Wednesday, 31 August 2011

mHealth - New way to Healthcare delivery system


According to research mhealth sector is of billion dollars opportunity sector. Today all needs affordable and easily accessible healthcare delivery system. Africa, America and other countries leveraging the use of mhealth. According to McKinsey & Company mhealth going to be the part of most of the healthcare system. Some hospitals in India also using mhealthcare for their service but not that much. Response is coming but not that much. mHealth right now restricted to certain departments.
“Mobile healthcare is clearly an opportunity to improve healthcare, manage costs and at the same time drive growth. We believe it is something that mobile operators, hospitals, pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers, technology players, health insurance companies and governments too should all be looking at closely,” said Alessio Ascari, director at McKinsey’s Milan office.
Key m-health sectors
PhoneDoctor
call to speak with a qualified physician for remote diagnosis & advice
Drug Delivery
customers order medications over the phone for last mile delivery of authentic drugs within 24 hours
Health Watch
a SIM embedded biosensor watch that monitors vitals, and is connected to emergency services
Med Reminder
customers receive periodic SMS reminders to follow a prescribed medication routine
Source: McKinsey & Company

Friday, 26 August 2011

10 Best Practices for Increasing Hospital Profitability

Hospitals today face many challenges including an economic recession, increases in uninsured care and growing competition for outpatient services. However, there are still many steps hospitals can take to increase their profitability amid these economic conditions.


Industry experts say that hospitals wishing to increase their profitability can focus on two key areas — reducing costs and increasing reimbursement.  Here are 10 best practices for increasing hospital profitability by reducing costs and increasing revenue and reimbursement.

1. Reduce staffing costs by using data to drive staffing decisions. Because labor is the largest single expense for hospitals, it is critical that hospitals are not over- or under- staffing their facilities.

Hospitals leaders can cosider the use of flexible staffing, such as part-time or hourly employees, and adjust staffing based on patient census data. Leaders should also monitor the efficiency of this staffing by continuously reviewing benchmarking data such as hours worked per case.

Amy Floria, CFO of Goshen (Ind.) Health System, says that her facility monitors patient volume on a daily basis and adjusts staffing accordingly. "We adjust our nursing staffing every eight hours after looking at our inpatient volume and expected discharges and admits," she says.

Kevin Burchill, a director at Beacon Partners, a healthcare management consulting firm, agrees that staffing must be adjusted daily. "The easiest thing that a hospital can do to improve profitability is for the senior management team to assume responsibility for the day-to-day performance of an organization and look at the organization's performance in real time," he says. "You must shift to an emphasis on the day-to-day, not pay-period to pay-period or month-to-month."

It is important that concerns regarding efficient staffing are communicated throughout the organization and that hospital leaders work in collaboration with physicians. Donna Worsham, COO of National Surgical Hospitals, suggests that hospital leaders share staffing efficiency benchmarking data with unit managers and provide feedback regarding the productivity of the unit.

Flexible staffing is especially useful for OR nursing staff. OR managers should review clock-in times versus surgery-start times and determine if their staff is consistently arriving before a surgery actually begins. If this is the case, mangers can utilize flexible staffing to allow nursing staff to arrive later so that when surgeries run over, no overtime expenses are incurred, says Ms. Worsham.

Other facilities are saving in staffing costs by reducing benefits for full-time staff. Goshen Health System, for example, deferred merit increases, reduced paid vacation time and suspended its retirement matching program in response to the current economy, according to Goshen's CEO, Jim Dague. Goshen reduced employee dissatisfaction in response to these cuts by soliciting employee feedback on which benefits to reduce, thereby building organizational support for the changes. In addition, Goshen's executives took a voluntary 20 percent cut in order to help sustain the system through the recession.

Joe Freudenberger, CEO of OakBend Regional Medical Center in Richmond, Texas, agrees that staff must buy in to any reductions in hours and shifts worked that will personally affect them in order for the hospital to remain successful. He says that hospital leaders must communicate the reasoning for these changes to the staff before making them. "If we call off staff, they see it as personally hurting their income when we need to help them understand that it is actually preserving their income by maintaining the financial viability of the hospital," he says. "It may be obvious to us that we're calling them off because we have a significant reduction in patient volume, but we need to communicate that to them for them to understand the financial realties we face."

Although some staffing cuts may be necessary, hospitals should be careful not to take a blanket approach to layoffs or cuts in services. Hospital leaders must take a close look at their business before making cuts.

