Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHAA Examination Preparation
Advertisements

CFI TAGLaw: Tips, Tools and Tactics for Better Client Service Laura Meherg
Prevention & Disclosure of Medical Error Dr. Ramadan Ibrahim Director Health Regulation Department Dubai Health Authority.
Patient Experience Design Day Findings. Design Activity - Goals Identify what matters to patients – through Acts I, II & III Specifically Identify the.
Happy Hospitals Make Happy Patients Dr. R. S. Chahal.
+ HEALTH INSURANCE: UNDERSTANDING YOUR COVERAGE Navigator Name Blank County Extension UGA Health Navigators.
Respect and Information - Communicating using AIDET
Title Patient Patient Advisory CouncilAdvisory Council Patient Advisory Council.
Understanding the why of AIDET®
Relentless Rounding for Outcomes
Customer Service. Objective 6.32 Demonstrate respectful and empathetic treatment of ALL patients/clients. (customer service)
Telling Stories for Positive Engagement
PBHCI Project Sustainability Analyzing Clinical Workflows to Support Integrated Care and Seamlessly Maximize Revenue 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET 3/15/2012.
March 25, The Blundellsands Surgery Patient Reference Group Questionnaire Results Monday, March 25 th 2013.
Health literacy and patient safety: Help patients understand Removing barriers to better, safer care.
Customer Service Training
Culturally Competent Care from the Perspective of the Consumer: What Matters Most October, 2007.
MUSC Health Ambulatory Patient & Family Advisory Council May 28, 2014 Location: MUSC Health East Cooper.
DMC Customer Service DMC Customer Service Department
Common Sense Customer Service All the people we come into contact with during the day are our customers. Customers include students, parents, visitors,
AIDETSM The 5 Fundamental Behaviors of Communication: Acknowledge, Introduce, Duration, Explanation, & Thank 1.
CHAA Examination Preparation
Physicians as Fundraisers Jennifer Willis Nicely, CFRE Foundation President and Chief Development Officer Memorial Health Care System.
Module 3. Session DCST Clinical governance
WE BUILT IT…THEY CAME… BUT WILL THEY STAY? CUSTOMER SERVICE FOR AWE PROGRAMS Written by: Kit Tyler, Lorain County Career Center Presented and Revised by:
PATIENT SATISFACTION AND WHY IT MATTERS. Why It Matters  CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services), hospitals and insurance providers are using.
“We are a compassionate team of healthcare professionals providing excellent personal care to Central Minnesota.”
Who’s Partner? Stephanie Scheffler University of St. Thomas MBC - Final Project May 15, 2008.
0 Everything Matters - Service: Staff Behavior Expectations 1.Effectively communicate in all interactions with patients, internal customers, and colleagues.
Quality Through the Eyes of the Patient: State-of-the-Art Concepts Paul D. Cleary, Ph.D. April 10, 2001 Quality Through the Eyes of the Patient: State-of-the-Art.
SMARTworks ® EffectiveResponse Training: Clinical Staff – Responders National Park Medical Center November 20, 2014.
Commitment to Excellence
P ATIENT S ATISFACTION 2011 HHCAHPS SURVEY RESULTS.
Generating Synergy to Improve Customer Satisfaction.
Occupational Health. Occupational Medicine Recognized Specialty Since 1949 Combines Clinical Skills With Toxicology, Epidemiology, Safety, Rehabilitation,
1Cadence Education, Inc..  Dissatisfied customers tell an average of people about their bad experience. Once it’s posted on social media, that.
Building a Healthier Prince George’s County PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT HEALTH ENTERPRISE ZONE Pamela B. Creekmur Health Officer Dr. Ernest.
presented by Louis Feuer, MA, MSW AHIP Virtual Seminar
Sales and Customer Service Strategies to Separate You from the Competition presented by Louis Feuer, MA, MSW GAMES 2008 Annual.
Health Care Organization Customer Satisfaction Measures.
Inpatient Survey 2008 Joy Wilk AD Clinical Governance June 2009 Appendix 4.
Physicians and Health Information Exchange (HIE) The Value of HIE to a Physician’s Practice and Consumers.
1 UMHC Service Excellence Cascade Learning Packet Developed by: Patient Satisfaction Service Excellence Team June 2005 People Financial Quality Growth.
C O R P O R A T I O N September 13, 2013 MPS CPE Day.
Medical Advocacy and Advance Directives Session 3 Staying in the Circle of Life.
Journey to EXCEL-lence
Mount Auburn Practice Improvement Program (MA-PIP)
Presented by: Laurie Christensen & Emmalea von Felden Studer Group Increasing Pay for Performance.
Employee Satisfaction Survey Results 2015 v Employee Satisfaction Survey Results 2015 v Work Areas 2015 Response Count 2014 Response Count.
Unit #9: Chapter 15 Medical Marketing. Marketing Marketing is the process of developing and selling ideas, goods, and services that satisfy customers,
1. G.R.E.A.T. TM Consistent, Connected, System-wide Communication 2.
D. Randall Brandt, Ph.D. Vice President Customer Experience & Loyalty The Customer Experience Trust Factor Do You Know How Well Your Employees Are Delivering.
Teach-back Method for Patient Education Tracy Grant Viterbo University.
What Makes Your Organization Different?. How Do You See People?
1Cadence Education, Inc..  Dissatisfied customers tell an average of people about their bad experience. Once it’s posted on social media, that.
SHOPS is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. Abt Associates leads the project in collaboration with Banyan Global Jhpiego Marie Stopes.
G.R.E.A.T. TM Consistent, Connected, System-wide Communication 1.
AIDET The cornerstone to our success A cknowledge I ntroduce D uration E xplanation T hank You.
Why? To improve the patient experience To support our patient satisfaction scores To increase our ability to provide safe care.
Patient Experience of Care Surveys
Dental Patient Satisfaction Survey
Module 10: Customer Satisfaction
Is the customer always right?
Acknowledge Introduce Duration Explanation Thank You
Consistent, Connected, System-wide Communication
St. Mary’s General Hospital Orientation
Best Practice Strategies for Maximizing Clinic Efficiency: Part 1
2016 NCPES Inpatient and day case adult cancer patients, discharged from hospital 01/04/16 – 30/06/16 Sent postal questionnaires Oct’16 – March ’17 National.
Presentation transcript:

