Strategies for Engaging Patients Who Self-Diagnose via the Internet

Author: ProAssurance

Time pressures1 and lack of patient trust2 are factors that can contribute to physician burnout. Patients who self-diagnose based on internet research combine these factors. Expecting self-diagnosing-patients to passively receive physician-delivered medical information will likely increase the frustration of both parties. Therefore, it can be more productive with these challenging patients to integrate their internet information into patient education.

This approach can improve clinical communication, strengthen the physician-patient partnership, increase patient satisfaction, and result in better outcomes. Time management strategies can help physicians keep discussions about internet content limited to the confines of the scheduled visit. When handled correctly, there is a silver lining to patient internet use.

Internet Websites for Patient Education

There are many websites that offer health advice and information. The Medical Library Association provides guidance on finding good health information. The websites listed below can get you started on your own recommendations for patients:

References

  1. Cory Pitre, et al. “Physician Time Management.” MedEdPORTAL, February 2018.
  2. James F. Sweeney. “The Eroding Trust Between Patients and Physicians.” Medical Economics, 4/10/2018.

 

Full Article Link: https://proassurance.com/knowledge-center/strategies-for-engaging-patients-who-self-diagnose-via-the-internet

 

Read more from ProAssurance: https://proassurance.com/knowledge-center

Healthcare As We Once Knew it is Dead

The healthcare landscape has changed over the last 20-25 years.  Primary care physicians used to manage overall patient care, coordinating with specialists for care that was outside their training and expertise.  Now, it seems that the primary care physician sees the patient a few times a year and might even request labs or perform a well-exam.  These exams have been greatly watered down over the years due to government red tape, ill advice from the U.S Preventive Services Task Force and declining reimbursement.  What used to be a true 40-minute history and physical has become a 10-to-15-minute checklist of things that the patient’s insurance company will likely reimburse the physician for providing.  The list of what won’t be done is longer than the list of things that will be done.  For specialty care, I notice that patients are increasingly arranging for care on their own, which often leaves the primary care physician out of the loop.

Primary care physicians used to have a trusted network of specialists to whom they could refer for evaluation and management of concerns outside of the primary care physician’s scope of practice.  A simple phone call once served as an introductory transfer of the patient from primary to specialty care.  Progress notes and polite thank you notes followed upon returning the patient to the primary care setting.  Today, insurance regulations and paperwork have become the primary focus, while the actual diagnosis and treatment of the condition(s) have become a distant secondary focus.  Medicare starts something and commercial insurers follow their lead, whether the policy is beneficial or harmful to their beneficiaries.

Referrals can be difficult to obtain, even for large academic medical centers.  In certain instances, the return of the patient to the primary care setting is delayed or halted altogether, with the specialist’s employer or accountable care organization assuming the role of the primary care physician.  Communication between offices has become something of a nightmare due to absent consultation notes in the patient’s chart.  In years past, referrals could be arranged quickly and easily.  The tides have changed over the last 20-25 years, with referrals becoming increasingly more difficult to obtain.  Due to insurance participation/non-participation, arranging referrals may take quite a while, and the patient’s condition might have worsened during the waiting period.

It is the author’s belief that the healthcare system is still recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic.  Preventive care was delayed to re-focus on the medically complex.  Patients who were not taking an active role in their care are now of higher acuity and require more resources to return to a more optimal state of functioning.  Referrals to specialists in large healthcare systems are still being impacted to due continued care for those medically complex patients who never fully recovered during the pandemic.

Referrals can be hard to come by, even in large cities with more than one major healthcare system.  Timeframes to obtain referrals varied for the author: 2 weeks for urology; 2 months for otolaryngology; 4-6 months for pulmonary evaluation after 1 round of COVID-19 and three rounds of pneumonia; 9-12 months for cardiology; and 24-36 months for a routine colonoscopy with gastroenterology.  For three of the above referral requests, the author was told there just weren’t enough good providers in San Antonio to see all the patients.  That waters down the prospects of finding a great provider to treat one’s medical conditions.

Is this the best we can do?  Is the status quo good enough?  While I share the same sentiment as my cardiologist and pulmonologist, “Healthcare as we once knew it is dead,” I say that we can do better, and the status quo isn’t something we should brag about.  While I’m grateful for the providers on my care team, I am disappointed that the healthcare system has changed for the worse.  I see patients being treated like numbers rather than human beings, band-aids being applied until the next care episode arrives, less emphasis on preventive care and fewer people taking part in their own care plans.  Will healthcare return to the glory days of 20-25 years ago?  Probably not.  However, I believe that if enough patients and providers start protesting the state of the current system, we could return to a better state within the next 5-7 years.

By Scott J. Grandjean, LFACHE

 

Your Profit Margin is in the Details: Focusing on Patient Care and Your Books

What if you could focus solely on patient care, knowing that your financial operations are not only in order but also optimized for growth and sustainability? 

If you’re running a healthcare business, chances are your focus is on patient care or patient products and not profit margins, cost classifications, or what’s buried in your books. But your numbers hold powerful clues about what’s working, what’s leaking money, and what’s keeping you from scaling.