"Don't make the same mistake everyone else does — don’t look at bottom line, determine that you need to cut $1 million, for example, and then cut 10 percent across the board. Doing so will trim some fat but will cut meat and bone in other areas," says Mr. Burchill. 

He suggests that hospitals assess each program individually and determine which ones are what are winners and losers. "You do not want to cut areas that you should be doing more of or that are already profitable," says Mr. Burchill.

2. Reduce supply costs by better managing vendors. Hospital leaders can reduce supply costs by working with vendors to improve contracts and encouraging physicians to make fiscally responsible supply decisions.

"When it comes to supply costs, you must drive this expense or the vendor will drive it for you," says Ms. Worsham.

Hospital leaders should not shy away from approaching vendors for discounts. Goshen's IT director recently requested a discount on the health system's contract for IT maintenance due to current economic conditions and successfully received a discount that saved the hospital 15 percent on this contract, according to Ms. Floria.

Hospitals can also reduce supply costs be reducing the number of vendors. Goshen, for example, is in the process of reducing the number of vendors in its surgical suite and aims to eventually scale the vendors down to 4-6 companies. "This action is expected to save us at least a million dollars in supply costs," says Mr. Dague.

Another way in which hospitals may reduce supply costs is by requiring vendors to submit purchase orders for any equipment or implants that are not included in a negotiated, written agreement with the facility. "All of our vendors sign agreements that any purchase orders must be submitted at least 24 hours before a procedure and must be approved by the materials manager or the CEO, or it's free," says Ms. Worsham. "If you don't require this, vendors will drop off the invoice for a pricey piece of equipment or implant after the procedure has already taken place and walk out the back door, which can greatly hurt your profitability."

3. Ensure that your OR is utilized by physicians efficiently. All hospitals can benefit from tightening up the efficiency of their operating rooms, but it is especially critical that less busy facilities ensure that their ORs are used as efficiently as possible.

"Hospitals need to review block time utilization," says Ms. Worsham. "Physicians who are assigned more time than they are using are hurting your profitability."

Ms. Worsham suggests that hospital OR managers work directly with physicians to make OR utilization more efficient.

"When physicians' schedules create gaps in the OR schedule, it effects a hospital's ability to staff effectively, which can create significant labor costs for the hospital," says Ms. Worsham.

4. Involve physicians in cost reduction efforts. Hospitals should work to encourage physicians to become more concerned about the costs of supplies and other activities, such as unnecessary tests and inefficient coding processes that may drive up hospital costs.

"Hospitals today have a unique opportunity to leverage physicians' interest in having hospitals help to stabilize their incomes with the hospitals' needs to involve physicians in cutting costs and improving quality," says Nathan Kaufman, managing director of Kaufman Strategic Advisors, a hospital consulting firm.

Hospitals can encourage the use of products from vendors that are cost-effective, but still high quality, especially in areas such as orthopedic implants, which can be considerably costly for hospitals. In addition, experts say the use of protocol-based care can reduce costs associated with unnecessary tests or treatments.

Mr. Freudenberger says that one of the biggest mistakes hospitals make is not engaging medical staff in profitability. "Physicians have a huge role in maintaining hospital profitability, but unless you give them a reason to be concerned with a hospital's profitability, they will make choices in what and to whom they refer services that will not consider the implications to the hospital," says Mr. Freudenberger. "Hospital leaders should work to help medical staff understand the connection of their referrals to the hospital's viability so that their referral decisions reflect the value they place on the hospital."

5. Consider outsourcing the management of some services. During tough economic times, some hospitals may benefit from outsourcing or partnering with other organizations for certain services, such as food and laundry services, and even, in some cases, clinical services.

"Some hospitals see these economic times as an opportunity to outsource unprofitable services," says Mr. Burchill.

By outsourcing certain services to more efficient providers, hospitals can share the savings with the service provider. However, hospitals must be sure to select truly efficient providers.

"Outsourcing is clearly a smart thing to do if an organization can gain greater efficiency through finding a larger-scale operation; however the provider must be more efficient than the hospital," says Kevin Haeberle, executive vice president, HR capital, for Integrated Healthcare Strategies.

Oftentimes, hospitals outsource services such as laundry, food and nutrition, information technology or human resources because they do not have the capital to invest in the equipment upgrades or training that is needed to increase the efficiency of their internal service. In these cases, the decision to outsource may not directly be related to profitability but instead the "lacking of funds for the investment required to make current services viable," says Mr. Haeberle. However, this decision can improve profitability in the long-run by allowing hospitals to use funds for more profitable services.

