Going mobile--from square one: a bankrupted provider
in New York gets reorganized and back on track with mobile
charge-capture technology.
In 2005, after years of mounting debts and falling revenues, St.
Vincent's Medical Centers--the largest Catholic hospital system in
New York State--did the unthinkable: It filed for bankruptcy protection.
Facing a financial crisis, St. Vincent's knew that it would need
new ways to get its financial house in order. More than ever before,
cost control and efficiency would become mission-critical priorities for
the multifacility organization.
The greater New York metropolitan area-based Saint Vincent's
Catholic Medical Centers consists of two hospitals and several
outpatient facilities and employs more than 1000 affiliated physicians,
including 70 fulltime and 300 voluntary attending physicians. The
healthcare organization is anchored by St. Vincent's Hospital,
Manhattan, a 758-bed tertiary care teaching hospital, Level 1 Trauma
Center and Critical Care Center.
A new management regime was in place and they understood that
information technology could have a dramatically favorable impact on
their day-to-day business operations. "We knew that the future
viability of our organization depended on our ability to rethink
everything from how we deliver care to how we charge for it,"
former director of medical informatics at St. Vincent's, Ken Ong,
M.D., M.P.H., says. "It really was a case of survival."
Renaissance of a System
After filing for bankruptcy in 2006, St. Vincent's Catholic
Medical Centers quickly reorganized and emerged six months later. From a
business perspective, the top priority for the organization was to
improve the accuracy and completeness of the physician charges it
recorded. For too long, physicians at St. Vincent's endured a
flawed process for capturing physician charges for patient encounters
that were recorded on paper and note cards. "Our physicians were
writing down their visits on scraps of paper and tucking them into their
pocket," Ong says. "They might not enter the correct codes for
the procedure, or forget what transpired. Or they simply might lose the
paper in the laundry. That's no way for a 21st century healthcare
organization to run its revenue capture," he says.
Those practices were creating lengthy payment delays and outright
lost charges resulting from either misplaced paper slips or claims that
were rejected because of tardiness." It made no sense to us that
our charge capture was an entirely manual process," Ong says, and
he adds that the reorganizing healthcare provider also had to address a
paper-based system for lab test results and access to other important
patient information, as well. "We were committed to improving the
workflow for our clinicians and applying IT to accelerate those
processes," Ong says. The clinical workflow for access to this
vital information was another focus area for St. Vincent's, and
automating this system would also help to increase efficiency and
control costs. "This would make life easier for our professional
staff--but more importantly, it would positively affect patient
care," Ong says.
New Automation Brings Dramatic Improvements
Laying the foundation for these initiatives, St. Vincent's
deployed a pilot implementation of new mobile technology from Newton,
Mass.-based PatientKeeper Inc. to help its doctors quickly and easily
record charges for inpatient services. That same mobile platform--which
leverages ubiquitous standard PDAs and Smartphones for clients--also
provides a multipurpose point of access to clinical information and
workflows, including not only lab results, but also medication lists,
allergies, patient lists and demographics, and still others.
According to Richard Roistacher, M.D., medical director at St.
Vincent's, the mobile solution has had a major impact on the
clinical staff at the hospital and is a tremendous improvement to have
access to demographics and labs anywhere, at anytime. Instead of waiting
hours or days to get lab results on paper, clinicians can simply tap a
couple of keys on the PDAs or Smartphones and have access to that
information instantaneously. The technology also makes it easier to stay
informed about his patients, Roistacher adds, and generates significant
productivity savings through enhanced capabilities to capture charges.
To him, it's clear that mobile technology is playing a key role in
improving the financial viability of the hospital for, at the very
least, the near-term future.
Roistacher emphasized that St.. Vincent's has achieved
significant enhancements to the levels of efficiency, quality of care,
access to patient medical histories, lab tests and results, as well as
improved access to insurance and other relevant information. This level
of functionality significantly improves the quality of care at St.
Vincent's by enhancing their ability to accelerate proper
treatments. "We now have several hundred physicians using this
system and that has sent a very strong cultural signal throughout our
institution that we are committed to re-establishing our hospital as a
first-class healthcare destination, for both patients and
clinicians," says Roistacher.
According to Ong, one of the key reasons they selected the
PatientKeeper solution was because the vendor had excellent references
that were very satisfied with the results they saw from PatientKeeper
products. "In healthcare," Ong says, "that means a lot
because this technology can affect the quality of patient care."
Using the integrated PDAs and Smartphones, hundreds of St.
Vincent's physicians now have real-time access to essential patient
clinical information, including chemistries, hematology, microbiology,
radiology and other laboratory results.
After finishing the implementation, Ong says the new automated
system provided the capability to pull lab data from their SoftLab
application and display it on the wireless PDAs or Smartphones. "We
pull our medication lists from Cerner PharmNet and interface with
Siemens' Radiology Management System to display radiology
reports," Ong says. "In the future, I expect St.
Vincent's will pull PACS images from the Philips system, but
currently that remains only one of a number of possible directions that
may be pursued."
Capturing the Charges Efficiently
St. Vincent's has begun to rely on the PatientKeeper platform
to drive a much more efficient charge-capture process. The rollout was
the first step to completely transforming its charge-capture operations,
and taking the facility from a paper-based process to an automated one
that it expects to dramatically improve both cash flow and top-line
revenue.
The two-dozen physicians who currently use the charge-capture
application now capture nearly 100 percent of their charges and get them
into billing systems immediately. As a result of this technology and
other process improvements, St. Vincent's physicians have increased
collections by a substantial amount within the first three months of
use. "With managed care, timing is everything," Ong says.
"If you're late with charges, the hospital doesn't get
paid. Before, it wouldn't be unusual for our doctors to submit
charges that were a month old. With this new system, not only are we
capturing all of the charges, we're submitting them within five
days, which is accelerating our cash flow. That's changing the
culture at St. Vincent's and setting a new standard and
expectation, and for a hospital coming out of bankruptcy, that's a
very positive change."
For more information on PatientKeeper Inc. solutions,
www.rsleads.com/708-202
Source
Richard Roistacher
Medical Director
St. Vincent's Catholic Medical Centers
New York, NY
Ken Ong, M.D., M.P.H
St. Vincent's Catholic Medical Centers
New York, NY
Product/Company
PatientKeeper
PatientKeeper Inc.,
Newton, Mass.
www.patientkeeper.com
COPYRIGHT 2007 Nelson
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