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Using eRehabData Referral Tracking to Market Your Program Lisa Bazemore, MBA, MS, CCC-SLP Director of Consulting Services. Objectives. Today we will talk about the following topics: Review of census development strategies Analyzing your facility's patient selection criteria
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Using eRehabData Referral Tracking to Market Your ProgramLisa Bazemore, MBA, MS, CCC-SLPDirector of Consulting Services
Objectives • Today we will talk about the following topics: • Review of census development strategies • Analyzing your facility's patient selection criteria • How to expand the population that you serve • Conducting a review of patients who were denied admission
Philosophy • Goals for Census Development • Serve the patients from the host hospital, in the communities, and surrounding areas where we live. • Extend the reach of case management • Follow through for patients with post acute needs from time of admission • Reduce the burden on the referral source
Census Development • Principles of census development • Know your hospital case mix • Know your market • Know your 60% rule compliance percentage • Know who is referring, when, and how much
Internal Case Finding • Daily Activities • Address all referrals • Complete floor rounds • Face to face meetings with physicians • Surgical list, Pre-admission testing • Review new admissions to the hospital in previous 24 hours • Analyze Out-migration • ED, Transfers • Plan for weekend coverage
Managing Internal Referrals • Set goals • Admissions and referrals • Census, LOS • Know • 60% rule compliance • Hospital med-surg census • Referrals • Acceptance • Pending • Denied and the reasons why
Managing Internal Referrals • Do not rely on referrals only • Be proactive in approaching referral sources • Be an extension of case management • Educate with each acceptance / denial • Share outcomes with physicians and referral sources • Reduce the following denials: • Managed care • Inappropriate denials from the Medical Director
Managing Internal Referrals • Trending Information: • Referral source • Referring physician • Zip code where patient resides • Payor source • Basic patient profile (anticipated CMG) • Accepted or denied with reason for denial
Other Views • Referrals Outcomes: • Designed to trend referral sources, referring physicians, and conversion rates. • Offers information on reasons for denied admission. • You can filter the information to drill down on physician, referral source, internal vs. external fill, and reason for denied admission.
Other Views • Referrals Outcomes: • Use information to determine referral trends by- • Referral source • Referring physician • Internal versus external fill • Zip code breakdown • Payor source breakdown • Conversion rates • Reasons for denial • Drill down by RIC, CMG, and Patient • Patient reports list patients denied
Tools for External Census Development • What tools do you need to accomplish this? • A map of your geographic primary and secondary coverage area • A list of all acute med-surg hospitals, skilled nursing facilities and acute rehab facilities in your area – KNOW their bed capacity, actual occupancy rate and trauma levels • Knowledge of affiliations, partnerships, alliances and services offered • MedPar data or hospital association data • Hospital’s ER log to determine facility outmigration
Managing External Referrals • Trending Information: • Referral source • Referring physician • Zip code where patient resides • Payor source • Basic patient profile (anticipated CMG) • Accepted or denied with reason for denial
Analyze your market data • Map It • Create a visual of your market – use a map to note all hospitals, SNFs and acute rehab facilities in your geographic coverage areas • Complete a SWOT – Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats of each of you competitors
Develop a Customer Hit List • Create a Customer Hit list for each organization that you plan to market – Hospitals, SNFs, Physician clinics, Payors, Home Health Agencies… • Target all individuals who can influence and/or decide the next level of care for the patient
Ranking • Rank your referral sources based on the volume that they send • “A”- highest volume referral sources • Visit these on a regular basis • “B” - potential growth customers • Increase the time dedicated to these referral sources • “C” - low volume referral sources or potential where contact is necessary but excessive time spent here would be wasted • Fill in your free time with these referral sources
Preparing for a Marketing Call • Establish your goals for the call • Find out what you can up front • What do you want to know/ask? • Anticipate Their questions • Anticipate Objections • Practice!
