ohio oral health summit presentation
TRANSCRIPT
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The Anthem Foundation of OhioThe Anthem Foundation of OhioSisters of Charity Foundation of CantonSisters of Charity Foundation of CantonThe Osteopathic Heritage FoundationThe Osteopathic Heritage Foundation
The United Way of Central OhioThe United Way of Central Ohio
Oral Health Capacity Building Project Oral Health Capacity Building Project Sustainable Safety Net Dental ClinicsSustainable Safety Net Dental Clinics
2007 Ohio Oral Health Summit
“OOral HHealth IIsn’t OOptional”
November 27, 2007
Robert Ellis, MBA and John F. Neale, DDS, MPH
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Points to be coveredPoints to be covered
• Purpose/Mission of Project• Project Methods• Balancing Public Health and Business• Elements for a sustainable, quality safety net
dental clinic.
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Why have a Capacity Building Project?Why have a Capacity Building Project?
Safety Net Dental Clinics (SNDCs) are not the same as private practices.
They need to find a balance between their
Public Health mission and healthy business practices, not letting either aspect take precedence over the other, so as to not jeopardize their own sustainability
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Mission Mission To improve the capacity and sustainability of To improve the capacity and sustainability of
safety net dental clinics in Ohio so that they safety net dental clinics in Ohio so that they can provide: can provide:
• Quality oral health services, • Access to care for disadvantaged and
underserved populations, and • Oral health services regardless of ability to pay
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Project MethodsProject Methods• Phase I : Develop a safety net dental Phase I : Develop a safety net dental
practice assessment toolpractice assessment tool• Phase II: Implement Assessment Tool and Phase II: Implement Assessment Tool and
conduct site visits with Five Oral Health conduct site visits with Five Oral Health Safety Net ProvidersSafety Net Providers
• Phase III: Develop Performance Phase III: Develop Performance Improvement Plans and Funding RequestsImprovement Plans and Funding Requests
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Phase 1Phase 1• Prepare a practice assessment tool/pre-visit
questionnaire consisting of key indicators and data elements;
• Pilot test the assessment tool by having each participating safety net provider fill out the questionnaire;
• Finalize the assessment tool based upon the responses from the practices and the Capacity Building Project steering committee
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Phase IIPhase II• Site visit with each participating program to
gain a better understanding of each program’s unique circumstances. o Interviews with key employees o Facility tours and o Final data collection.
• Prepare an assessment of each practice • Evaluate and finalize the assessment tool
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Phase IIIPhase III
Work with the participating Safety Net practices to Work with the participating Safety Net practices to do the following:do the following:
• Prepare practice-specific action plans to improve their efficiency and financial sustainability
• Assure complete understanding of the program assessment and recommendations
• Prepare practice-specific action plans on which to base future funding requests
• Prepare practice-specific funding requests
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Know Your OrganizationKnow Your Organization
• Understand corporate structure– What is the reporting chain of command?– Who looks out for the SNDCs interests at the board level?
• What are the communication patterns?– Among management team members– Between management and staff
• How are goals and objectives communicated to staff?• Do staff have input in developing their own personal
goals, including career and clinic production goals
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Does your organization have a Does your organization have a strategic plan?strategic plan?
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Develop A Strategic PlanDevelop A Strategic Plan
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Develop A Strategic PlanDevelop A Strategic Plan
If you don’t know where
you are going...
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Develop A Strategic PlanDevelop A Strategic Plan
If you don’t know where
you are going...
Any road will get you there!- Lewis Carroll
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Elements of Strategic PlanElements of Strategic Plan
• Vision
• Mission Statement
• Critical Success Factors
• Strategy & Actions for Objectives
• Prioritize Implementation Schedule
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Elements of Strategic Plan Elements of Strategic Plan VisionVision
• What is our mission?• What do we do best?• What is our business - types of services?• What can we do that our competitors can’t• Who are our customers?• What is our philosophy, ethical and social
responsibility and value?• WHERE DO WE WANT TO BE IN FIVE YEARS?
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Elements of Strategic Plan Elements of Strategic Plan Mission StatementMission Statement
• What are you selling?– Quality dental services– Access to dental services
• Affordable dental services (sliding fee scale in place)• Reasonable waiting times for appointments• Walk-in services?
