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SVMIC Practice Management Advisor February 28, 2005

 

Welcome to the SVMIC Practice Management Advisor, a new email newsletter brought to you twice a month by State Volunteer Mutual Insurance Company.  The SVMIC Practice Management Advisor will bring you timely, informative and practical practice management advice in a succinct format.  Practice management expert Elizabeth Woodcock, MBA, FACMPE, CPC, is the author and writer of the newsletter.  Best of all, it’s totally free! 

 

Feel free to tell your friends about it, or sign up all of your staff members.  Email elvad@svmic.com with the names and email addresses.  We’ll sign you up right away!

 

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The SVMIC Practice Management Advisor

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Volume 1, Issue 2

February 28, 2005

By Elizabeth W. Woodcock, MBA, FACMPE, CPC

 

First impressions count:  Low cost ways to improve your office’s reception area

 

It’s been said that we form lasting impressions of people within the first seconds after we first meet them. To some extent, the same goes for a physician’s office.

 

Is the floor or carpet stained? Are plants wilted or, if plastic, are they dusty? Are the pictures of your practice’s physicians more than 10 years old? Are magazines tattered and outdated? If so, replace these items.

 

I have been to literally hundreds of medical practices over the past few years, and I guarantee that first impressions do make a difference. You may be overlooking what your practice’s waiting room says about you because you see it every day, or maybe you enter by a side door and hardly see it at all. For a little bit of time and not much money, you can show patients that you care about them and that your practice is capable of paying attention to details, both large and small.

 

Sprucing up your reception area doesn’t have to cost a fortune. You can even do it on a tight budget by following some of these suggestions:

 

  • Contact a local artist. Many artists would leap at an offer to display their art in a well-traveled public place, especially with cards that contain their contact information. You get new artwork; the artist gets exposure.

 

  • “Hire” a volunteer. Call a local senior citizen’s center and ask if they know someone who wants to volunteer as a greeter in your reception area. Hospitals have done this for years, and rely heavily on volunteers. The volunteer could serve coffee, read to children, hold the door for the mother shepherding small children, or fetch a pen for someone filling out a form.

 

  • Get help from children. If your practice treats children, ask them to participate in an interior decoration project. They can bring in drawings or you can give them drawing supplies to use while they wait. I worked with a pediatric practice that used children’s art to dress up temporary walls during a renovation project. If you don’t have pediatric patients, the children or grandchildren of your staff and physicians could help. Since most school-aged kids bring home at least one or two art “projects” a week, you should have an ample supply. Find inexpensive picture frames at a thrift store to add a little extra “class” to the art before hanging it in the reception area.

 

  • Hang pictures of providers and staff throughout the practice. These days you’d be wise to ask patients for permission to display their photos (although this certainly shouldn’t stop you from asking!), but you don’t have to ask yourself. Have a fun hobby? A photo in the reception area of you on your motorcycle, or playing bagpipes, or whatever your hobby is will certainly delight patients. Baby pictures are sure-fire attention getters. Ask your staff to bring in their baby photos, too. It’s a guaranteed way to generate chuckles from patients and form a bond with them in the process.

 

  • Stage a contest. Hold an art contest among the staff. If you have a small practice, extend the contest to include patients. You’ll be delighted to see your staff’s talents, which may include photography, quilting, drawing, embroidery, or other arts. Establish a first prize such as a gift certificate at the local mall or a lunch out with you, and you’ll have entries pouring in.

 

  • Get historical. Scan yard sales and antique shops for interesting medical-related items. You might find old medical equipment, tools, documents, photographs, or other items. You may find some non-medical items of interest to your patients. One practice located in a recently built-up area hung photographs of the area from the 19th Century when it was still rural.

 

  • Set up an announcement board. You can provide important community resources to patients, which is particularly relevant if you serve patients who suffer from chronic problems. An endocrinology practice should have information from the American Diabetes Association and local diabetes support groups; a pulmonology practice, information from the American Lung Association and so on. Ask a local patient support group to contribute to the resource board (which also could be posted on your practice’s web site). Volunteers will leap at an opportunity to reach dozens of patients each day.

 

  • Take a critical look at your signage. I was recently at a practice where I counted 30 pieces of paper hung everywhere through the reception area. There were announcements of everything from charging for late payments to the appointment cancellation policy. Besides being a visual overload, these signs are often unprofessional – containing spelling mistakes, smudges, and sometimes, they are unintelligible. Take a few minutes after hours to sit in your reception area and look around. What do you see? Is it “we don’t do this,” “we won’t do that” and “we’ll charge you extra for such and such?” Discard this negative messaging. Put those signs into a Practice Policy Brochure or integrate the messages into your registration forms. (In the next issue, I’ll cover what to put in your Practice Policy Brochure.) Give those policies to patients in writing and post them on your website, not your walls.

 

Use these tips to get started on the low-cost improvements that can make your waiting room seem less cluttered, less dingy, and much more welcoming to patients.

 

 

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Ask Elizabeth

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QUESTION:  Who is allowed to call in prescription refills and renewals?  Does a nurse have to make the call?

 

ANSWER:  There is no requirement for training, skill level, or a specific credential.   A staff member who is not a nurse may call prescription refills and renewals into the pharmacy.  However, it is of note that the physician is liable for the actions of this staff member(s).  Thus, for your (and your patients') sake, it's important that the staff member assigned this duty have the appropriate training, skill level and knowledge base, as well as guidance from the physician for whom he or she is working. 

  

Have a practice management question that you’d like to see answered?  E-mail Elizabeth at ewwoodcock@mindspring.com .  We’ll publish one of your questions -- and the answer -- in every issue of the SVMIC Practice Management Advisor!

 

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Upcoming SVMIC Practice Management Programs

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PRACTICE MANAGEMENT FOR PHYSICIANS

TOP 10 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

Owning and working in a medical practice requires knowledge and skills that many physicians are unprepared for.  The physician is faced with a multitude of financial, organizational, regulatory, and operational issues for their practice.  This program will cover ten areas that every physician needs to monitor within their practice to insure that it is compliant, efficient, safe and harmonious.  Attendees should leave the program with information on specific areas in which they focus.

 

This program is designed for physicians.  The two-hour workshop will focus on specific activities a physician should insure are being done in their practice. 

 

For cities, dates, and registration, see www.svmic.com/mps

 

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Elizabeth Woodcock, MBA, FACMPE, CPC, is a national practice management speaker and author.  The material for The SVMIC Practice Management Advisor comes from her frequent visits to medical practices, as well as her nearly 15 years of practice management experience.  She was educated at Duke University and The Wharton School of Business. 

 

This material is brought to you by the Medical Practice Services Department of State Volunteer Mutual Insurance Company.  Copyright 2005 by SVMIC and Elizabeth Woodcock. All rights reserved. For reprint requests, please contact Elizabeth Woodcock at ewwoodcock@mindspring.com or Elva Denney at elvad@svmic.com.  The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of SVMIC.   

 

To be removed from this email, please email elvad@svmic.com with "REMOVE ADVISOR" as the subject line.


Woodcock & Associates: Changing the Way You Work