It is a common phenomenon in the healthcare industry
for medical practices to struggle with collecting their patient
obligations. Its not that you as the doctor didn't provide quality
healthcare or the patient was dissatisfied with your service.
Unfortunately medical bills get put on the back burner because
generally speaking, the mortgage payment, car payment and other various
bills have top priority by a lot of consumers. Having a patient payment
plan in place can make the patient obligation more affordable, which
means they are more likely to pay.
Is offering a patient payment
plan a smart business move from a medical practices point of view?
According to Dallas L Alford IV, CPA and President of Atlantic
Financial Consulting, a medical billing firm in Wilmington, North
Carolina, there are benefits to offering a payment plan.
The
first benefit is that you will establish loyalty with your existing
patients. An example of this may be a geriatric practice whose patient
base consists of older patients that are more than likely on a fixed
income. These patients have every intention of paying but may not be
able to afford their bill. If you offer them a favorable payment plan,
you can guarantee they will pay their balance and will be back to see
you again since they need your services. They will more than likely
tell their friends and family about your practice, which will in turn
further increase your patient base and revenue.
The next benefit
is you will increase your patient base and revenue since you will
continue to see patients that are enrolled in your payment plan. A lot
of practices have a policy in place that they refuse to see patients
that have an outstanding balance. While this type of policy is
understandable and you may end up collecting 100% of your patient
obligation with such a policy, you may also limit the number of repeat
patients that visit your practice. Let's compare the numbers of a
practice that has this type of policy versus a practice that has a
payment plan in place. The practice without the payment plan may be
collecting 100% of $125,000 while the practice with the payment plan is
only collecting 98% of $200,000. The first practice may be collecting
100% of their patient balances but has fewer patients while the second
practice is only collecting 98% of its patient balances but has more
patients due to the availability of a payment plan. You have to ask
yourself what is better for your practice, collecting 100% of $100,000
or 98% of $200,000?
The key to a successful payment plan is to
minimize your practice's risk and headache associated with
administering the plan. To improve cash flow for your practice, ask the
patient to pay as much as possible up front and collect the remaining
amount via an automatic payment plan that drafts the patient’s checking
account for a predetermined monthly amount. This type of service can be
done in-house or handled by a third party billing service.
The
bottom line is patients are becoming more responsible for healthcare
costs due to such insurance plans as health savings accounts and those
practices that can adapt will grow their patient base and increase
their revenue.
Dallas
L Alford IV, CPA is a licensed Certified Public Accountant in the state
of North Carolina and owner of Atlantic Financial Consulting, a firm
which specializes in assisting medical practices with outsourcing their
insurance billing and collection of patient accounts receivable.
To learn more about Atlantic Financial Consulting, you may visit their website at http://atlanticfinancial.us or contact Dallas L Alford IV, CPA at 1 888-428-2555, Ext. 200.