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"The goal for our staff is to reach at least a 90% monthly accuracy rating for preadmits, activations, and discharges," says Bailey Holloway, admitting evening coordinator at Maine Medical Center in Portland.
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Patient access jobs are challenging to fill for a variety of reasons. One is the need to recruit employees that are quick learners and flexible.
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Some patient access leaders are realizing that exemplary staff members can be a major resource for training and education. This could be because staff are more comfortable learning from their colleagues, or because the department is being charged to do "more with less" and more formal training resources are cut. Either way, it can be a successful strategy.
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Next time you get a complaint, don't let it ruin your day. Instead, find a way to make a customer's dissatisfaction work to your advantage.
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To reduce administrative claims denials, Virtua Healthcare System in Marlton, NJ, did two Six Sigma projects. "Our major mission for the first project was to identify root causes that resulted in administrative denials at all campuses and all registration types," says Diane E. Mastalski, CHAA, CHAM, director of patient access.
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Reasons for claims denials often can be traced back to factors beyond patient access, such lack of medical necessity, lack of clinical documentation, or a physician not participating with a plan. This is why "patient access cannot work as a silo in reviewing claim denials," says Carol Triggs, MS, director of patient access at St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center in Syracuse, NY.
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Does a system claim to be the "be all, do all" for your patient access department's issues, such as an eligibility system verifying benefits for all payers? If so, be skeptical.
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Increases in cardiac volume in the non-pregnant state increase BNP, but little is known about pregnancy and BNP levels.
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Implantable cardiac rhythm devices are being used in an increasing number of patients and, in addition, patients who receive them are living longer.
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Dual anti-platelet therapy with aspirin and a thienopyridine, such as clopidogrel, is recommended after ST elevation myocardial infarction (MI).