As maintaining a private practice grows more challenging, identifying hidden costs is essential to protecting physician practices’ bottom lines.
Medical Economics reported on 10 hidden costs hurting physician practices’ finances in an April 28 article:
1. Outdated EHR and technology: Clunky EHR systems reduce productivity, frustrate staff and patients and lengthen visit times. Reassess technology return on investment every two to three years to stay efficient.
2. Billing and coding errors: Inaccurate coding can lead to denials, delays and lost revenue. Regular audits and ongoing training help minimize costly mistakes.
3. Underutilized staff time: Physicians handling nonclinical tasks waste labor and prolong patient wait times. Delegate administrative work and automate routine processes to boost efficiency.
4. No-show appointments: Unfilled slots drain capacity and revenue. Use automated reminders, pre-visit check-ins and waitlists to reduce no-shows.
5. Poor contract negotiation: Accepting payer contracts without review can reduce reimbursement and expose practices to retroactive recoupments. Review and negotiate contracts annually.
6. Excess inventory and supply waste: Overstocked or expired supplies tie up cash and increase compliance risk. Track usage patterns to reduce waste.
7. Inefficient scheduling: Uneven schedules and overbooking lead to lost productivity and staff overtime. Use analytics and smart scheduling tools to optimize appointment flow.
8. Hidden turnover costs: Burnout and disengagement drive turnover, increasing recruitment and onboarding costs. Invest in retention to preserve team stability and knowledge.
9. Uncollected patient balances: Patient payment defaults are rising. Train front-desk staff on payment options and use technology to collect payment at the time of service.10. Ineffective marketing: Marketing without tracking return on investment wastes money. Monitor referral sources and online reviews to gauge marketing effectiveness.
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