Some hospitals have also begun to outsource clinical services such as emergency room staffing and anesthesiology in an attempt to become more efficient. Because these staffing groups employ a large number of specialty physicians, they may be able to provide more efficient services, especially in clinical areas that require around-the-clock coverage where the demand for services is high.

Mike Mikhail, MD, vice president of client services for Emergency Physicians Medical Group, says that hiring an emergency department management company can help to improve the profitability of hospitals whose demand for emergency services exceeds its emergency treatment capabilities. "An emergency management group can help make the emergency department more efficient by introducing management oversight and best practices, allowing more patients to be seen and keeping others from leaving to find another hospital," he says. "Because a majority of hospital admits come from emergency walk-ins, driving more patients through an ER will create more admits, and therefore more profit for the hospital."

6. Consider partnering with local physicians to reduce competition for outpatient cases. An increasing number of hospitals are joint venturing with local physicians and surgery center management companies to offer outpatient services through the development of a surgery center.

According to Clete Walker, vice president of development for Surgical Care Affiliates, hospitals are beginning to focus on the need for a comprehensive outpatient strategy and recognizing the need to partner with doctors to effectively execute on this strategy. Mr. Walker reports that he has seen an increased interest from hospitals in joint venture arrangements for outpatient services.

"More and more hospitals are realizing that their core competency is providing inpatient care; their outpatient cases are more costly per case and take up more of the physician's and patient's time than they do at an ASC," he says. "As a result, hospitals are competing with physicians for outpatient cases. Hospitals with joint-venture agreements, however, do not have to compete with the physicians."

Hospitals can leverage their standing in the community to partner with local physicians to share the revenue generated by efficient outpatient cases.

"We are in lean times, and lean times call for us to rethink our strategies," says Mr. Walker. "It's better for physicians, hospitals and other groups to work together to provide an efficient delivery system for patient care than for the groups to compete."

7. Grow case volume by attracting new physicians to your facility.
Identifying and attracting additional physicians to bring cases to your hospital is another way that hospital leaders can increase profits. Physician-owned hospitals can bring in additional physicians as partners, while other types of facilities can recruit new physicians who are willing to perform cases at their hospitals.

"New physicians will bring in more cases and grow your profits," says Ms. Worsham.

Ms. Worsham suggests polling your medical staff for names of local physicians to target and inviting them into the facility. During the visit, Ms. Worsham recommends that hospitals work to "wow" the target physician. "We work tirelessly to promote the services we can offer them," she says.

When a new physician begins performing cases at one of Ms. Worsham's facilities, that physician is assigned a concierge. "We have strong internal programs in place for this first day. A concierge is assigned to each new physician who provides them with a tour facility and walks them through every aspect of their day," says Ms. Worsham.

8. Consider adding profitable service lines. Hospitals may also be able to grow case volume and profits by adding new service lines. However, hospitals need to be careful to do their homework on the expected profitability and ROI for any new lines added, especially in a market where access to the funds required to invest in new service lines may be tight.

"You have to look at what the market needs are and where you're going to get the referrals from," says Ms. Worsham. "Meet with local physicians and interview them about their needs and the number of cases they see that could utilize a new service."

Hospitals should also be sure to examine the competitive landscape for any new service line.

Ms. Worsham reports that her facilities have had great success from adding a hyperbaric service line because few competitor hospitals were offering this service.

9. Consider hiring hospitalists to manage inpatient care. Hospitals that use hospitalists to care for patients can benefit from the more efficient care and better documentation that specialized hospitalists can potentially provide.

"A protocol-based hospitalist program can increase efficiency and help to reduce the length of stay for patients, which can increase case volume without the need for additional beds," says Mr. Kaufman.

Hospitals should consider employing these specialists as a means to improving care and enhancing their bottom lines, according to Mr. Kaufman.

Stephen Houff, MD, president and CEO of Hospitalists Management Group, says that hospitalist groups can provide effective care to patients and possibly increase reimbursement. "Hospitalists may be the most reliable and cost-effective means available for hospital leaders to transform medical delivery in their health system," he says. "Through shared vision, an effective hospitalist team partners with hospital leadership to improve patient safety and access, streamline care, improve patient and family satisfaction, enhance reimbursement via improved clinical documentation and provide seamless transition to post-discharge care."

