance is affecting your bottom line, allowing you to reduce denials, measure the impact of ICD-10, and mitigate audit risk today and for reimbursement changes yet to come.
Approaching value-based care is an enterprise-wide responsibility. From the C-suite to physicians, everyone has a role in ensuring not that you find more revenue, but that you find the right revenue. A complete view of the revenue cycle can help you evolve with reimbursement changes without negatively impacting your bottom line.
Learn more about Revenue Integrity to help your clinical and financial leadership get the data they need to start the value-based care conversation.
Get our take on industry trends
The future of digital health part 3: AI, machine learning and robotics
This post is part three of a new series featuring healthcare visionary and thought leader Andy Dé. In this series, Dé discusses how COVID-19 has triggered remarkable digital transformation and uncovers five, long-term innovation implications that providers, healthcare leaders, and payers need to consider.
Read on...The future of digital health part 2: Digital patient engagement and virtual healthcare delivery
Protecting the health, well-being and safety of healthcare practitioners and first responders is paramount — and will accelerate adoption of Digital Patient Engagement (DPE), enabled by Virtual Healthcare Delivery (VHD) solutions (also known as “Hospital at Home.)”
Read on...You’re asking too much of your EHR
Electronic Health Records (EHRs) are purported to do a lot of things to support healthcare providers, and most of their claims are generally accurate. Of course, like anything, there are many areas where EHR vendors could and should make improvements.
Read on...Gamification in healthcare only works if you can measure it – here’s how
In business and in sports, it’s all about teams. What teams can accomplish when they work together. How they can fail spectacularly when they do
Read on...