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Loyalty: Making a Difference Barbara Hotko, RN, MPA Studer Group Coach January 12, 2011 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Today’s Session Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient loyalty – why? Measure what matters most Tools for success www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Loyalty Pays: Treating patients with respect adds up to satisfaction & repeat visits Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) “Satisfied patients return for care, and the positive word of mouth from satisfied patients will bring new patients into the practice.” (Drain & Kaldenberg 1999, 32). A better patient rating of information quality and physician quality was “associated with patients reporting that they would definitely return” for care. (Lechtzin, Rubin, White, et al 2002, 1326). “The compassion with which care is provided appears to be the most important factor in influencing patient intentions to recommend/return, regardless of the setting in which care is provided.” Burroughs, Davies, Cira, Dunagan 1999 Source: Press-Ganey: Return on Investment: Patient Loyalty Pays, 12-07 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Loyalty Pays: Treating patients with respect adds up to satisfaction & repeat visits Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) “Treatment with respect, the rating of care received, and the helpfulness of the person at the front desk are the strongest predictors of patient satisfaction…patient satisfaction is highly correlated with intent to return and intent to recommend services.” Hill & Doddato (2002, 108) “Patient satisfaction will significantly influence the intent to return and intent to recommend services to others; thereby serving as a determinant for repeated clinic visits, new patient visits, and program marketing.” Hill & Doddato (2002, 108) Source: Press-Ganey: Return on Investment: Patient Loyalty Pays, 12-07 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Loyalty Pays: Satisfaction, Loyalty and Profitability are linked Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Loyalty has been an area of focus both within and outside of the health care industry for sometime. The links between customer satisfaction, loyalty, and profitability have been well established. (Reichheld 1996) High levels of satisfaction with a service relationship will override service failures, suppress shopping for another service provider, and maintain high compliance. (Forrester & Maute 2001) Source: Press-Ganey: Return on Investment: Patient Loyalty Pays, 12-07 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Health Managers Network: Building Patient Loyalty Are you measuring patient satisfaction? Yes No

Health Managers Network: Building Patient Loyalty Are you measuring patient turnover? Yes No

Health Managers Network: Building Patient Loyalty What is the #1 reason patients leave your practice? Insurance change Dissatisfaction with provider and/or staff Geographic location Disagreement with treatment of care Wait time (while in office) Appt. availability

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Loyalty Pays … Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) A “high level of satisfaction will lead to greatly increased customer loyalty … And increased customer loyalty is the single most important driver of long-term financial performance.” (Jones & Sasser 1995, 88) Source: Press-Ganey: Return on Investment: Patient Loyalty Pays, 12-07 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

The Cost of Dissatisfaction Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) The Cost of Dissatisfaction The other side of the satisfaction-loyalty link is the link between dissatisfaction and loss of revenue due to patients who switch providers or hospitals. Through the Healthcare Financial Management Association reports: • For every one customer who complains, 20 dissatisfied customers do not. • Of those dissatisfied customers who do not complain, 10% will return but 90% will not. • Changing a poor customer service image takes 10 years average. • It costs 10 times as much to attract new customers as it does to keep current ones. • About 10% of revenue is lost to poor customer service. • The average “wronged” customer will tell 25 others about the bad experience. Zimowski (2004) Source: Press-Ganey: Return on Investment: Patient Loyalty Pays, 12-07 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

