Title: Best Practices: The Front Office
1Best PracticesThe Front Office
- Removing the Roadblocks to Efficiency
Kathie Huttegger, MBA,, CMPE Administrator St.
Louis Pediatric Associates, Inc.
2Best PracticesThe Front Office
- Define Reality
- Identify the bottlenecks
- Increase efficiency
3The Right Questions
- What is a best practice?
- What are the functions of the front office?
- Definitions of some key principles
4Defining Reality
- Max DuPree Leadership Is An Art
- The first responsibility of a leader is to
define reality. . .
5Wrong Jungle
6Defining Reality - Differences
- Primary Care versus Specialist
- Single Specialty versus Multi-specialty
- Number of sites
- Ancillary service offerings
- Use of midlevels
- Cost or accrual based accounting
- Physician compensation
- Payor mix
- Many other variables (triage, billing, etc.)
7Defining Reality - Similarities
- Provide medical services
- Face increasing costs
- Struggle with reduction in payment
- Patients
- Staff
- Physicians
8MGMA Best PerformersIn Three Critical Areas
- Profitability and operating costs
- Productivity, capacity and staffing
- Accounts receivables and collections
See Key Indicators Handout Expanded
Quantifiers of Better Performing Practices
9What are the functions of the front office?
10Front Office Multi-Functional
11Director of First Impressions
12Can Help or Impede Patient Flow
13Touches Revenue Cycle at Multiple Intervals
14Removing Roadblocks to Efficiency
- Throughput Money coming in (profit)
- Operating Expense money going out to make
throughput - Inventory Money stuck inside
15Bottleneck
- A resource whose capacity is equal to or less
than the demand placed upon it. - The flow through the bottleneck must equal the
demand from the market. - Capacity of a process is the capacity of its
slowest resource
16Bottlenecks or Roadblocks
- Crowded reception area
- Irritable patients
- Financial underperformance
- Burnt out staff
17Causes of Bottlenecks
- Too much paperwork
- Poorly planned processes
- Inefficient office design
- Miscommunication between staff
- Poor scheduling
18Productivity
- Accomplishing something in terms of goals
- Meaningless if you dont know the goals
19The Goal
- Reduce operational expense
-
- Reduce inventory
- Increase throughput
- More important to increase volume
- Expand hours with providers with no increase in
fixed costs - Incorporate efficiencies to increase patient
volume
20What is Our Goal?
- The Right Number of Staff
- In the Right Place
- With the Right Skills
- At the Right Cost
- With the Right Behavior
- With the Right Rewards
- With the Right Outcomes
- No More No Less
Deborah L. Walker 2003
21The Goal Defined by Jim Collins
In Good to Great the bus doesnt leave until .
. .
- Get the wrong people off the bus
- Get the right people on the bus
- Get the right people in the right seat on the bus
22- Count what is countable,
- measure what is measurable,
- and what is not measurable,
- make measureable
- Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
23- You cannot manage what you
- cannot measure and
- what gets measured gets done!
- Bill Hewlett
24(No Transcript)
25Dynamic Relationship of Staffing Levels With
Accounting Functions
Productivity
Revenue
Expenses
Profit
26Physician Time
- Data suggests that most critical resource in a
medical group is physician time
- Profit is a function of productivity and the cost
of the resources that enable productivity
27Waiting Room Time
Yes, I have an appointment. Should I also have
made a reservation?
28Standard Production Measures
- Telephone calls w/messaging 180-200
- Appointment scheduling 75 125
- Check-In with registration
- Verification and copay collection 75 100
- Check-Out with schedule of return appointment and
charge entry 70 - 90
29The Peasant and The King
30Managements job is not to see the company as
it is . . . But as it can become. John W.
Teets
31RE-ENGINEERING THE FRONT OFFICE
- R eliable
- E fficient
- S ervice
- P atient-Focused
- E nergy
- C ustomization
- T rust
32Put the Cookies on the Lower Shelf
33S N A P
- Smile
- Name
- Ask May I help you?
- Parting comment
34The Five Whys
35Best PracticesThe Front Office
- Define Reality
- Identify the bottlenecks
- Increase efficiency
36You are NOT Alone . . .
- Books
- The Total Service Medical Practice by Vicky
Bradford, PhD - Mastering Patient Flow by Elizabeth Woodcock,
MBA, FACMPE - Good to Great by Jim Collins
- The Goal by Eliyahu M. Goldratt
- The Fifth Discipline by Peter Senge
- All books by John Maxwell
- Medical Group Management Association
- Local www.mgma-sl.org
- State www.mgma-mo.org
- National www.mgma.com
- Other Organizations
- American Academy of Family Practice www.aafp.org
- Organization of your specialty
- The Journal of Medical Practice Management
37Our Role As Leaders . . .
Finding the gifts people have to give Inviting
them to give them, andHonoring the result when
they do
38DONT GIVE UP . . .