• Other factors– Caring for patients as people– Flexibility– Identifying your target population
• Safety net populations• All persons in your service area
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Elements of Strategic Plan Elements of Strategic Plan Critical Success factorsCritical Success factors
• Maintaining quality standards• Finding needed resources• Staying in touch with your target population’s needs • Establishing effective internal and external communication
standards• Providing cost effective services• Establish policy and procedure documentation for training
and measurement purposes• Develop a plan for adequate cash flow
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Elements of Strategic Plan Elements of Strategic Plan Critical Success factors Critical Success factors (cont’d)(cont’d)
• Develop a plan for measuring performance– Communicate expectations to staff– Include staff in developing achievable goals
• Involve staff in the development of a strategic plan– Assigning the implementation of a strategic plan
to staff who have not been involved in the planning is a recipe for failure
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Elements of Strategic Plan Elements of Strategic Plan Strategies and Action PlansStrategies and Action Plans
• Steps to Implementation– Define how the work will get done and by whom
• Strategic planning should be completed by a group or team assigned to each objective
• Establishing effective internal and external communication standards
• Providing cost effective services• Establish policy and procedure documentation for training
and measurement purposes• Develop a plan for adequate cash flow
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Elements of Strategic Plan Elements of Strategic Plan Prioritize Implementation SchedulePrioritize Implementation Schedule
• Prioritize critical success factor objectives and corresponding strategies/actions in order of importance
• Document a schedule for implementation• For each strategy, document:
– Start dates– Milestones– Anticipated completion dates
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Develop a Set of Good Key Indicators Develop a Set of Good Key Indicators
• Key Indicators: Data driven measurements• Ratios that compare costs, revenues, and productivity
– Charges, net revenue, costs per period of time (Hour, Day, Week, Month, Quarter, Year)
– Numbers of visits or procedures per period of time– Charges, net revenue, costs, visits, procedures per personnel unit (FTE,
service minute, service hour, days worked, etc.)– Payer mix
• Key indicators should be selected based on:– Available data– Purpose
• Board reporting• Grant applications• Determining the impact of decision making - Changes in operations• Identifying problems early
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
• RVUs are numerical values assigned to each procedure code based on the following factors:
– Time necessary to perform the procedure– Skills necessary to perform the procedure– Risk to the patient– Legal risk to the dentist– Severity of the problem– Expendable supplies that are not billed separately
• RVU data can be purchased from RVS, inc. www.rvs.com-$100/yr
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
Sampling of the top 15 procedures, by volume
Code Description Number Charges Avg. Charge
Per Procedure
RVU by Procedure
Total RVU
7140 Extraction/Root recovery 1,364 $75,025 $55.00 2.20 3,000
0272 Bitewings (2) 1,068 $16,872 $15.80 0.60 640
0150 Comp Oral Evaluation 1,019 $27,513 $27.00 1.00 1,019
0220 X-ray Single 882 $7,938 $9.00 0.50 441
1110 Cleaning 14 yrs & Older 572 $20,592 $36.00 1.50 858
0120 Dental revisit - recall Exam 561 $10,098 $18.00 0.70 392
2391 Composite Filling/Post 1 surface 451 $23,903 $53.00 2.00 902
0140 Limited Oral; Eval-Prob. Focus 386 $9,650 $25.00 1.00 386
2150 Filling (A) Permanent/Primary 379 $21,224 $56.00 2.20 833
1351 Sealants - 1st & 2nd molars 361 $8,664 $24.00 0.80 288
0230 X-ray, Add'l 337 $2,359 $7.00 0.25 84
1203 Fluoride 309 $5,562 $18.00 0.50 154
1120 Cleaning under 14 Yrs 253 $6,578 $26.00 1.00 253
2392 Filling ( C) 2 Surface/Posterior 193 $12,545 $65.00 4.00 772
