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Readers Write: Shame on Health IT

June 16, 2013 Readers Write 9 Comments

Shame on Health IT
By Tom Furr

I’m willing to bet were I to ask anyone even remotely associated with healthcare IT, that person would wax poetically about how collective efforts are helping to advance the speed and quality of healthcare. I’d hear boasts of breakthroughs in all areas of medicine, drug discovery, imaging, lab procedures, and surgery as well as recovery and rehabilitation methods.

Be it ambulatory- or hospital-based care, all those advancements have made a big impact on the care and treatment of the patient. I can find nothing wrong with initiatives that yield a faster, better end result for any man, woman, or child who requires medical treatment.

Why, then, after having benefitted from 21st century state-of-the-art healthcare, does the patient get time-warped back to the 1950s when it comes to providing the bill? If the last impression left with a patient after receiving state-of-the-art care is an antiquated management and billing process, could s/he not question everything that’s happened in the examining room?

My point is simple: shame on the health IT industry as the advancements made on the clinical side of patient care have far outpaced the comparably meager improvements that have been made on the financial side. Don’t deny it, especially when you know that healthcare providers have played a major role in maintaining the existence of the US Postal Service, printer companies, toner suppliers, envelope makers, and a bunch of related entities.

Yes, shame for not embracing technology on the business side with the same determination so dramatically shown on the clinical side. What’s worse, the underpinnings for an automated patient bill and balance management system has been in place almost as long as practice management software has helped run practices, from the individual doctor to multi-office physician groups and multi-state hospital networks.

The need for every software vendor and billing company to get to the point where they are actually helping the patient manage and meet her/his financial obligations is very great and very much of the here and now. Not to mention the disservice that they are doing to the very clients who they claim to help … by not providing a tool to help medical practices keep their accounts receivable in check and drive them towards profitability instead of languishing with large back office overhead.

The high deductible health plan (HDHP) isn’t going away. Rather it is only going to grow, bringing with it change that must be dealt with in the business offices of healthcare providers and the homes of all their patients. The shift of the primary payment responsibility coming from the health insurer to an even split with that organization and the patient is here now and not helping practices collect those balances is negligent on health IT’s part.

As a practice’s A/R gets out of hand, one of two things will happen: the practice will be sold, either to a large physicians’ group or a hospital, or the doctor takes down her/his shingle and ends a career. Either way, the practice management software vendor and/or the billing company lose a customer.

But it doesn’t have to be that way.  Unless, of course, you want to continue to keep medical business offices operating like it’s still “Happy Days.”  Keep that attitude and there’s a good chance your company won’t be happy or healthy, especially if it makes practice management software.

Tom Furr is founder and CEO of PatientPay of Durham, NC.



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Currently there are "9 comments" on this Article:

  1. All these high and mighty CEOs (Tom, Edmund, Neil, …) calling “shame” down on this industry for whatever transgression their widget seeks to improve.

    Get serious.

    Tom, shame on you for slacking so long and not inventing your widget sooner. How could you have let us all suffer so long. Shame. Shame on you Tom.

    And by the way, you medical professionals out there – yeah, you too Suzy – why haven’t you people cured cancer yet. Why do I have to watch friends and loved ones die such horrible deaths while you sit around and laze away your summer afternoons with an ice tea in your hands or a beer from the golf cart lady. Shame. Shame on you. (shouldn’t even call yourselves professionals – you should be embarrassed)

    Shame on the whole darn lot of us!

  2. @ Not Tired of Suzy RN….all you do is gripe and complain. I remember wise words from a teacher in 3rd grade, you can’t complain unless you offer a solution to your complaint.

  3. According to the USPS 60% of people are paying their bills online today. Can you tell me that the HIT industry is doing better than that? They’re not and yes there are solutions out there that modernize healthcare billing that aren’t being adopted.

  4. While we’re looking to put blame & shame on vendors and providers (which I admit are not blameless) I do not see you placing any blame on the entity that created all the payment and billing complexity. Our friendly, snoopy, contradictory GOVERNMENT!

    Doctors and hsopitals did not create Medicare /Medicaid…as I recall it was Congress. And those insane billing requirements all came out of DH&SS (now called CMS).

    And if you push the dagger back far enough, who told Congress to create Medicare? Oh, the people that elected them. Moral to the story, what goes around comes around.
    You can’t expect providers to clear this quagmire alone (with or without your software).

  5. Thank you all for these constructive comments from both a negative and positive perspective. The purpose of this article was not to raise blame for the past but instead to raise the question as to why we continue to accept the past versus make a change. As John Kennedy was quoted as saying:

    “The problems of the world cannot possibly be solved by skeptics or cynics, whose horizons are limited by the obvious realities. We need men who can dream of things that never were, and ask why not.”

    All involved in HIT billing have an opportunity to recognize the opportunity or continue to accept the norm. If you would like to continue this discussion offline or learn how we are addressing via our innovative solution which has received 3 patents, I can be reach at 919.794.8080 or at tf@patientpay.com.

    Sincerely,

    Tom Furr

  6. Just another article that seeks to just create new business – expected a little more from this forum.

  7. Great title for the post…. it attracts attention but unfortunately the content was not what many of us are looking for.







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