Hospitals Are Shifting To Outpatient Services: What This Means For The Hospital Revenue Cycle
You can expect major changes to hospital billing this year thanks to the pandemic and shifts in patient behavior – but one of the most important that hospital and health system leaders should pay attention to is changes in use of outpatient services.
An
analysis from the Guidehouse Center for Health Insights and Healthcare
Financial Management Association (HFMA) addressed hospital and health system
leaders including CEOs, CFOs, COOs, and other executives from 182 hospitals for
insights into what they expect in the near future. It found that a full 95% of
the executives surveyed expected higher outpatient volumes in 2023. As much as
40% of leaders expected increases of 10% or more.
But
this shift isn’t happening on its own and those in charge of hospital coding and billing should pay
attention. 41% of the leaders surveyed expected lower inpatient volumes at the
same time, with 17% expecting that drop to be 10% or higher [1].
What’s Behind the Shift
in Hospital Revenue Cycle
Hospitals and health systems have been
navigating this flow of patients from inpatient to outpatient since the
beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic – a period where patients were avoiding
hospital emergency departments and many providers postponed or even canceled
elective surgeries to slow the spread of the virus. HFMA has found that leaders
believe that emergency department visits will increase, along with elective
procedures, both at a rate of 10% or more. This is to be expected since, as
things stand now, many providers still haven’t returned to pre-COVID patient
volumes.
But many leaders will find themselves
unprepared since they are still navigating issues with staffing and workforce
problems. A full 96% of survey respondents said that their workforce issues are
having a negative impact on growth strategy, and this impact isn’t minor. Among
those who are having these issues, 62% report that the impact is significant.
And while these problems are most prevalent on the clinical side, many are
having issues on the administrative side also. Almost three out of four of the
executives surveyed are looking for hospital revenue
cycle, coding, and IT
experts this year.
How to Adapt Hospital
Billing to the Shift to Outpatient
As the “new normal” emerges, hospital revenue
cycle leaders
should be taking steps to adapt so that you stay ahead of the competition and
in front of any future challenges you might face.
Assess Your Current State
in Hospital Billing
Now is the time to look at your current
revenue cycle processes and determine your baseline before you begin to make
any changes. For example, does your staff understand outpatient billing well?
Will they need additional training? Do your current workflows meet the needs of
increases in outpatient billing and coding?
Now is also an excellent time to determine
whether your approach to measurement will be sufficient to evaluate any changes
you make in your hospital revenue
cycle staffing and
procedures. You might want to consider creating new KPIs to make sure you have solid insights into
your decisions around outpatient changes.
Know that you’ll be doing the work of
creating your own standards for using data to track outpatient claim
statistics. There isn’t much of an industry standard and you’ll find considerable
variation by payor and possibly even patient type, so a custom approach is
best.
Improving Your Clean
Claim Rate
When deciding on goals and standards, your
outpatient clean claim rate will be a useful place to start. Most hospital revenue
cycle departments
aim for around 95%, so if you aren’t hitting that number now, it’s a good time
to start investigating ways to improve your processes and numbers.
One of the first steps should be a focus on
education and training, ensuring that your team on both the coding and billing
sides understand what constitutes a clean claim for all payers on outpatient
contracts. If you begin this process and realize that you have a significant
amount of work to do to get your team up to the necessary standards, consider
working with a medical billing and
coding partner to
supplement your hospital coding and
billing needs.
Dive Into Denial
Management
During times of change like these, denial management only becomes more important. Having a
clear strategy to measure, identify, prevent, and address denials will be
immensely helpful in developing a hospital outpatient
billing strategy
that keeps cash flows healthy and creates a positive work environment for your hospital billers and
coders.
Know that denials are currently increasing
and many hospitals and health systems are bleeding revenue as a result. But at
the same time, the vast majority of denials are preventable. By appealing a
majority of claims and aiming for a denials rate under 5% (or even lower), you
can get a handle on outpatient billing issues before they even start.
Stay dedicated to identifying and rectifying
root causes, and filling in with outside support where needed, and you’ll walk
into a future of increasing outpatient volumes with confidence.
Consider Outsourcing
Hospital Billing
Hospital leaders shouldn’t take on this type
of unprecedented change alone. Many of your competitors are taking advantage of
options in outsourced billing
and coding to fill
in gaps and create efficiencies that would be too difficult to achieve
internally. They understand that outsourcing can stabilize revenue and reduce
risk even while improving the
patient experience.
When you’re ready to take a fresh look at
your approach to outpatient hospital billing and
coding, we would love to
share our expertise and insight. Just contact us here to get started.
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