10. Renegotiate managed care contracts. One of the most important ways that hospitals can improve their profitability is by continually evaluating and renegotiating their managed care contracts.

"Hospitals must demand their fair share of premiums from third-party payors in order to subsidize the underpayment of Medicare and Medicaid," says Mr. Kaufman. "Hospitals need to focus on reducing their cost structure as much as possible to approach breaking even with Medicare reimbursement rates, but that only goes so far."

Mr. Kaufman recommends that hospitals only agree to contracts that reimburse at 130-140 percent of cost. "If a facility is not big enough or strong enough to get these rates, then they should look at merging with a larger facility," says Mr. Kaufman.

Ms. Worsham suggests that hospitals perform a profitability analysis by payor and by procedure in order to determine where a facility is losing money and identify any trends. She also suggests that hospitals evaluate older contracts due to changes in severity-based DRGs and carve out the reimbursement of implants in order to ensure they are reimbursed appropriately for the costs associated with these.

Ms. Worsham also suggests that hospitals evaluate contracts on a quarterly basis, even if the contract is not near expiring. She suggests that hospital leaders examine the contracts with the following questions in mind: 

•    Is revenue where we thought it would be given reimbursement rates and volume of policy holders?
•    Are we being paid as agreed upon in the contract?
•    Are we being paid in a timely manner?

Contracts that are determined to be "high risk" should be renegotiated. Make sure your contracts contains a material harm clause, which will allow you to readdress terms of contracts that have become financially harmful to the facility, according to Ms. Worsham. Renegotiating contracts can be very valuable — one hospital Ms. Worsham advises will gain $500,000 this year due to renegotiations.
Looking forward
Hospitals that focus on enacting these best practices are likely to see improvements in their profitability; however, hospitals can also benefit by using today's economic conditions as an opportunity to improve their overarching approach to business, creating a more sustainable organization in the future.

"When profits were high, hospitals had the luxury of being sloppy in some areas; now we must run a tighter ship," says Ms. Floria. "This will benefit the industry in the long-run."

Hospitals can also use this opportunity to find creative solutions to problems that plague their facilities.

Goshen Health System, for example, recently enacted a program in which the hospital pays the premium required to sustain Cobra benefits for recently laid-off patients seeking care. "We are willing to be creative with our patients," says Ms. Floria. "We pay for benefits when certain patients cannot. The revenue we receive from caring for these patients recoups this cost and provides us with additional cash flows that likely would have been uncollected or written off to charity care or bad debt."

This idea, which was enacted during lean times to improve profitability, will continue to benefit the hospital's bottom line, even when profitable times return.

source :http://www.beckershospitalreview.com

Simple discharge management can cut your hospital expenses for readmission

A perfect discharge management is required by the hospital to cut their expenses on readmission. It has seen that without any discharge protocol most of the Heart surgery patient come for readmission within a month. simple initiative can prevent this like simplifying discharge instructions;
  1. Giving patients handouts with important reminders such as taking their medications.
  2. Visiting their doctor within 14 days of their discharge 
  3. Monitoring their weight
  4. Making follow-up calls to patients with a simple phone survey 

Thursday, 25 August 2011

Simple Tips for Rural Doctor to keep their patient and market there services.

Yesterday i was thinking like ok a urban doctor can use e-mail, social media , and other way to do marketing but what about Rural doctor this question led me to contact and discuss this with some marketing experts in Healthcare field. So, For rural doctor who can use system and computer to interact with there target patient or existing patient at this time they can use just simple and very useful way like..

Post  Cards : If doctor is maintain any data base in register for name and address then he can simply send Postcard in hand written or printed in local language to patient. Also they can send follow-up messages or information regarding there disease . Post card can also be use to educate the patient, Because our ultimate aim is to build the relation ship with them. 

Gram Panchayat: Second place is Gram panchayat, lots of villagers come here for discussion at that time you can discuss about disease which currently affecting the local area, or educate them on other disease, Arrange free check-ups for villagers. 

Film : Villagers love to watch movie in their area, they watch this movie in community center or open area on curtain. At that time before movie or after movie doctors or healthcare practitioners use the time. 






Pay attention what you already have ?

Now a days all hospitals and clinics running after new patients to bring in. But they forget what they already have. It has seen that maintain your old customer is cost effective than getting new patients. I suggest first pay attention on your existing customer, give then good and affordable quality care. Followings are some simple ways a healthcare provider can do....

