We all know or have heard that the number one reason that a patient drops out of care, based on surveys, is that they experienced an “attitude of indifference” on the part of the doctor or the staff.
Most offices nod knowingly and are assured that their office cares about the patients, that their staff show concern, that their doctors have the patient’s interest at heart.
But what is an “attitude of indifference?” How does it manifest in a clinic? What does it feel like to a patient?
A patient experiences an attitude of indifference when they feel they are the 38th visit on a 60 visit day. They experience an attitude of indifference when they feel like they are on visit 15 of a 36 visit treatment plan and that everything is the same as the last 13 visits.
They feel an attitude of indifference when the doctor says, during the ROF, that he will give them some home exercises, and then doesn’t. Or when the doctor instructs them to attend the spinal care class as an important part of the treatment plan and no one schedules them for it, or when the front desk says they will order a supplement for them and a month goes by without the order, or the doctor says she will do a re-exam and then keeps putting it off, or when the doctor is running 5-10 minutes behind each visit or worse, comes in late.
Normally, you may still get that patient to follow through. But put yourself in the patient’s shoes. They are feeling better, even feeling “healthy” now, they have a $30 copay twice a week, and they have just heard that the company their husband works for may be laying off some people.
90% of the population right now, according to USA Today, is worried about the economy. Many have been affected, and many more are concerned – they are uncertain. When will things get better? Are we heading down farther? Am I going to have any money left?
When people are uncertain, the decisions they make are either “no” or “maybe” (which isn’t a decision but a postponement). They don’t decide that now is a great time to spend more money. Not on cars, not on restaurants, not on healthcare.
Expressing an attitude of interest is an “every visit” manifestation. That patient’s visit is not the 38th of the day or the 15th in their treatment plan – it is a singular, unique moment in time that will never occur again. It is a one and only opportunity to make an impact and a difference in that patient’s life. When you talk to them about the weather (“gee, cold out today, isn’t it?”) or tell them a joke in the treatment room or bs about the Packers – and if that is ALL you do that visit, you are just more white noise in their life, just another piece of spam in their mental inbox.
You have to manage a patient’s care EVERY visit, you have to work to make a difference in that patient’s life EVERY visit. If you don’t, that is an attitude of indifference. There is no other way to put it.
There are four critical factors that go into growing during a recession. These are:
1) Great customer service. During a recession, other businesses cut back on the front end. People want and need good customer service. They deserve it from your office.
2) Excellent patient financial plans, well communicated. The first response in some clinics when times get tight is to tighten up your financial plans. “All patients have to pay their copay before they see the doctor. No copay, no visit.” Do this and watch your practice drop by 50% (actual case).
3) Step up your marketing. Great customer service and flexible financial plans don’t mean anything if no one comes in. Marketing is a variable expense and one of the first areas businesses cut. There were over 650 auto makers in the US before the great depression. After, there were six. Clinics are closing, going out of business right now. You can pick up market share.
4) Increase your patient education. Patients aren’t going to blindly come in “because you said so”. Educating patients on wellness, having a wellness report of findings, and a “can’t resist” wellness financial plan are keys to building your practice.
Following the 3-Goals principles, review the above four points. Implement them personally. Review them with your staff and see how they can implement them further. Review them again and refine them.
There has never been a better time to grow your practice.