5 ways to increase your EMR efficiency
1. Start on time. Consider the idea that if a provider can cut
just 30 seconds from each patient encounter, it enables that provider to see an
additional patient every day. Naturally, some patients require more time, but
they can be balanced with those who require less time. But all of this is for
naught if a provider starts late. In fact, not only should providers start on
time, but they should have two patients “front-loaded” to get the day off to a
running start. You should also give patients an arrival time ten minutes before
the first appointment, so they’re ready to go when the provider is.
2. Have cross-trained staff that
can handle intake and documentation. Cross-training staff so they are capable of
filling in for different providers at different times on a variety of tasks
leads to a smoother patient flow, less chaos, and fewer frustrations. Providers’
workflow preferences need to be communicated upfront and clarified often so
that stronger, more flexible relationships with their support staff will
develop. Providers need to be flexible, too, and be willing to work with
whichever staff member is available at any given time, rather than always
relying on one person.
It is also important to have more than one staff support
person available right from start of the day, in order to help providers stay
on time — especially when the schedule is full. One important task that staff
can assume is inputting some patient documentation. Handing off some of this
responsibility would enable providers to spend more time with patients and
still have documentation completed by close of business.
A simpler, more efficient workflow that aligns the right
tasks with the right stages on the intake process helps ensure more efficient
handoffs of tasks among administrative staff, clinical support staff, and
providers. And constant visibility into patient status, location, and stage of
visit — which ought to be available via your EMR — can also make it easier to
stay ahead of the game and hand off tasks more efficiently.
3. Document encounters in
real-time, but be cognizant of time and detail. Completing patient
documentation is an important component of running a successful practice.
There are important benefits to completing documentation by
close of business, but some providers are overly zealous about completing it in
real-time — something that an EMR makes much easier to do. However, complex
documentation may take more time to complete than is good for your patient
flow. You should consider putting off finishing documentation in real-time when
necessary, and hand off more of the documentation to staff, in order to reduce
patient wait times.
Knowing which data fields you need to fill in your EMR will
also increase efficiency. Just because there are a lot of fields doesn’t mean
you need to fill every one of them in. Don’t get bogged down by information
overload. You should also look for an EMR that automatically provides
pay-for-performance or quality rules so that as you document patient
encounters, you know you’re capturing the data that will ensure that additional
revenue.
4. Close all patient encounters at
the end of each business day. As I just discussed, providers
shouldn’t try to complete complex documentation that consumes a lot of time
while trying to see patients. They should, however, try to close all encounters
by the end of the business day. This requires completing as much documentation
as they can during the day without holding up the flow of patients, leaving
themselves just the wrap-up of complex documentation at day’s end. Not only
does closing encounters clear the decks for patients coming the following day,
but it also moves the encounter into the administrative phase, where it can be
billed. The sooner encounters are closed, the sooner billing can be done, and
the sooner the practice will get paid. It’s that simple. And, as mentioned
previously, the providers’ ability to close encounters on the same day is the
leading indicator of the overall efficiency of a practice’s patient workflow.
5. Route documents appropriately
and delegate effectively. Handling charts, faxes, lab work requests
and results, and so on is time-consuming in a busy office. Providers should
hand off to staff as much of the responsibility for handling routing documents
as possible. Providers will always need to review and handle certain types of
documents, of course, but staff should be able to handle administrative forms
and routine negative test results without the physician involvement.
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