What is that Smell
Here is a subject that is not really discussed and that is smells that you have to deal with at work. Being in a medical office setting we have to deal with a variety of things and keep our composure. Most of us have to deal with sick patients and they may have their own kinds of smells depending on the sickness. And we have to be careful of what perfume, powders and lotions we use because what we wear can affect our patients and our co-workers. Sick patients have compromised immune systems and perfumes, lotions and powders will make them feel worse and unable to breath sometimes. In an enclosed office your co-workers can be affected as well. The best practice is to not wear anything at all. Always go to work with just the smell of your soap.
There are a variety of different articles on the web discussing this very subject. Most are studies about how perfume adversely affect asthma patients but most of them discuss the chemicals in perfumes and lotions that people are not aware of that can affect their health as well as their patients.
http://www.livestrong.com/article/228365-perfume-health-risks/
And here is a video from a doctor about his office policy of his patients and staff not wearing perfumes and why:
What Online Tools Do You Use
What Online Tools Do You Use for your patient registrations? Utilizing whatever tools you can to ensure that you get accurate and timely information on ALL of your registrations is important for you keeping your job as well as making sure that your company stays in business. With the advent of the Red Flag Laws we are required to ensure that our patients are who they say they are. There is also the the ever increasing problem of patients seeking medical care just to get prescriptions for drugs who will tell you wrong information. This is especially true in Emergency Rooms across the country and with the EMTALA ruling we are required to treat patients regardless of their ability to pay. I am not advocating turning patients away or making them wait a long time for service but you should treat each registration of the patient as a new patient and confirm everything when they come in as well as ask for positive ID and their insurance cards. You cannot get a 100% accuracy rate but you can come close.
To that end we use a variety of online tools to ensure that the information we get from patients is current and accurate. To verify a drivers license you can try online verifications offered through your state’s DMV. To verify addresses you should try the postal service www.usps.com by putting in the address but not the zip code. They will tell you if the address is valid and deliverable. You should also try a reverse directory website for checking phone numbers and addresses. One of these that does not charge is www.whitepages.com. And you can use your county’s property appraiser’s website to verify an address and the owner.
Lastly, you should considered purchasing and using on online insurance verifications website such as Passport and Emdeon. Passport has the ability to verify social security numbers and have a wide variety of payers as well. They also have a payer address and claims information database that is fairly decent. WebMD or Emdeon is a very nice service as well. Now these are pay-for-use services and you will have to negotiate your own rates with them. You can also take advantage of the free services offered by each of the major insurance carriers. Availity is offered by our Medicare intermediary for free to Medicare and Blue Cross providers. Of Course, Tricare has an online eligibility verification system that is free to providers. United Healthcare offers their providers with online verification as well as the ability to view their insurance cards should a patient forget to bring one with them.
These are just some of the many tools available for Patient Access Reps or Insurance Clerks (whatever term your employers uses for Registrars) that can be used to help you do your jobs effectively and efficiently. It will also help your billing and collections department do their job in a timely manner. The name of the game is to ensure accuracy of information, entering information into your computer system correctly and make sure that the claims go to the right insurance as quickly as possible to get the money back.
Telemedicine
Do you know what telemedicine is? It sounds like patients are receiving medical care through their televisions. That is not too far off. There is a growing trend of medical professionals consulting on patient care through the use of video conferencing. We have seen a stand alone device much like a robot with a high resolution video camera that can transmit real-time images of patients to doctors from anywhere in the world. Now you are wondering what this has to do with any registrar or patient access person? Well, the answer to that is really simple, no matter what fantastic technology medical researchers come up the patient still needs to be charged for that service and as a Registration person we have to make sure that the patient’s demographic and insurance information is gotten from the referring facility and keyed into our billing system.
Generally, the patient is not seen or available prior to this type of service but we are still tasked with ensuring the information received from the referring facility or doctor is accurate. Every facility has their own version of a “Facesheet” with patient information and their own policies about transmitting patient information via fax or email. So, before your medical personnel agree to this service we would hope that there is an agreement as to the minimum amount of information that must be available to satisfy your own billing requirements. We would assume that includes the patient’s name, address, telephone number, date of birth, social security number, sex, race, religious preference, employer, next of kin contact info as well as complete billing information. A copy of the patient’s identification and front-and-back copies of the insurance cards would be a plus. Each of these data points should be gotten just in case that patient ends of being transferred to your own facility. Remember you will need to verify as much of this information as you can using your online tools.
Patient Access Technology
We are required to use and learn about a variety of different technologies everyday in our job. Our industry is forever changing and we are required to keep up with it. From copiers that can not only copy insurance cards but can also fax them or upload them to your computer to touch I-Pads for bedside registrations. We are also required to learn all the software that controls those machines as well. With the enactment of HITECH – Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act that is requiring medical providers to adopt health information technology and to ensure that all electronic medical information is protected and the privacy of the patient is maintained. Our industry depends on electronic transmission of claims, online verification of insurance and precertification of services and we are being tasked with identity theft protection as well (Red-Flag Rules).
One of the solutions that is coming of age is the medical smart card. The Smart Card Alliance has a website with an abundance of helpful information that explains what they are and how they work. These are general credit cards with special chips that hold information on patients and can include demographic, insurance and patient medical records. Some have pictures on the card or within the demographic info section. They can be plastic cards, fobs, subscriber identity modules (SIMs) used in GSM mobile phones, or USB-based tokens (kind of like a flash drive you put into a USB port). The Alliance even offers certification classes for those who wish to take them. Check out their website to read more at: http://www.smartcardalliance.org We have even read about a Patient Access Kiosk that will allow the patients to check themselves in for services, pay copays and updated their own demographic and insurance information! (Watch Out We May Become Obsolete)