What Metrics Should You Track in Your Practice?
Are metrics important to you?
Our clients have determined that these are the most important metrics to track in your practice: Collections, Patients Visits, Charges, New Patients, No Shows, No Future Appointments, Accounts Receivable, Unbilled Visits, Unsigned Notes and Claims needing to be corrected by the Practice. They’re related to each other and they affect each other.
How do you track them? Do you have a tool to monitor them with a simple glance at a chart? Do you have a radar chart or a histogram that you can understand with a quick look on the home screen? The tools to track these metrics are built into our software and your Practice Success Coach will help you to understand the numbers and their relationships to the others. These Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) must be measured to know the health of your Practice. You’ll be able to see if you’re reaching your goals instantly because two time ranges compared show your improvements.
Learn more with the free webinar that can be viewed right on this page.
Read the transcript:
This week’s webinar, the topic for this week is How to Measure the Success of Your Practice. Really what to measure? What things as a practice owner should you be looking at? What things should you have in place as weekly, monthly, yearly things that should be measured and then managed?
So today is going to be which metrics you should look at, and we can talk about frequency, but that frequency is only recommended. You as a practice owner will be able to choose whatever frequency you’re looking at there. and we’ll actually get into how to find information within our system so practice owners can have this happen a little bit more easily should they be concerned about something, so the key indicators are going to be discussed today.
And aside from that though, we’re going to…well, first I’ll start by introducing myself. My name is Jason Barnes, I’m the Chief Operations Officer here, and I may have been sitting here for about six and a half now helping practice owners figure out what to measure, and how to measure it in their practices.
So what things should be measured, first of all? And why do you need to do it? And how it is going to begin? When you talk about the success of your practice, I have differing opinions from one practice owner to another. Some practice owners want to measure it on the amount of money that we’ve brought in. Others, the number of visits. Both of those numbers are very important, I would recommend that they both be looked at. But at the end of the day, you’re going to have to figure out which one is more important to you because there can be only one top number that will drive your practice and typically that number is dollars. A lot of practice owners prefer to look at visits but visits can be viewed in a number of different ways.
So looking at this moving forward, we’re gonna take it down to the ones that we talk about the most, the ones that we’re going to utilize while actually making recommendations to practice. Collections. Now, collections can be viewed in a couple of different ways. The amount of money in your bank account, the amount of money posted in your system. If they’re the same amount of money, you’re doing really well, but if they’re not the same amount of money you’ve got a problem, and we need to figure out why there could be an issue there.
But where do collections come from? And if they’re low, what can be done about them? So the first thing to show you is a diagram. You have a practice here…and I’ll make this slightly larger. You have a practice here with three different numbers on it, right? The blue line is their total collected, their green line is their cash collected, and their red line is their insurance collected. As trends would go, it looks like they’re trending down as they went in from the end of the year to the beginning of this year. It’s pretty typical for the end of the year where you’re having less [ inaudible 00:03:16] visits due to the holidays than in the beginning of the year where you see deductibles kick in.
However, if you were to contrast that over patient visits, this is the same exact timeframe right now, you would know that visits dictate your collections. But there’s a big trend of going down from 2,088 ending at a much, much lower number here in the 1,400 range. So for this particular example, I brought up and put together a few diagrams. If you’re looking to increase collections, if the collections are indicating that they’re going down, there are a few obvious places to look, like going to visits. You would have to increase patient visits or you would have to fight underpayments.
So if your visits weren’t going down, it means that the amount of money you were getting paid was going down. So there’s really only two ways that you could look at the metric of collections, two possible things that could be bringing it down. Either my visits went down or the amount I’m getting paid per visit went down. Either way, you have to know what to do next and which metric to look at next. So visits are fairly easy. You know, if you check somebody in, that’s a visit, and underpayment is a much more challenging thing. And I’d like for you guys to see a separate webinar we did on fighting underpayments and you can find it in any of our websites to go over how we do that.
But then what? What is it that you’re gonna change? How is it you’re gonna manage your practice if you have a metrics issue like low collections? So if you analyze that your visits have gone down, what is it that you do next? Am I not getting patient referrals? Am I not rescheduling no-shows? Am I allowing people to leave here without resigns or a future appointment set up? There’s got to be something that I can do next.
So we put this diagram together with most of our practice owners. These are the next logical steps: remind my patients, get new patients, make sure that I’m retaining the patients that I have. If I have underpayments, well, you have to have tools to fight this. And we do provide those tools and we can go over those tools in great length and detail other places, but these are the next steps. And these are fairly large and I wanna use this as an example right now because increasing patient visits sounds easy enough. Any practice owner listening to this, that’s the hard thing to do in business. The hardest thing to do in business is increase patient visits.
