Improving Patient Follow Through: The new patient log and checklist

Working with different offices, we are always reminded of the fundamentals that apply universally. For example…

Once your patient has committed to getting better, it is your job, and everyone else on the team, to help them achieve their goals.

But in the busyness of everyday office interactions, essential steps along the way can become abbreviated or dropped out altogether.

At one office I recently visited, the patient visits and income were diving downward on a monthly trend. And this was occurring even though the new patient volume had been pretty steady.

When I inquired with the front desk staff, they told me that patients were sick, had money problems, were busy, and blah blah blah.

I asked if this was a new phenomenon. Did patients suddenly become poor, was there a new pandemic? What?

Didn’t get any real answers, as they were busy on the phones doing recalls trying to get people back in the office. The doctor wasn’t sure what was happening. To his credit, he loves adjusting and focuses on providing outstanding care – which he does, usually at a high volume.

Long story short, after investigating, I discovered that the doctor had changed up his treatment procedure slightly, and staff positions had changed. As a result, new patient financial consultations had dropped out. The patients had been getting excellent care but had no idea about their payments and were only scheduled for one visit at a time.

This was a pretty big change! A critical procedure just silently disappeared without anyone really noticing. (Sometimes it is hard to see the forest for the trees. Plug: Consulting doesn’t cost. It pays!)

Everyone at the office is a veteran, hard-working, and goal driven. A great team. But this missing procedure was costing them thousands and preventing patients from getting the full benefit of care.

We implemented several solutions that have worked for other offices.

One solution was the New Patient Log and Checklist. I gave them a sample to customize. It is a lined sheet on a clipboard. Each new patient is listed vertically on the left column, followed by other columns stipulating key actions that should occur on each patient. The Log would include such things as:

  • Report of findings and Tx Program.
  • Multiple appt. card.
  • Financial Consult.(When, by whom.)
  • First adjustment call.
  • Attend NP workshop.
  • Source.
  • If referred by patient, what is pt.’s name?
  • Thank you card to referring patient?
  • Type [ WC, PI, C, etc.]

You could add more columns, but the most vital aspect of this Log is this: it must be assigned to someone. You and the team can review the NP Log during your morning meetings or at weekly team meetings.

One of the lessons here is to always look for what you and your team are doing or not doing before you look to the environment for why your practice may be slipping – or booming!

And help your patients achieve their health goals by ensuring that they complete all the steps necessary along their health journey to achieve their goals.

Stay Goal Driven for a happier future!

Ed

Case Management for Better Service and Retention

Start Each Day with Service First

Do you want a fast, simple and very effective procedure that

  • Improves patient retention
  • Improves patient referrals
  • Improves patient service
  • Improves team coordination and morale.

Beginning Each Day With Service Goals for Each Patient

Too often, we start our days by first looking at the appointment book when the patients are already waiting for us. The staff may not know what special needs each patient has, or they may have been told something by a patient that should be passed on to the treating chiropractor.

A brief review of each patient can help coordinate patient services with the entire team.

Case Management Meeting Procedure

Meet with your team about 20 minutes before you see the first patient each morning. Review the patients individually that are coming in that day. You may not need to go over every patient, especially if you have a full book.

Discuss each patient and what the goal of their next visit should be. Do they need therapy or rehab procedures? What kind? Is it time for their progress exam? Did they voice a concern to a team member that you need to know about? Do they need another financial consultation or educational materials? Should they bring in their spouse?

You can also discuss new patients – what do we know about them? Are they a friend of Rihanna or Marge Simpson? Do they live in the high-rent part of town or in a trailer down by the river? Are we all looking forward to meeting them?

More Than Case Management – Keeping It Fun.

Aside from case management, the morning meeting helps get the day started. Everyone can see how each other is doing, say Hi, and be on deck all set for the day.

I have seen chiropractic offices do short exercises (practice what you preach!), such as a plank or wall sit exercise.

I have seen jokes told. For example, everyone is assigned a spot on the Bad Dad Joke Rotation. One joke per day. The most joke for the week (the best one) gets free lemon and beet juice!

You can set reasonable goals for the day – new patients, visits, case completions, etc.

You can add a motivational quotation or review the mission or a core value.

I have personally seen this applied in many offices. Often, the primary chiropractor would get to the morning meeting first, and anyone who came in late was duly noted!! One office did this procedure in the morning and then again before the afternoon crowd came in after lunch.

Assign this as a procedure to your manager, case manager, or front desk coordinator. But make sure you support it 100%.

I have seen case management meetings work for a few months and then, like many procedures, fall by the wayside.

It only works if it is done.

In the end, everything we do is to help each patient reach their goal of better health, and this is the ultimate goal of case management meetings.

Over to you!

Carpe Posturum! (Sieze the Future)

Ed

Case Management in a Chiropractic Office

Chiropractic Case Manager Job Description Summary

In many chiropractic offices the majority of the attention on patient care is on the first 5 to 12 visits. In some offices, it is only on the first 5 visits, or less. It can get so bad that the primary concern is only on getting more and more new patient first visits.