0274 Bitewings (4) 163 $3,580 $21.97 1.00 163
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
Setting Fees
Description Code Standard
Fee Quantity
Gross Charges
RVU By Procedure
Total RVU
Conversion Factor (Total
Standard Fees/Total RVU By
Procedure)
Extraction/Root recovery 7140 $55.00 1,364 $75,020 2.20 3,000
Bitewings (2) 0272 $16.00 1,068 $17,088 0.60 1,917
Comp Oral Evaluation 0150 $27.00 1,019 $27,513 1.00 2,697
X-ray Single 0220 $9.00 882 $7,938 0.50 533
Cleaning 14 yrs & Older 1110 $36.00 572 $20,592 1.50 1,055
Dental revisit - recall Exam 0120 $18.00 561 $10,098 0.70 1,928
Composite Filling/Post 1 surface 2391 $53.00 451 $23,903 2.00 957
Limited Ora; Eval-Prob. Focus 0140 $25.00 386 $9,650 1.00 477
Filling (A) Permanent/Primary 2150 $56.00 379 $21,224 2.20 910
Sealants - 1st & 2nd molars 1351 $24.00 361 $8,664 0.80 1,555
X-ray, Add'l 0230 $7.00 337 $2,359 0.25 1,036
Fluoride 1203 $18.00 309 $5,562 0.50 286
Cleaning under 14 Yrs 1120 $26.00 253 $6,578 1.00 107
Filling ( C) 2 Surface/Posterior 2392 $65.00 193 $12,545 4.00 391
Bitewings (4) 0274 $22.00 163 $3,586 1.00 610
Totals $457.00 8,298.00 $252,320 19.25 17,460 $23.74
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
Setting Fees
Description Code Standard
Fee Quantity
Gross Charges
RVU By Procedure
Total RVU
Conversion Factor (Total
Standard Fees/Total RVU By
Procedure)
Extraction/Root recovery 7140 $55.00 1,364 $75,020 2.20 3,000
Bitewings (2) 0272 $16.00 1,068 $17,088 0.60 1,917
Comp Oral Evaluation 0150 $27.00 1,019 $27,513 1.00 2,697
X-ray Single 0220 $9.00 882 $7,938 0.50 533
Cleaning 14 yrs & Older 1110 $36.00 572 $20,592 1.50 1,055
Dental revisit - recall Exam 0120 $18.00 561 $10,098 0.70 1,928
Composite Filling/Post 1 surface 2391 $53.00 451 $23,903 2.00 957
Limited Ora; Eval-Prob. Focus 0140 $25.00 386 $9,650 1.00 477
Filling (A) Permanent/Primary 2150 $56.00 379 $21,224 2.20 910
Sealants - 1st & 2nd molars 1351 $24.00 361 $8,664 0.80 1,555
X-ray, Add'l 0230 $7.00 337 $2,359 0.25 1,036
Fluoride 1203 $18.00 309 $5,562 0.50 286
Cleaning under 14 Yrs 1120 $26.00 253 $6,578 1.00 107
Filling ( C) 2 Surface/Posterior 2392 $65.00 193 $12,545 4.00 391
Bitewings (4) 0274 $22.00 163 $3,586 1.00 610
Totals $457.00 8,298.00 $252,320 19.25 17,460 $23.74
• Calculate an RVU Conversion Factor– Total Standard Fees divided by Total RVUs by individual procedure code - not total units
($457.00 ÷ 19.25 = $23.74 per 1.0 RVU)
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
• Calculate the RVU Based Fees– RVU Conversion Factor multiplied times each procedure’s RVU– Example for Code 7140: $23.74 CF X 2.2 RVU = $52.23
Description Code Standard
Fee
RVU Based Fee
Schedule Difference
Extraction/Root recovery 7140 $55.00 $52.23 2.77 Bitewings (2) 0272 $16.00 $14.24 1.76 Comp Oral Evaluation 0150 $27.00 $23.74 3.26 X-ray Single 0220 $9.00 $11.87 (2.87) Cleaning 14 yrs & Older 1110 $36.00 $35.61 0.39 Dental revisit - recall Exam 0120 $18.00 $16.62 1.38 Composite Filling/Post 1 surface 2391 $53.00 $47.48 5.52 Limited Oral; Eval-Prob. Focus 0140 $25.00 $23.74 1.26 Filling (A) Permanent/Primary 2150 $56.00 $52.23 3.77 Sealants - 1st & 2nd molars 1351 $24.00 $18.99 5.01 X-ray, Add'l 0230 $7.00 $5.94 1.06 Fluoride 1203 $18.00 $11.87 6.13 Cleaning under 14 Yrs 1120 $26.00 $23.74 2.26 Filling ( C) 2 Surface/Posterior 2392 $65.00 $94.96 (29.96) Bitewings (4) 0274 $22.00 $23.74 (1.74)
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Comparison of Standard (clinic’s) FeesComparison of Standard (clinic’s) Fees to RVUs Based Fees to RVUs Based Fees
-
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
CDT Code
RVU Based Fee 52.23 14.24 23.74 11.87 35.61 16.62 47.48 23.74 52.23 18.99 5.94 11.87 23.74 94.96 23.74
Standard Fee 55.00 16.00 27.00 9.00 36.00 18.00 53.00 25.00 56.00 24.00 7.00 18.00 26.00 65.00 22.00
7140 0272 0150 0220 1110 0120 2391 0140 2150 1351 0230 1203 1120 2392 0274
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
• The RVU-Based Fee Comparison does not tell you that your fee schedule is adequate (high or low)
• It only tells you the relationship of an individual charge for one of your procedures compared with an average of your most used procedures