Physician Calls Information to give and receive • Where are they on staff? • What is the conversion ratio for their patients • What have the outcomes been for their patients • Share Progress Notes as applicable • Find out how your program can meet the physician’s needs • Conduct a needs assessment for specialty programming
Discharge Planner Calls Information to give and receive • What is the conversion ratio for their patients • What have the outcomes been for their patients • Your Location - what areas your patients come from • Community discharge rate • Utilization of Post Acute Continuum
Managed Care Plan Calls • Information to give and receive • Your conversion percentage • Your location • Average length of stay & outcomes • Specialty Programs • Continuum of Services • Admit 24/7 – Weekend/Holiday Therapy • Percentage transferred to SNF, Acute, Home
Conducting a Non-Admission Review • Non-admission review: The review of all patients that have not been admitted to rehab unit. This is done by reviewing the pre-admission forms and reviewing the section that notes the reason for not admitting to the rehab unit to help identify trends and changes that occur over a quarter. • Common Reasons • Too impaired • Too functional • No bed available • Physician did not agree • Patient or family refused • Insurance did not authorize • Not 60% rule compliant
Conducting a Non-Admission Review What can we do about the too impaired category? • Determine if the admission denial was based on objective criteria • Identify if the denial was based on staff’s lack of competency • Clarify with Medical Director his/her comfort level with the staff managing a patient with that diagnosis or at that level of acuity
Conducting a Non-Admission Review Action Plan Suggestions: • Identify staff educational needs for diagnoses that are being denied • Ask Medical Director to provide in-services if appropriate • Provide educational in-services that enhance staff’s skill set to care for more complex patients • Consider adding these skills to staff’s competency list
Conducting a Non-Admission Review Denial because “Too Functional” • Review the referral date against the actual date of the screen • Would reducing the number of onset days have resulted in a decision to admit? • Determine what the patient’s deficits really were and if they could have benefited from a stay in an IRF.
Conducting a Non-Admission Review Action Plan Suggestions: • Consider offering an in-service to case managers regarding the referral time frames • Review the discharge disposition and consider if those that are discharged to skilled might have been appropriate for ARU • Shorten up the time frame between referral and actual screen if not done the same day
Making Admission Decisions • How should the process work? • The admissions coordinator or liaison screens the patient • The AC makes a determination about whether or not the patient meets the conditions of participation • If yes, the AC reviews the case with the program director • If no, the patient is denied and the reason for denial is tracked for later review under the performance improvement plan
Making Admission Decisions • How should the process work? • The program director determines if the patient meets the criteria for 60% rule compliance and whether they are eligible for admission given their current compliance threshold • If yes, the case is taken to the medical director to make a final admission decision • If no, the case is tracked as a denial for later review
Making Admission Decisions • Making a good decision demands good information, so what does the medical director need to know in order to make good decisions: • Why does the patient need a stay on rehab? • What do you think will be involved in the caring for that patient? • Are their 60% rule compliant conditions? Tiering comorbidities?
Making Admission Decisions • Making a good decision demands good information, so what does the medical director need to know in order to make good decisions: • Will the patient be able to participate in 3-hours of therapy? • What evidence supports the medical necessity of this admission? • Is the patient ready for transfer?
Making Admission Decisions • What are your barriers to admission? • Does your medical director advocate for patients to have an opportunity at rehab? • Do you advocate for patients to have an opportunity at rehab? • Rehab patients no longer fit the typical mold. Who do you take? Who do you deny? • Being able to calculate the risk is necessary. What is a smart risk?
Making Admission Decisions • What are your barriers to admission? • What can your staff handle? How do you know? • What are you doing to remove the barriers? • What is the alternative placement? • Is that a good option for you patient?
Making Admission Decisions • So how do you sell it to the Medical Director and the team? • Present the case as if rehab is the only place for the patient. • Discuss the medical needs and how you plan to meet them. • Talk about your experience with patients with that diagnosis. • Talk about your facility averages and why you think this patient is worth the risk. (Transfer payments, ALOS, admission Functional Independence Measure scores, and 60% rule compliance) • Discuss what the outcome would likely be if the patient was seen in another level of care.
Questions? Lisa Bazemore Lbazemore@erehabdata.com