Turning Around a Troubled Revenue Cycle
Accurate, efficient revenue cycle management is essential to maintaining positive cash flow in a healthcare organization.
Maintaining positive health care finances requires that claims processing and payments are effectively managed and that claims are "trackable at all points so issues can be addressed in a timely manner.
First, hospitals must learn what their issues are when they believe their financials are performing poorly. Is it the billing department? Is it medical records? Could the problem be charge capture?
Third-party payers can be major contributors to slowdowns in the healthcare revenue cycle. Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers can effectively avoid paying claims by requiring perfect compliance with their individual requirements, and they frequently change those requirements, so what was perfect last year may result in a denial this year.
Other factors that negatively affect hospital accounts receivables include IT problems, lack of communication between revenue cycle departments, and inadequate training of personnel in the specifics of the healthcare revenue cycle.
To dramatically turn around poor or inefficient revenue cycle performance and increase cash flow, the triumphant management team must be able to implement well thought out solutions from planning and documenting an effective course of action. A good number of revenue cycle folks believe this but are not sure what to do first, then next and next and next and next.
Here are a few key steps you can take to reduce hospital accounts receivables (A/R) days.
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Conclusion
As hospitals deal with the ever changing financial environment, the billing and collections operations is one of the most crucial aspects of managing a healthcare business. Cash-starved health systems are generally the victim of a declining A/R turnover rate and a deteriorating A/R aging schedule.
Turning around a troubled revenue cycle is no easy feat. Most hospitals first need to determine precisely what is wrong with the infrastructure of their revenue cycle, and then construct a work plan that will achieve the necessary changes while maintaining cash flow in the interim.
When A/R ages to the point of no return, hospitals need to recover cash quickly and work down aging receivables.
Whichever road you decide to take during a revenue cycle turnaround attempt, remember that proper planning and allocating the right resources to produce maximum performance are the keys to any successful A/R turnaround effort.
When practices are implemented that effectively shorten the healthcare revenue cycle, the impact can be tremendous. By decreasing a payment cycle by only five days, cash flow can increase significantly and hospital accounts receivables can decrease significantly.
Zinserv Healthcare provides interim staffing and consulting services to healthcare providers nationwide. For more information, please contact us.