  •  E-mail Marketing: Send regular e-mails to your regular patients about your new services or anything which you want to share with then. 
  • Websites : Organization own website play a vital role in marketing. If your website contains good and updated Healthcare Article which can attract people to get back to read it. This will increase awareness about your hospital or organization. Make it interactive short of website so if your websites visitors can ask any question. 
  • Recall list or Follow-ups:  Inform your follow-up patient before due date. Make them feel that how important you are for them.


How you can chose the quality target market you always wanted ?


This is the very common question all doctor ask. But, doctor themselves ask this question that “What kind of patient I want into my clinic and hospital or at private practice”.  Answer is with you. Let me tell you simple strategy to know what my ideal patient target is. As you have all data of the patient with you which come to your clinic. You can simply segregate your data with following simple parameter or you can segregate as much as possible way until it give you meaning full clue. Like for example if you are a cosmetic surgeon, and you want to target a quality and perspective client for you so you already know that what kind of patient usually visits you frequently. You figure out following parameters from data.
  1. Females
  2. Married 
  3.       Working
      4. Urban area
      5. Age group 35-45
ü  
So now you have target area where you have to hit. Just do marketing to that audience which meets above criteria. Target that group of females. Arrange seminars for this age group. Advertise on that magazines which this target people reads. You can do online advertisement on those sites which mostly visited by these target group. Keep it simple.

Hospital marketing in 21st century


 Healthcare marketing has changed lot in past 10 years. Now it is not only depending on referral doctors or on cut based referral system. In a study, it has been proves that commission based referral increase the cost of hospital, it is not giving any benefit to the hospital. Now, only quality patient care is the main concern to all needy patient and common people. In this fast changing economic medical marketing is also changed a lot. There is lots of competition in Hospital or healthcare to increase footfall in the Hospital. Hospitals are also taking new way to increase foot fall or to do marketing. Hospitals are not afraid of testing new way to reach to its customer and make them aware about their services. After some research I am able to figure out some basic marketing initiative in hospitals around the globe.
Followings are some marketing strategies, hospitals can apply. 

  •     SMS
  •     Social Media Marketing (Facebook, twitter, Blogs, Google+, Search engine optimization)
  •    Patient Ambassadors
  •   Treat patient as a people not a disease.
  •   Local large society, groups, NGO etc



SMS -    (Short messaging services)

Today mobile penetration in more, almost all having mobile phone with them. SMS services plays a vital role in marketing of new services, new offering, or any kind of updates. Sending updates about your service would be good source of marketing. Whenever  patient come, make a database of new or existing patient send then updates about your services.
Social Media Marketing 

Social media become tools of marketing now a day. Everyone spend at least half an hrs on these social media, lots of friends are reading each other’s updates, shares it they feel its good news or updates. Hospitals should also open an account and updates it regularly. One bases way to use this social media is that urge your satisfied patient to write on their experience on their so other`s can read it, also share it with their friend circle. A satisfied patient is always a good conveyer of your messages. One can also post their experience on hospitals accounts.
Not only patient, your employee can also be the good source of marketing. Tell your employee shares their hospital information if any new things in happening in your hospitals. You Doctors can also do the same things. Today people rely on others information and experience.

Also you can use these tools as marketing survey. Like what people think about your organization and you can solve their query on the same time if any. 

 Patient Ambassadors’ 

This is also a very powerful tools of marketing. Patient Ambassadors is nothing but your satisfied patient’s short interview kind of videos which you can post on your website or on social media websites. These satisfied patient acts as an ambassador for your services. For example: a patient survive from massive accident you can ask them to say few words about their feeling during stay in the hospital then make this video represent able with your hospital logs.

Treat patient as a people not disease   

Just think that how do you feels when someone giving you attention, greeting you, welcomes you, ask for if you required any help. These are just simple antiquates but very powerful. Give training to your all who comes direct touch with patient start from registration department how to greet people, how to solve problem of the patient, tell them to treat them like a guest not a patient.

Local Society 

Find out large society, group in you locals. Make a health club kind of thing for them where they will get discount healthcare service from your hospital. Give healthcare education on regular basis. Give discount card to that society member.

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Four Change Agents That Will Influence Your Future Healthcare Marketing

Here’s a heads-up snapshot of four recent news items. Each of these is likely to be of growing importance on your healthcare, medical or hospital marketing horizon. We’ll be watching and writing more about:

Google takes a new swing at Facebook with Google+.

