A home healthcare client needed to better reach their remote labor pool.
A home healthcare client needed to better reach their remote labor pool.
Workforce enablement is about creating engaged employees by providing them with the tools they need to be more efficient and productive.
One of the largest challenges facing companies today is the declining labor pool available to backfill the wave of retirees in the coming years. This challenge is especially clear in highly competitive growth industries that rely on a skilled workforce. Over the past 12 years, most of us has seen a radical shift in expectations of how technology should work for us. The smartphone, and the business models that surround them, have shaped how we expect to interact with technology, and more importantly, how technology can be leveraged to simplify our lives.
Many workplaces have made leaps forward in how workers leverage technology to complete their daily activities. While the following is a healthcare case study, we find similar circumstances and opportunities across the industries we serve. Workforce Enablement is about creating engaged and productive employees—how you can make your workers more efficient and enable them to deliver more impactful results.
In this case study, a healthcare provider was reliant on pool of talent that was not expanding at the same rate as the market, creating a highly competitive, and stressful, environment to fill vital care delivery roles. This led to gaps in coverage that current manual processes could not effectively deal with, impacting patient care and the firm’s bottom line. Introducing a more modern, digital, approach sped up the laborious and inefficient processes for scheduling and completing visits. It also put, in the hands of workers, the technology they were accustomed to using in their daily “consumer” lives. The result has been a happier workforce, better care for patients, and a significantly improved bottom line
In addition to these external factors, home health providers face the challenge of realizing revenue on approved and authorized work. With an industry average for absenteeism of 10-15%, more than one in ten shifts is not filled as planned. For a billion-dollar home health provider, this means $100-$150 million in revenue that may be lost completely as the missed shifts cannot be filled or are no longer authorized once missed.
This was identified as a strategic priority. Myridius was engaged to assist the client in creating the solution to help fill these missed visits with a target of increasing revenue by 10%.
Traditionally, shifts were filled by a human scheduler seeking to connect “available/authorized” visits with “available/qualified” clinicians. Much of this work was accomplished through an inefficient combination of calendaring applications, print mail, and telephone calls. Unplanned absences had to be handled with urgent phone calls and emails as schedulers sought to match the open visit to available local clinicians. In this model, the scheduler operated like an air traffic controller seeking to manually balance and optimize open visits with clinician availability.
Further complicating this process was the need to have the right clinical skills to perform the visit. Beyond just location and availability, requirements to fill a visit include language, clinical knowledge, and certifications. With a predominantly contract workforce, and the high turnover typical of the industry, keeping track of available clinicians with their applicable skills and qualifications was an additional complication.
Solving this multi-faceted challenge required:
The solution centered on a flexible mobile application to “bring the office to the car” for clinicians in the field. The mobile app let users see available visits and request to fill them, resulting in a change from the “push” legacy dispatch model to a “pull” component. This allowed the client to start aggressively harvesting unfilled shifts to meet the 10% revenue enhancement goal.
This reimagined solution also provided a platform for the rapid and iterative augmentation of future services. HIPAA compliant cloud technologies, agile analytics, and industry leading mobile tools are supporting the rapid digital transformation of the client and putting better information, more personal autonomy, and a more engaging experience into the hands of the clinicians.
The new platform was developed and deployed to one of the organization’s regions for an initial pilot. This pilot proved the ability to integrate with legacy scheduling, billing, and clinical systems. More importantly, it proved the importance and business benefits of putting new capabilities into the field via a mobile application. The next steps include integrating with the remaining legacy scheduling and billing systems and undertaking an organization-wide rollout. Going forward, the system will enable detailed operations analysis and data analytics to show the reduction in unfilled shifts, and to provide insight into additional business and technical changes for further improvements.
Clinicians have embraced the approach and love the ability to interact with the schedulers using HIPAA compliant messaging. Open shifts that once led to a series of frantic calls are being filled electronically and, in many cases, filled by request from the clinician, with minimal effort or intervention required from human schedulers.
The key strategic goal of increasing revenue by 10% is well on the way to being realized. Shifts that were going unfilled are now being filled, clinician satisfaction and engagement is improving, and revenue is steadily climbing.
These benefits aside, the true strategic value is yet to be realized. As managed care companies increasingly move into the traditional fee-for service segment, national payers are looking for those firms that can efficiently service members and demonstrate a path to capture additional information. Even with just the pilot complete, the system’s operational benefits offer a potentially significant increase in corporate valuation.
The new platform allows for a host of incremental data capture and sharing opportunities in the home. Myridius is working with the client to prioritize and implement those capabilities that will help them differentiate from competitors as revenue sources shift from government payers to managed care ones.
Strategic initiatives currently in evaluation include:
Future success for home care providers will be exemplified by organizations that aggressively implement flexible digital transformation platforms to secure lucrative managed care contracts, support quality improvement, and increase realizable revenue.
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