Here are a few simple places to start:

  • Review your Chart of Accounts – Are expenses lumped together in vague categories like “Miscellaneous” or “Office Supplies”? Clean categorization gives you clarity and control.
  • Separate Owner Spending – Mixing personal and business expenses doesn’t just create tax issues; it clouds your decision-making.
  • Check for Duplicates – Subscriptions, services, or staff hours might be charged twice and go unnoticed without regular reviews.
  • Reclassify Costs Correctly – Mislabeling a cost of goods sold as an overhead expense can distort your profitability.
  • Request Reports You Understand – If your current P&L or balance sheet leaves you guessing, it’s time to ask for insights.

Safeguarding your profit isn’t about taking shortcuts; it’s about paying close attention to the details.

If you are curious about what your reports are really saying, I recommend starting with the items listed above.

Respectfully,

Lillia Sanders,  CEO|CFO|Advisor
Let’s Connect! LinkedIn

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Healthcare Leaders Enters its 11th Year of Forging New Connections

Healthcare Leaders celebrated its 10th anniversary last year. Back in 2014, we were a small handful of acquaintances, some of whom had experienced position eliminations, were transitioning out of the military, or just plain looking for new and better opportunities.  We were meeting twice a month, early in the morning, at a coffee shop on 281 trying to help each other make connections and identify opportunities. Over the course of a few months, we developed a little email following of two or three dozen people, many of whom had never been to our meetings. “We’d love to attend,” they would tell us, “but can’t make mornings, can you do something in the evening?” 

At that point, we started doing an evening mixer the second Thursday (so as not to coincide with our friends at San Antonio IT Networking Group on the first Thursday) of each month. We’ve been hosting our networking events ever since. Like everyone else, we had an unwelcome hiatus forced on us by COVID. We even had a newly launched and ultimately short-lived Houston chapter that was closed after only two meetings due to the lockdown. But, as things returned to normal, we concentrated on rebuilding our San Antonio group. After about a year, we were back to where we had been and beginning to grow even larger.

Over the years, we’ve had a lot of great sponsors, venues and speakers for our special events. As most of our regular attendees know, for many years we were at the Sustenio Restaurant at the Eilan Hotel. They were great and gracious hosts, but, sadly, we outgrew the space they could offer and set off exploring other locales. Our very first special event sponsor was the South Texas Spine & Surgical Hospital for a luncheon hosted by the Bexar County Medical Society.

Although we began as a small group helping each other with job leads, over the years we have probably been more prolific in connecting people with new clients and new business. However, helping people connect with someone who can point them to a new job remains near and dear to our hearts and we are delighted if we can offer help in what can be a very trying and stressful time.  We are dedicated to fostering business connections, and our goal is to do this in an atmosphere of community and familial support.

If you haven’t already done so, please join us sometime. Come and connect.

August Trevino Represents Wave Online in San Antonio

I am pleased to announce that I am now representing Wave Online in San Antonio and South Texas. While Wave Online serves clients in 19 states and other urban areas of Texas, its broad array of contemporary revenue cycle solutions and service offerings are relatively new to the San Antonio market.

For over 25 years, Wave has maintained a proven track record of helping healthcare providers achieve revenue increases of 10% or more through coding expertise, denial minimization, timely claims follow-up and advanced data analytics.

A thorough understanding of all the obstacles and challenges faced by your billing and coding practices is the key to successful revenue cycle management.  At Wave Online, our team can help improve profitability by monitoring, measuring and managing those challenges while also providing you with transparency of progress.

Our four-pronged approach which includes technology-led operations, a delivery model aligned to provider priorities, a focus on automation to drive efficiency and our 25 years of experience crafted insight into payor behaviors has helped us to realize over $81.5 million in charges billed, $30.5 million in payments posted, and $42 million accounts receivables effectively managed at over 100 client sites worldwide.

If you think your practice might be leaking revenue through the unintentional gaps that can occur in your coding and billing practices, please contact me to find out more. Wave Online can give you a free assessment, analyze your billing data, and find those gaps which can adversely affect your bottom line.

Call: 210-951-9268

Email: august@wavehca.com

www.wavehca.com

Purchase a chance to win a great ATV and support The Kingdom Healthcare System!

Many of our HLSA regulars know Dr. Hussein Musa and Dr. Adetoun Musa, the husband-and-wife physician founders of The Kingdom Healthcare System, a wonderful San Antonio based non-profit that, in their own words, “Provides access to free and affordable primary healthcare to medically underserved communities as a physical example of God’s love for all people.” Kingdom’s scope and outreach has been growing rapidly since we met the Musa’s two years ago, including the recent addition to their team of Hondo Esparza as Director of Operations. Together, they are in the midst of a new fundraising campaign featuring a chance at a really nice ATV for only $15! The drawing will be held Wednesday, May 22, 2024, so there is still plenty of time to purchase your ticket by scanning the QR code below. Please help the Kingdom team help the medically underserved in our community by supporting this worthy cause!