This, we predict, will be big…or at least a big battle of online titans worth watching. It seems that Google wants all of us to abandon Facebook in favor of its new social-network-and-search-engine. Google+ (“Google-plus”) is already being tested in the field, so you may have seen it. It’s a direct blast into the social media success that has been dominated by Facebook.
“At its core, Google+ is a social network. The first thing users are introduced to is the Stream. It’s much like the Facebook News Feed, allowing users to share photos, videos, links or their location with friends,” according to Mashable. “That’s where Google+ begins to diverge from Facebook, though. The focus of this social project is not on sharing with a mass group of friends, but on targeted sharing with your various social groups. To do this, Google uses a system called Circles.”
Other distinctions with Google+ include photos and group video chat, a “recommendation engine” and mobile apps for Android. We’d like to hear about your experience with Google+.

Facebook and Monster, in the meantime, take a swing at LinkedIn.

The popularity of LinkedIn has not escaped the attention of Facebook and the job-listing site Monster. To get in on the professional networking side of social media there’s a new app called BeKnown. It takes a page from LinkedIn and enables Facebook users to establish a professional network, search for jobs, and keep personal and work-related contacts and content separate. There’s more about BeKnown (available in 19 languages) here.

Who knew? Consumers prefer the title “hospital” to “medical center.”

So-called “common wisdom” isn’t always right, or so it seems with this survey. “When it comes to choosing a name—’hospital’ or ‘medical center’—consumers prefer hospital,” according to Bauman Research & Consulting LLC. “Consumers tend to associate hospitals with more services, better care, new medicine, and expert physicians, compared to medical centers’ offerings.”
Healthcare and provider organizations that took up the Medical Center moniker presumably thought that a hospital communicated an old-fashioned image and/or a medical center was a more cutting edge or broader-based facility. You’ll find more particulars in this news release.

A new consumer directory will compare quality and cost of hospitals and doctors.

“From Maine to California, medical patients can scroll over a U.S. map and find Web-based resources to help them choose a doctor or hospital in their town based on whether patients received recommended tests and treatment, the outcomes of their care, their experience with providers, or the overall cost of care,” declares the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Facility and physician directories aren’t new, and various rating, ranking or comparison systems have inspired pro-and-con debates. This format is worth watching, although similar information is available online via the Department of Health and Human Services.
We’ll be providing updates on these change agents. And for more information about using social media profitably, click through to this page at Healthcare Success.

Source: www.healthcaresuccess.com

Hospital tries marketing with patient Web logs

A North Carolina hospital is hoping to capitalize on the growing popularity of Web logs, or blogs, by turning a collection of first-person accounts of patient experiences into a marketing tool.Since March, High Point (N.C.) Regional Health System has been encouraging patients to maintain personal blogs of their thoughts, concerns and experiences while going through specific medical episodes. To date, five patients have posted blogs, describing their experiences with mini-gastric bypass procedures, prenatal care and cancer for others who might be considering High Point Regional for their own care."Research has shown that journaling, or any form of expressing your thoughts, can be very beneficial to the people going through a medical condition," High Point Regional's marketing coordinator, Aaron Wall, said. "It actually is a good exercise for them to be able to get their thoughts out." 
One lymphoma patient gave this advice for others undergoing chemotherapy: "I suggest that you request freezing spray prior to the nurse sticking you, this stops any discomfort you might feel."A gastric bypass patient described follow-up care as such: "Monday morning, I woke up feeling really crabby. My mouth felt weird. I didn't want to eat or drink anything. We drove back to High Point that afternoon for clinic to remove my staples. They came out easily and without pain. I got on the scale and found out I'd lost 10 pounds! In only 4 days! I'm still sure most of it was from that left leg."

source :http://www.computerworld.com.au
Wall said that his boss, marketing director Eric Fletcher, came up with the idea for patient blogs. "He was seeing how effectively blogs were being used in the corporate sector and saw how they could benefit patients," according to Wall. The hospital has been adding one to two new patient journals a week since mid-April. "What we hope to someday have is a blogging community that represents the whole of the community that we serve," Wall said.
Wall said he has asked clinicians and others who interact directly with patients to try to identify people who might be good candidates to blog about their experiences. Because of HIPAA privacy regulations, the marketing department does not have access to individual patient information.
"This is not a forum to discuss politics or anything like that," Wall said. Hospital staff vet entries for profanity and anything "extremely off topic," according to Wall, though he said that editing has been virtually nonexistent to date.