• In order to determine if your fees are adequate you need to compare your fees to a survey of fees, national, regional or local
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Setting Your Fee Schedule Setting Your Fee Schedule
$-
$25
$50
$75
$100
$125
$150
$175
$200
$225
CDT Code
Survey Fee Low 100.00 33.00 55.00 23.00 35.00 60.00 118.00 60.00 115.00 46.00 19.00 29.00 45.00 150.00 48.00
Survey Fee Average 137.00 38.30 68.30 25.10 41.60 75.20 151.00 77.50 154.30 47.70 22.10 32.40 59.10 192.70 57.80
Survey Fee High 160.00 45.00 85.00 31.00 45.00 89.00 160.00 110.00 155.00 48.00 30.00 38.00 71.00 197.00 68.00
Standard Fee 55.00 16.00 27.00 9.00 36.00 18.00 53.00 25.00 56.00 24.00 7.00 18.00 26.00 65.00 22.00
7140 0272 0150 0220 1110 0120 2391 0140 2150 1351 0230 1203 1120 2392 0274
2006 National Fee Schedule Survey: www.dentaleconomics.com2006 National Fee Schedule Survey: www.dentaleconomics.com
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process
Setting Your Fee ScheduleSetting Your Fee Schedule______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• The National Dental Advisory Service Comprehensive Fee Report for 2008 will be available in December. Go to www.ndas.com.
• Based on CDT 2007-2008 Codes and Nomenclature
• Allows You to Compare Your Fees with NDAS 40th, 50th, 60th, 70th, 80th, 90th and 95th Percentile Fees Geographic Multipliers for all U.S. 3-digit Zip Code Prefixes.
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Decision Making ProcessDecision Making Process Using Relative Value Units Using Relative Value Units
• Consider using RVUs to measure productivity in the same manner as you would gross charges
• You will need reports that provide CDT code data, including:– Code number– Number of procedures per code– Total charges per code– Broken out by payer, practitioner, period of time, and
so on
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Bench Marking and Best PracticesBench Marking and Best Practices• From our experience there are no good bench
marking standards for SNDCs• FQHCs are using as a standard the number of
visits as reported on their Uniform Data System (UDS) reports– 2,700 visits or 1,100 users (patients) per 1.0 FTE – Best practices...No, just average from reports
• Until unifrom bench marks come along, establish practice specific bench marks and track these to measure performance in relation to history
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Essential data for sustainabilityEssential data for sustainability
• Patient visits*• Gross charges*• Patient visits per provider*• Gross charges per provider*• Charges per visit*• Broken appointments*• Procedures per visit• Revenue*
• Revenue per visit*
• Expenses*
• Cost per visit*
• Broken appointments per provider
• Average length of time that the clinic is fully scheduled in advance
*Monthly, Quarterly, and Annually
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Essential elements for sustainabilityEssential elements for sustainability• Appropriate fee schedule (should not be
below Medicaid)• Well designed encounter form/superbill
that easily collects the data needed for billing and reporting
• A well-designed and uniformly-enforced Broken Appointment policy (don’t let BAs run the schedule)
• An emergency/walk-in policy compatible with the appointment system (don’t let emergencies run the appointment book)
• Billing success of 95% of expected collections
• Efficient system for patient registration/eligibility documentation and updating
• Appointment system that allows multiple procedures (e.g., quadrant dentistry) to be done when appropriate
• Appointment system that allows the efficient use of EFDAs as allowed by law
• Patient Satisfaction
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Essential elements for sustainabilityEssential elements for sustainability__________________________________________________________________________________________ Expected Collections vs Gross Charges for Budgetary
Planning
• Expected collections are gross charges minus all write-offs
• Expected collections depend on payer mix, sliding fee schedule, minimum fees, etc.