So what we’ll focus on is we don’t know how to coach you to go out and get new patients. We do however have tools to help you to track and retain your current ones. And we’re well equipped to help you fight underpayments, all right? And the getting every single claim paid, making sure you have good follow-up procedures in place, those are the things that we can help you with as well, but increasing charges for visits is another quadrant that we would struggle as an organization to help you with. Making sure that you’re billing out every line item, making sure that, you know, you’re billing the right level of code or the number of units per code.
These are things that you’re gonna have to look at in depth to make sure that the metric of collections is correct. Did your payer mix change? Did he at one point…with this example that we had right here where we brought up the total billed, and the insurance collected and cash collected. If we bring out insurance collected and then we bring it down and select our cash collected, the cash for this particular practice far, far outweighs your insurance collections. So if you’re seeing a dip in insurance patients, it really won’t make that big of a difference. If you’re seeing a dip in cash patients for this particular practice, you’re gonna have a major fall.
So the first one that we’re looking at, and this white paper is available on any one of our websites, you can go check it out, is collections and payments. The second one is charges. Charges sometimes are thought to be right in line with visits. If I had all the visits, I’m doing fine. But if you’re a heavy insurance shop and all of a sudden the particular CPT codes start getting covered you’re in a world hurt, you’re seeing a big reduction. If you start seeing all of a sudden a big increase in the number of Medicare patients that you’re seeing, and they’re only gonna pay certain codes, you’re gonna see charges drop like a stone. This is a big picture metric.
Moving down to patient visits, patient visits are a lot trickier than any other ones that we’ve seen up to this point because now you’re dealing with relationships. You have somebody that comes and agrees to see you and you have the visit scheduled for them. There’s only one or two things that happen, right? They showed up or they didn’t show up. If they showed up, did you make sure they had another visit set up? And if they didn’t show up, what is the mechanism of tracking them and making sure that you’re gonna follow up? How did you ensure that they’re going to get there?
So we look at different metrics as operational versus performance metrics. We have to be able in practice to say our performance metrics are our charges, collections, patient visits. Our operational metrics are many, but the operational metrics such as making sure that all the reminders went out lead to all of your financial or your big picture metrics. If you don’t have a good method or a process in place to support your operational metrics, your big picture or financial metrics never reach the potential that you’re looking for.
That being the case, there are additional metrics that you can take into consideration and we’ll keep going over those now. New patients. I was recently at a conference where I got up and they applauded that somebody was able to average 50 new patients a month for an entire year. It’s quite the accomplishment but a lot of the people who were attending the conference found it to be lackluster in comparison to their own numbers of 10 to 15 patients a month. Why on earth would that comparison exist? If you’re comparing 50 new patients verses 10 to 15, it’s a huge difference. However, the practice that’s seeing 10 to 15 new patients a month and retaining 100% of them versus somebody who’s getting 50 new patients a month and is onlyretaining 10% of them, you know which practice you’d rather be.
Focusing on patient retention has to be just as important as getting new patients through the door. So these particular metrics I bolded because they’re going to make up your big picture [inaudible 00:10:34]. You have to know how these affect your financials. So new patients are only great if you keep them.
No shows. The bottom line is that when you have a no show, you don’t just lose the money that you’re going to get from that visit. No shows must be tracked fiercely, they must be tracked every single month. And if you have a downward trend, then you have to make a decision as the practice owner, what am I going to do to reverse that? If somebody’s not showing up there is either a real conflict that existed or they didn’t find the value in the service that you provide. The assumption that has to be made by any reasonable practice owner is that in the absence of any other real tragedy that is keeping somebody from getting there, that there’s a value question. This value question can’t be ignored and we have to make sure that they’re reminded of it, and we have tools to help one do that. But how are you gonna do this? We’ll go over that in just one moment.
Accounts receivable. We’ll go back to our system here. So if you’re gonna look at accounts receivable, and I’ll underline it here, we have a couple of different ways of using this dashboard up here to help you keep your finger on the pulse of the financial performance of your practice. First, looking at the amount of dollars that you’ve collected month to date is helpful, but this next number of
Amounts in accounts receivable over 120 days is the indication of a poor performing practice. I will say that again. If this number is high, it means that your practice is performing poorly. How poorly you ask? We measure that in percentages. Here, this