Caring Docs: Saluting the Good Works of Physician Community Relations Programs

We need to devote a few lines in recognition of the volunteer efforts of healthcare providers, medical industry corporations and hospitals everywhere that do good things for their community.
In the world of doctor and physician marketing and advertising, our post today is about the new mobile medical clinic of the Puget Sound Christian Clinic (PSCC). It’s a noteworthy example of a healthcare community activity that usually doesn’t get a lot of notice.
As a bit of background, PSCC began in North Seattle in 2003 through the shared vision of a small group of health care providers, according to their website. After providing medical care overseas, these providers saw an urgent need for a clinic in their local community, where more than 20 percent of the population does not have access to medical and dental care.
PSCC provides low-cost medical, dental, mental and spiritual care to low-income uninsured individuals and families. Last year, with the support of area churches, PSCC purchased a mobile medical clinic to bring healthcare services directly to communities in need in the Puget Sound region. One of this year’s pilot programs operates in Snohomish, WA.
The 40-foot mobile clinic has two separate patient rooms and a lab area, and is staffed by doctors, nurses, healthcare professionals and other volunteers. The mobile clinic—which parks weekly adjacent to supporting churches—can see up to 16 patients each week depending the number of volunteer physicians available. Among other medical services, the clinic provides check-ups and care for chronic conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure and asthma.
The non-profit PSCC is assisted by the support of many medical and healthcare organizations. For example, Northwest Hospital and Medical Center (Seattle, WA) donated approximately $65,000 in laboratory and x-ray services.
Other healthcare services are provided through partnerships with Seattle Donated Dental Services, King County Project Access, Trosvig Labs, pharmaceutical companies, LensCrafters and include lab tests, x-rays, specialty care, prescription medications and glasses, among other contributions.
We suspect that the quiet good works of most healthcare providers are routinely overshadowed in the news by national issues such as Medicare and healthcare reform. (Send us a note about other healthcare community relations projects that we might spotlight.) The PSCC mobile medical clinic is only one example of how healthcare professionals and organizations throughout the nation contribute to their community without much fanfare, public relations or acknowledgement.

www.healthcaresuccess.com

How to shop for your healthcare

Hospitals are expanding their markets by selling services directly to the public

Picture this: a photograph of adorable eight-year-old girls at the local YMCA, attired in bright red swimsuits, and holding trophies from their recent swim meet. Only there's a pause in the lineup, which is broken by the photo of a little girl in a hospital johnny clutching her stuffed Teddy bear. The caption says it all: "Where to turn when a childhood is interrupted."

The magazine advertisement, sponsored by Children's Hospital Boston, ran recently in Time and Newsweek. TV ads with a similar tag line have run on local television stations in Buffalo and Rochester, New York. The goal: to market the services of a leading Boston hospital to consumers outside of New England.

Traditionally, hospital marketing has been a regional effort, directed at local doctors and patients. But a new trend is emerging among high-profile hospitals that are looking for more patients to fill their beds.

Looking for more patients
"Hospitals that provide more sophisticated procedures are reaching out farther and farther to attract patients," says Larry Margolis, partner in the Chicago-based healthcare marketing firm Storandt Pann Margolis.Typically, he says, these are academic medical centers that provide cutting edge services that would not be available at smaller, community hospitals in cities like Buffalo. There are reasons for this increase in marketing. One is the power of the informed consumer. Rather than wait for advice from their doctors, many patients now turn to the internet to research their medical problems. These are the same individuals who might read an ad for Children's Hospital and decide, "This is where I want my child treated." Another reason is that health insurance plans have relaxed their restrictions on coverage, making it easier for consumers to go wherever they want for care. Many want to come to Boston, long known as a center of medical research and treatment.

Going national
In order to attract them, Dana-Farber/Partners Cancer Care purchased its first national advertising in U.S. News & World Report's Best Hospitals issue this past July. "We wanted to promote the fact that three of the world's leading hospitals work together to fight cancer," says Donna Walthall, director of marketing for Dana-Farber/Partners Cancer Care, explaining that DFPCC is a collaboration among Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), Dana-Farber, and Brigham and Women's Hospital. "The ad was aimed at telling consumers that these hospitals share the goal of accelerating the transfer of research from the research bench to the patient's bedside," Walthall says.

This new thrust is just a small part of any major hospital's marketing effort. Dana-Farber/Partner's primary marketing focus remains the physician. "Doctors still drive the referral process for oncology," says Walthall. She notes that DFPCC physicians are active in high-profile conferences, such as the American Society of Clinical Oncology-a gathering of more than 24,000 physicians from around the world-where they provide information on Dana-Farber's clinical trials.