For Example• Gross charges for 10 procedures, each at $100 on the
fee scale = $1000• If each of the 10 patients is a minimum fee patient ($20
per visit) the expected collections are only $200• Expected collections provide a more realistic basis for
budgetary planning
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT
Essential elements for quality practiceEssential elements for quality practice• Effective recruitment • Pay, benefits, and working conditions that promote staff
retention• Written Policies and Procedures that support the efficient
provision of oral health care services and are adhered to• Ongoing, prospective professional peer review• Staff accountability for both the quality of their work and the
revenue they produce• Effective communications among staff and between the dental
staff and the program’s administration
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Summary of Critical ElementsSummary of Critical Elements(courtesy of Raymond A. Kuthy, DDS, MPH)(courtesy of Raymond A. Kuthy, DDS, MPH)
Organizational Structure
DentalClinic
Management
Missionand Goals
StrategicPlan
Policies andProcedures
RoutineAppointmentScheduling
HandlingPatient
Cancellationsand No-Shows
DentalEmergenciesClinic Hours
ClinicAccessibility
Efficiency ofDental Operatories
Efficiency of Recordkeeping,Data Collection, Billing
And Collections
Outcomes
FinancialManagement
CommunityInvolvement
Self-Assessment,Evaluation
AndChange
DENTALSAFETY
NETPROGRAM
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ORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECTORAL HEALTH CAPACITY BUILDING PROJECT__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Most Common Problems in Clinic Operations
• Broken Appointments
• Front Desk Logjam
• Appointments too short
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Broken AppointmentsBroken Appointments___________________________________
• The number one barrier to access in most of the programs we reviewed
• Most programs averaged between 20 and 50 percent
• High levels usually lead to double and triple booking, which become a nightmare if most patients show up
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Broken AppointmentsBroken Appointments__________________________________________________________________
• Many programs attempt to compensate for BAs by scheduling shorter appointments to minimize the down time when BAs occur.
• This usually leads to fewer services being provided per visit
• This also punishes the patients who do show up by requiring them to come in more times to complete treatment. Many SNDC patients cannot afford to miss work many times to come in, so they in turn miss appointments.
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Broken AppointmentsBroken Appointments____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Establish an effective BA policy that can and will be universally enforced.
• Consider a signed contract with all patients that spells out their rights and responsibilities within the system, and enforce the contract.
• Consider having patients come in and complete all paperwork before they are given their first appointment. This investment of time may make it less likely for them to miss their exam appointment.
• Confirm all appointments, including recall and hygiene appointments, the day before the appointment, or
• Consider requiring patients to call in and confirm their own appointments the day before the visit or face losing the slot to someone else.
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Broken AppointmentsBroken Appointments__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• After one, two or three (you choose the number) BAs within a certain time frame, consider discharging the patient from the practice and allowing them to be seen for emergencies only (or only as a walk-in, depending on your scheduling procedures) for a period of time (often six months or a year).
• Patients with multiple BAs cannot be allowed to jeopardize the sustainability of the clinic for all patients.
• One SNDC in Ohio averages 10 to 14 percent BAs by having a zero tolerance policy – patients are excluded from appointments for 6 months after only 1 BA (they can still be seen as walk-ins).
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Broken AppointmentsBroken Appointments__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Decrease the amount of time that the clinic is fully scheduled in advance. Evidence from the Indian Health Service indicates that the rate of BAs increases dramatically whenever the appointment book is filled more than 3 weeks (i.e., 15 working days) in advance.
• Schedule families together for those who have a history of showing up for their appointments, but limit the number of family members that can be scheduled either concurrently or consecutively for those with a history of BAs. If one family member BAs, they all usually BA.
