For all your private medical practice needs

pete@medicalhealthcaremanagement.co.uk

01902 280 442

Hilton Hall, Hilton Lane, Wolverhampton, WV11 2BQ

To successfully perform medical invoicing or medical billing there has to be a degree of focus on the task itself.

In fact, there has to be a total concentration on the expected outcome. But what is the outcome

Outcome

The outcome is always the same.

Getting an invoice paid.

The total focus must be applied to this outcome.

Making sure the private consultant surgeon is paid is the task and therefore total focus must be on that. The problem arises when the total focus is not possible.

For example: in the middle of invoicing for 12 consultations and 4 medical episodes the telephone rings.

More often than that, however, is an email alert pinging up! Worse still the person responsible for medical billing decides, as they don’t really enjoy doing that specific task, to do something else.

A major distraction from focus is other people’s demands.

MHM once had a client who called 8 times within 35 minutes.

He afterward complained his medical billing wasn’t being done speedily enough.

It didn’t take a genius to work out that the 8 phone calls were a total distraction from raising the very invoices he expected to be raised.

Distractions

It doesn’t really matter what the distraction is even though with modern technology advancing so much over the years, the likelihood of distractions has increased ten-fold.

For example, I may be in the middle of a task and my mobile pings to say an email has arrived.

A phone may also ping because a text has arrived.

The opportunity for distraction(s) is enormous. Yet these distractions can remove focus from the planned outcome.

They can stop processing an invoice correctly, resolving an issue that is preventing an invoice getting paid or they can even stop an invoice being raised in the first place.

Blessing in disguise

Modern technology is great.

It enables MHM to communicate with its clients speedily and efficiently.

Clients can provide data to MHM equally efficiently. It also enables MHM to raise invoices electronically and deliver them at the push of a button.

But it can also be a blessing in disguise if MHM were to let it distract from the job in hand.

Thus it is worth repeating that the planned out is for the private medical professional to get paid.

That is what MHM is there for; nothing else.

If the technology on occasion stops that, then remove the technology for a while.

Ignore the technology

This may sound revolutionary but in the real world, ignoring technology when the technology actually prevents achieving the planned outcome is not as silly as it sounds.

For example: when I’m raising medical invoices for a client – every single morning invoices are processed at MHM – I switch my email off.

Thus there are no distractions caused by emails arriving.

Before anyone raises the question of an email being important, may I suggest that in reality whilst emails may be important seldom are they time critical? They are normally requests for data or asking a question.

All three examples are important but they are not, despite what people may claim, time critical.

Cut yourself off

My favourite example of this is the person who was tasked with locating new premises for MHM.

She emailed me one-morning last year but when I didn’t immediately respond, telephoned to confirm if I had received her email.

This despite the instruction to email details to me and being advised I would respond later that week.

As she couldn’t even follow that instruction, she immediately lost the opportunity of finding new offices!

The world will not end and a private medical practice won’t immediately collapse if an email, a phone call or even a text are not immediately responded to.

That is not to say a patient inquiry should not be immediately answered.

In the case of a patient calling then absolutely they should. Have someone designated to answer the phone.

It looks awful if a patient calls and the phone isn’t answered.

But don’t have the same person responsible for medical billing AT THE SAME TIME for if you do the phone calls and/emails will provide the distraction to caused the planned outcome to be missed.

Remember to focus.

Medical billing is not the easiest thing to do in the world.

It requires concentration and attention to detail.

If the outcome is expected to be prompt payment of an invoice for medical services, the focus should be directed to just that. You know what happens if I switch my email off during the morning or I have the text alert set to silent? Nothing.

Except I raise numerous invoices for clients, resolve issues with insurance companies and make sure MHM clients are paid.

pete@medicalhealthcaremanagement.co.u