The Cost of Dissatisfaction Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patients dissatisfied with physician care and practice are more likely to leave. (vom Eigen, Delbanco, Phillips, 1998) Conservative estimate: In a practice with 6,000 patients, if 5% are dissatisfied and leave with members of their household (assuming 3.5 members per household and 2.5 visits per year, this would be 8.75 visits per household per year), and the average visit averages $57 in payments, the cost of dissatisfaction is $149,625. Using the Consumer Price Index, this would equate to over $180,000 in 2006 dollars (http://www.measuringworth.com/uscompare/). Drain and Kaldenberg (1999) Source: Press-Ganey: Return on Investment: Patient Loyalty Pays, 12-07 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Loyalty Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) To earn patient loyalty, your staff will need to provide excellent care for every patient in every encounter. In order to do so, staff will need: Actionable Data Tools www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

AHMG surveys patients by clinic and by physician Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Sample survey questions: Staff make me feel like I am important and valued The doctor listened to me and showed respect of what I had to say Overall Experience Recommend to family and friends www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

“What patients want” in rank order Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Treats you with dignity and respect Listens carefully to your health concerns Easy to talk to Takes concerns seriously Willing to spend enough time with you Truly cares about you and your health Source: Harris Poll, 2004 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group 14 14

Studer Group Five Fundamentals Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Safety A Acknowledge Decrease Anxiety I Introduce Increase Compliance D Duration E Explanation Quality Patient Loyalty T Thank You www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Advantages of AIDETSM + = Decrease anxiety with increased compliance Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Decrease anxiety with increased compliance Improved clinical outcomes and increased patient and physician satisfaction Decreased Anxiety Increased Compliance + = www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group 16

Physician and staff AIDET training University Medical Center Outcome – AIDET Physician and staff AIDET training University Medical Center Physician Practices Tucson, AZ

FPA - Otolaryngology 3rd Qtr 08 4th Qtr 08 1st Qtr 09 2nd Qtr 09 Overall Results Otolaryngology Percentile Rank Mean (raw score) 13 Mean 83.5 n=30 33 Mean 88.9 n=31 35 Mean 89.2 n=82 69 Mean 91.9 n=49 Access to Care * 16 40 55 Visit * 34 17 42 Nurse/Assistant * 5 53 48 91 Care Provider * 49 80 Personal Issues * 9 10 30 59 Overall Assessment * 24 46 60 74 * Percentile ranking

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Acknowledge Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) A Acknowledge Key message: YOU are important Eye Contact Make the patient feel that you expected them www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group 19

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Introduce Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) I Introduce First Generation Next Generation Your role in the team of care givers Your experience, skill set, or credentials Coworkers, physicians, other departments, AHMG Name Title Specialty www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Manage Up! Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) A Short Bio www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Examples of Managing Up “Hi, I’m Georgette. I’ve been with Dr. Smith for over three years and he is excellent. Welcome to our practice.” “We have a great staff and we are going to take very good care of you.” “Dr. Jones takes the time to answer each patient’s questions.” “Good Morning, Mrs. Smith. My name is Ann. I am a medical assistant and I have been working in this practice for five year.” 22

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) The A and I of AIDET for Safety “Because greetings are one way to ensure proper identification of patients, they may well be considered a fundamental component of patient safety” www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Duration Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) D Duration Key Message: I anticipate your concerns How long will the registration process take? How long will the test, procedure, or appointment actually take? How long will it take to get the results? Goal: Keeping Patients Informed www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Keeping Patients Informed of Duration

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Explanation E Explanation Listen to the patient’s story: Active listening Clarifying questions Understanding patient’s perspective Explain the treatment plan: Using language that patients can understand Use “key words” Use “tell, ask, tell” approach Involve patient in decision making www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Explanation Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) E Explanation Why are we doing this? What will happen and what you should expect? What questions do you have? (about medications, instructions for follow up care) www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group 27

Reality of Explanation Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) During a 20 minute encounter Physicians self-report spending 9 minutes “providing information” REALITY: Physicians spent 1.5 minutes The key driver for patient satisfaction The quality and clarity of information that patients receive from physicians www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Patient Perspective Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) 72% of patients unable to list medications they take 58% of patients unable to recite their own diagnosis Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2005 www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Thank You Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) T Thank You Key message: I appreciate the opportunity to care for you Closing Key Words Thank you for choosing us Thank you for your patience today Thank you for coming in today, I know we can help www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) AIDETSM Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Loyal Patients Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Loyal Patients will … Return Advocate for you in the community Talk www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Creating Patient Loyalty – THE WHY Meeting Title Here (on Notes Master) Improves patient compliance Improves clinical outcomes Improves patient satisfaction Increases growth and market share Reduces malpractice risk Improves physician satisfaction Improves clinical efficiency www.studergroup.com © 2007 Studer Group

Practicing Excellence A guide to implementing specific behaviors that will create a high performance workplace Written by a physician Available online at www.studergroup.com

Partner Relations Coordinator Thank You! Barbara Hotko bhotko@studergroup.com Partner Relations Coordinator Lauren Holstman 850-343-1057 www.studergroup.com