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Broken AppointmentsBroken Appointments__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Emergency patients tend to have a higher BA rate than comprehensive-care patients if they are scheduled into the appointment system at the completion of the treatment of their “emergency.”
• This can be prevented by asking them to call back the next day to let the clinic know how they are doing and to schedule an appointment for a routine exam.
• Those who want routine care will call in, and those who only wanted their immediate problem treated (and are more likely to break an appointment that they didn’t seek in the first place) will not.
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Front Desk IssuesFront Desk Issues__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Patient Registration for new patients can take up to a half hour, and benefits updating at each appointment often takes 10 to 15 minutes to complete
• Unless the patient comes in early to complete the paperwork, this time eats into the clinical appointment
• Patients checking in for their appointments compete for the receptionist(s)’ time with those checking out after the completion of their appointment
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Front Desk IssuesFront Desk Issues__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Have patients come in 15 to 30 minutes prior to the start of the clinical appointment
• Have patients pre-register prior to scheduling the initial appointment
• Have different people checking patients in and checking patients out
Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• To limit down time when the broken appointment rate is high, many clinics schedule short appointments (15 to 20 minutes) regardless of the procedure(s) scheduled
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Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Short appointments usually mean that only one (or 2 at the most) procedures are completed at each visit
• This requires multiple visits per treatment plan, which increases the risk of BAs
• Short appointments also have higher marginal costs
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Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues Costs of Short appointments
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Set-up, Clean-up, Sterilization time are repeated for each appointment
• Disposable supplies are repeated for each appointment
• Anesthesia time is repeated for each appointment
• All of these can account for 10 or more minutes per appointment
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Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues Quadrant Dentistry Should be the Standard for a SNDCQuadrant Dentistry Should be the Standard for a SNDC
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Unbundling procedures is not consistent with a quality encounter when such procedures are usually done in one appointment rather than spread out over a series of appointments.
• Providing single services at each appointment so as to increase collections (e.g., minimum fee patients, or FQHC reimbursement per encounter) violates the ethical principle of beneficence, which gives priority to the needs and benefit of the patient.
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Appointment Issues Appointment Issues Quadrant Dentistry, Cost/Benefit AnalysisQuadrant Dentistry, Cost/Benefit Analysis
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Impact Analysis of Increasing Services per Visit for a Patient with 12
Cavities, 3 in each Quadrant
Actual 2006 Program Statistics from a Sample SNDC
• Total Costs $266,112 • Total Visits 4,381 • Total Service Hours 3,168 • Total Cost/Visit $60.74
• Total Cost per Service Hour $84.00
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Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues Quadrant Dentistry, Cost/Benefit Analysis Quadrant Dentistry, Cost/Benefit Analysis
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Impact Analysis of Increasing Services per Visit for a Minimum-pay Patient with 12 Cavities, 3 in each Quadrant
15 Minute
Appointment Hour-Long Appointment,
Quadrant Dentistry 1.25 Hour-Long
appointment
Per Visit, 1 Service per
Visit
Per Visit,
Quadrant Dentistry
Savings from
Increased Services Per Visit
Per visit,
Quadrant Dentistry
Savings From
Increased Services Per Visit
Total Cost per visit $60.74 $84.00 $105.00
Collections @ $20/Visit $20.00 $20.00 $20.00 Loss per Visit $40.74 $64.00 $85.00 Required visits to completion of treatment 12 4
4
Loss/Treatment Plan $489.00 $256.00 $233.00 $340.00 $149.00
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Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues Impact Analysis of Increasing Services per Visit for a
Patient with 12 Cavities, 3 in each Quadrant, continued
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Currently, the average cost per visit is $60.74, and the average cost per service hour to run the clinic is $84 ($105 for a 1.25 hour appointment).
• This means that for a patient who pays $20 for a visit, the clinic loses $40.74 per visit for the standard 15 minute appointment.
• If such a patient required 3 restorations per quadrant (12 fillings), the clinic would lose $489 if twelve 15 minute appointments were used.
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Appointment IssuesAppointment Issues Impact Analysis of Increasing Services per Visit for a
Patient with 12 Cavities, 3 in each Quadrant, continued
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• If the same patient received 4 hour-long appointments and had full quadrants restored at each visit, the patient would be completed in 4 visits, and the clinic would lose only $256, for a savings of $233 over the course of the treatment plan.