An old maxim in dental consulting is that the biggest cost to the dentist is the incomplete dental program. A patient who discontinues care after the first $1,000 of a total program of $10,000 just cost the dental office $9,000. This also applies to the chiropractic office.

Actually, many chiropractors are producing incomplete cases. This is not in the best interest of the patient’s health or in the viability of the office. Imagine a hygienist that only cleaned the upper teeth, or a baker that only baked his bread half way through. Yet, many offices are only getting their patients partially through their treatment programs.

The job of your clinic is to get your patients to complete their entire treatment program and on to a Wellness Program. During the course of a patient’s care, the doctor and staff may concentrate only on their specific duties with the patient, such as scheduling, treating (adjusting), collection, etc.  Usually no one has the job of overseeing the patient’s progress along the entire treatment pathway, through all the adjustments, scheduling, therapy, education, payments, until they finally “graduate” and go on to a Wellness Program.

Yet a full Wellness Program takes some of the pressure off of the need for a constant stream of new patients and makes for a smooth running office.

To help ensure that patients get complete and comprehensive care, the position of Case Manager should be held by someone in the office.

Who should be the case manager: It can be fulfilled by the doctor, or the therapy or back office assistant, or the front desk or even the billing and collections staff member.

Time spent as a case manager: It should take no more than one hour per week.

Mission: The mission of the Case Manager is to ensure that all patients move through the various departments of a health care clinic smoothly and quickly, ensuring that they get excellent service such that they complete their treatment program as quickly as possible.

Duties and Responsibilities

1.  Coordination. Once a week, or daily before treating hours, the case manager should get the doctor and essential staff together for a Case Management Meeting. A great time to do this is 20 minutes before the first patient for the day, or weekly for one hour. During this time, the appointment book or a list of active patients should be reviewed.

    This is the most important tool the case manager (or case coordinator) has. During these meetings, the following points, among others, can be reviewed on each active patient:

    • Patient’s Progress
    • Patient’s Satisfaction
    • Re-exam (last/next)
    • Re-x-ray, or other diagnostics
    • Re-x-ray, or other diagnostics
    • Re-reports (progress report of findings)
    • Supplements
    • Exercises, nutritional or other recommendations
    • Financial conclusion (Initial, subsequent, and transitional to Wellness.)
    • Education programs, such as spinal care class, special lectures, pamphlets, etc.
    • Awards, compliments, thank you for referrals, good attendance, etc.
    • Family and friends referrals
    • Transition or adherence to a Wellness Program.

    2.  Outcome and Statistics. Keep a statistic of “Completed Treatment Programs”. Once a patient reaches a maximum level of improvement they are ready to go on to Wellness Care. One way to keep this statistic is to track the number of patients beginning a wellness care program.

      3.    Patient Progress Card. Make up a general treatment plan for every patient in the form of a simple checklist. This would include all service procedures, therapy, diagnostic, as well as educational actions. The last steps would include transitional consultations onto a wellness care program. This could be called a Patient Progress Card, and placed in the patient’s folder.

      4.    Day 1 & 2 Procedures. Ensure that day one and day two procedures are well documented and kept up to date with current procedures, and a simple flow chart outlined.

      5.    Regular Visit Procedures. Ensure that regular patient procedures are documented, and a simple flow chart outlined.

      6.    Staff Training. Staff walk-throughs for day one and day two procedures, and other flow procedures rehearsed at least on a quarterly basis. The best offices practice monthly.

      7.    Financial Consultations. Financial consultations done on all patients as often as is needed.

      8.    New Patient Orientation. New Patient Orientation done on each patient.

      9.    Patient Satisfaction. Ensured patients are very happy with service.

      10.    Pathways. Pathways for different types of cases documented and reviewed by all.

      11.    Flow Charts. Flow charts for first three day procedures outlined and rehearsed.

      12.    Conversion. All patients completing services are converted to wellness or other programs.

      Outcomes. The major outcome of the position of Case Manager is “Completed Treatment Programs.” That is, patients who have completed any acute or chronic treatment programs prescribed by the doctor and have reached maximum improvement. This definition could be extended to include: a patient who has completed their active care program and is educated so that they will continue onto a wellness program.”

      Performance Monitors

      • Number of Completed Treatment Programs
      • Number of Patients Beginning Wellness Care Programs
      • Number of Wellness Program Visits

      It is easy to drop out important but not urgent actions with patients during their care. Ultimately, this leads to poor quality and a deterioration of results. With a Patient Progress Card, and the Case Manager System in place, quality and patient results will improve, and your volume will increase. Often it is not what we see that hurts us, but what we don’t see. It is the gradual omissions that eventually add up to an empty office. Ensure each patient completes all of the steps of their treatment programs.

      For better patient retention, increased referrals, improved treatment compliance, and more revenue, implement the Case Management System!