"We also use it as a chance to promote our online consultation program," says Walthall. That is a service through which doctors around the globe can seek second opinions on treatment plans from Dana-Farber physicians. Partners HealthCare has begun to dip a toe into promoting its services to consumers throughout the New England market. According to Jenny Watson, spokeswoman for Partners, the healthcare group has bought television commercials promoting its cardiac services on the New England Cable News Network. Partners also purchased a print advertisement featuring its cardiac services in the New England edition of the U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals issue.

Creating a brand
All of these efforts are part of many hospitals' growing commitment to creating a "brand" for themselves, says Margolis, the healthcare marketing consultant. He sees this among academic hospitals, in particular, as they try to establish that there is an "academic difference" created with their teaching and research. Once that academic brand is established, it's easier to reach out to a wider audience.

Making its audience as wide as possible is the aim of Partners HealthCare's International Program. Partners International works collaboratively with patients, physicians, insurers, governments, and corporations to extend the benefits of medical innovation to a worldwide audience. In addition to MGH, Brigham and Women's and Dana-Farber, Partners International includes McLean Hospital, the psychiatric hospital and research institute in Belmont, and Spaulding Hospital, a leading rehabilitation hospital in Boston. Founded in 1994, the program serves more than 5,000 patients from more than 100 countries each year.

"Beyond patient care, Partners plays a key role in disseminating medical knowledge and expertise around the globe," Dr. George E. Thibault, a Partners vice president of clinical affairs, explains on a video describing Partners International. The largest not-for profit biomedical research institution in the United States, Partners conducts almost $1 billion in research annually in the fields of molecular biology and genetics, clinical trials, epidemiology, and medical-device research. In addition, 14 Nobel laureates have studied or worked at Partners affiliated institutions.

"By training foreign physicians and by publishing our work in scholarly journals, we disseminate knowledge across disciplines and across national boundaries," says Thibault. "Through the Partners International Program, we are building relationships with physicians, hospitals, businesses, and governments that share our belief in the importance of international collaboration. These collaborations are a way to exchange knowledge and expertise that go beyond traditional residency and fellowship training programs."

Among the services Partners International provides is telemedicine, which allows Partners physicians to relay timely advice and consultation on difficult cases to physicians abroad. In addition, Partners physicians travel to international hospitals and foreign doctors come to Boston for short-term programs. And Partners establishes longterm consultative partnerships to develop hospitals and integrated healthcare networks overseas.

In addition to Partners International Program, some other nationally recognized hospitals maintain international partnerships. Among them, Margolis includes the Cleveland Clinic, the Mayo Clinic in Rochester,MN, and the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

Source : http://www.boston.com


Keeping rural patients 'home' needs broad physician-hospital marketing plan

Rural physicians, especially specialists, who want their patients to stay interested in getting care near home rather than going to big cities or suburban areas must join with local hospital administrators--who often have the same concerns--and develop a comprehensive strategy to keep patients "home," says a leading health care marketing consultant.
Adrian Percy of Percy & Co. in Baton Rouge, La., explains that because hospitals in rural areas often fill more health care functions (such as main supplier of many key ancillaries) than they do in suburban or urban areas, rural and small-city physicians must work with hospital administrators on new marketing plans when both are concerned about the loss of patients to providers in more populated areas.
While most applicable in rural areas, Percy contends that the following strategic and marketing ideas are applicable anywhere, including suburbs and cities, to rejuvenate a hospital and its affiliated medical practices. Percy's firm serves hospitals and their medical-staff groups mainly in Louisiana and Florida.
If a rural area loses its hospital, physicians there will find it difficult to hold on to patients for purposes other than primary care, he explains, because patients having more sophisticated needs will view the physician as having limited capabilities. Losing a hospital is a real possibility, he adds, citing eight to 10 closures over the last 10 or 15 years in the rural parishes (counties) surrounding Baton Rouge. Hospitals in all locations have lower profit margins today than they had in the mid-1990s.
In general, Percy says, hospitals with fewer than about 150 beds can have a difficult time holding onto their local patients in today's business environment--and physicians who serve those hospitals lose patients as well. Such hospitals need strong marketing plans, he contends.
The costs of putting together such plans usually are borne by the hospitals, he notes. For physicians, the main "costs" are time and a willingness to work creatively with hospital managers and bury old disagreements that often stand between the doctors and the managers.

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