Updated: December 6, 2021
There are many mechanisms healthcare organizations can use to accelerate their financial recovery efforts post-COVID-19.
When examining these mechanisms, financial leaders' questions often boil down to two essential concerns: How effective is it? And how long will it take for us to see results?
The revenue cycle lands at the top of the heap when it comes to quick but highly effective ways to accelerate revenue. It also plays a critical role in improving the patient experience and health of populations while reducing the cost of care.
By improving revenue cycle efficiencies, healthcare financial leaders can gain a vital "quick win" in their financial recovery timeline.
I recently taught a 2-day HFMA seminar on Revenue Cycle Essentials and KPIs (key performance indicators). Here, I’ll summarize the challenges revenue cycle leaders are experiencing today, as well as key factors for success.
Whatever specific challenges an organization may face, success requires continuous monitoring and measurement.
Medical groups should have a clear strategy and objectives, especially in the ever-changing, competitive healthcare space. Financial goals based on payer contracts and anticipated utilization and performance should be shared with revenue cycle leaders. These realistic financial goals can then be translated into measurable KPIs that define practice priorities, drive practice improvement activities and evaluate success.
Once the KPIs are established, they can be compared to historical performance and industry benchmarks. This allows the organization to measure and track against a standard measure and/or peers in the industry while helping quickly identify issues and proactively address them. It also provides insight into what others in the industry are doing.
Traditional KPIs are still relevant, but a new generation of KPIs must also be tracked, as indicated in the graphic below. In a fee-for-service environment, KPIs on revenue cycle, operations, cost/profitability, and production were typically monitored. In a value-based world, KPIs around cost, quality, patient access and experience are also important to track. It is key for organizations to understand the reimbursement mechanics of a payer contract and incorporate those KPIs into their dashboard.
When revenue cycle (RC) leaders identify the KPIs to measure, a dashboard report can be created. Leaders must know their audience, as different stakeholder groups care about different KPIs.
Organizations and staff must understand the KPIs, determine which ones are most important to them, and then understand how to improve or “move the needle” in a positive direction.
KPIs act as an alert system to provide insight that something is wrong. It is critical to shift the focus to improvement activities. Some key strategies to support improvement activities include:
It takes KPIs to monitor the performance of the revenue cycle, but it takes a village to keep the revenue cycle healthy. Rising healthcare costs necessitate a concerted effort by all provider organizations to determine how best to improve margins and patient care, and to put the right KPIs and analysis in place so they know that they are succeeding.