• Even if 1 hour 15 minute appointments were required to perform quadrant dentistry, the 5 hours required to complete treatment would lead to losses of $340 compared with the $489 at 1 procedure per 15 minute appointment, or a savings of $149 for the treatment plan.
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Management of the Appointment ScheduleManagement of the Appointment ScheduleLevels of CareLevels of Care
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Limit services to Emergency, Preventive, and Routine Restorative services when resources are severely restricted; this maximizes access because these services routinely take the least amount of time
• Add “limited” additional Rehabilitative services (which are more time-consuming) as more resources become available;
• Charge enough for high level services to cover all lab and supply costs even if sliding fee discount applied.
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Management of the Appointment ScheduleManagement of the Appointment Schedule________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Managed appointment scheduling works best with electronic scheduling and three chairs per FTE dental provider
• Two chairs are “appointment” chairs with the third unscheduled for emergencies and walk-ins.
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Appointments and ProductivityAppointments and Productivity____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• ODH Grants require 2,500 encounters per FTE dentist per year
• Based on 2005 UDS stats Nationwide, the average number of encounters per full time dentist in FQHCs was 2700 per year or 1100 patients.
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Appointments and ProductivityAppointments and Productivity____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Assuming roughly 200 work days per year (or 1,600 work hours per year after holidays and
vacations):• The average number of encounters per Dentist
FTE would be 1.7 patients per hour or 13.5 patients per day for 2700 encounters in a 200 day work year.
• Many sites have 220 days of care/FTE, so the math would be 1.54 patients per hour or 12.3 patients/day.
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Appointments and ProductivityAppointments and Productivity____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• 1.7 patients per hour means an average length of 35.5 minutes per appointment (200 day/year)
• 1.54 patients per hour means an average length of 39 minutes per appointment (220 day/year)
• It is not necessary to schedule 15 or 20 minute appointments to meet the 2500 encounter requirement of ODH grants if your broken appointments are under control
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Appointments and ProductivityAppointments and Productivity____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• A dentist should utilize a minimum of two chairs and 1.5 dental assists to achieve these productivity aims.
• This is for minimum efficiency.
• Use of additional operatories and assistant staff, especially
EFDAs, significantly increases the marginal rate of return on investment and increases productivity.
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Ways to Improve “Bottom Line”Ways to Improve “Bottom Line”______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Focus on services covered by Medicaid and/or state S-CHIP programs, i.e., consider payer mix in scheduling
• Seek grants for specific targeted groups like maternal care and disabilities
• Seek to perform the greater balance of total services toward revenue generation if the revenue is needed to keep the doors open
• Lower supply and overhead costs.
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Bottom LineBottom Line____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Actively Promote Your Program
– Health Centers must actively promote their services to target population to assure adequate patient flow in all demographic and payer categories.
– Promotions must be culturally relevant and focused toward major social outlets utilized by target population.
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Bottom LineBottom Line______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• While services may be limited under tight budgets, there are no services if you are not open.
• Good quality care for all is the goal; however limited access to good quality care is great when the alternative is no care at all.
• “We can’t be or give all things to all people,” or, stated somewhat differently;
• In the absence of universal access, the decision to do one thing for one patient is also the decision to not do something else for another patient.
Resources for Safety Net Dental Clinics__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Safety Net Dental Clinic Manual– www.dentalclinicmanual.com
• Dental Management Coalition– www.dentalmanagementcoalition.org/
• Ohio Dental Safety Net Information Center– www.ohiodentalclinics.com/
• Dental Public health Listserv– www.aaphd.org/default.asp?page=listserve.htm
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Oral Health Capacity Building Project Oral Health Capacity Building Project Sustainable Safety Net Dental ClinicsSustainable Safety Net Dental Clinics
Our thanks for the cooperation from the participating clinics and:
The Anthem Foundation of OhioSisters of Charity Foundation of CantonThe Osteopathic Heritage FoundationThe United Way of Central Ohio
“OOral HHealth IIsn’t OOptional”
Robert Ellis, MBA and John F. Neale, DDS, MPH