Black Book Rankings: 25 top RCM outsourcing vendors

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/black-book-rankings-25-top-rcm-outsourcing-vendors.html

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Black Book Rankings has released its 2016 rankings of financial and revenue cycle management systems and services.

Here are the top five vendors included in the rankings across five different outsourcing categories.

12 hospitals planning facility upgrades, expansions

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/facilities-management/12-hospitals-planning-facility-upgrades-expansions-92216.html

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Big Ten produced the most sitting CFOs: 5 things to know

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/big-ten-produced-the-most-sitting-cfos-5-things-to-know.html

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The Big Ten Conference has produced more sitting CFOs of Fortune 500 and S&P 500 companies than any other undergraduate university conference, with 75 sitting CFOs who attended Big Ten universities for their undergraduate education, according to a Crist | Kolder Associates report.

Here are five findings from the report.

21 statistics on high-deductible health plans

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/21-statistics-on-high-deductible-health-plans.html

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4 best practices for managing patient billing complaints

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/4-best-practices-for-managing-patient-billing-complaints.html

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Root causes of billing complaints
Healthcare reform has transformed how hospitals conduct business. Due to shifts in cost sharing, a larger portion of many hospitals’ reimbursement now comes from patients rather than commercial payers. This means hospitals are interfacing more than ever with consumers to collect. Many hospitals’ revenue cycles are struggling to meet today’s financial demands and consumer expectations due to a confluence of factors, from historic underinvestment to administrative burden.

Many Americans who gained healthcare coverage under the Affordable Care Act are unfamiliar with what their health insurance entails. The first time some policyholders hear about deductibles, co-pays, co-insurance or benefits is when an unanticipated hospital bill shows up in their mail. In fact, consumers’ No. 1 billing complaint is that hospital employees did not explain how much their medical care would cost, says Ms. Prince.

The shock of an unexpected expense can destabilize the patient-hospital relationship and reduce satisfaction rates. A 2013 survey by TransUnion found nearly 70 percent of patient respondents who gave the highest ratings to their quality of care during the past two years also gave high ratings to their billing and payment experiences, compared to only 24 percent of those who gave low ratings to their quality of care. This has made customer satisfaction a strategic priority for hospitals as clinical outcomes and HCAHPS scores are increasingly linked to reimbursement rates.

Negative financial interactions also have a direct effect on hospitals’ cash flow. A 2016 study by Connance found 74 percent of satisfied patients paid their medical bills in full, compared to 33 percent of their lesser satisfied counterparts. Intermittent or unreliable cash flow can harm a hospital’s ability to respond to changing market conditions, putting an organization at a disadvantage in the transition to value-based care.

Many patients lodge complaints about the length of time between services rendered and when they get a bill in the mail, says Ms. Prince. The number of days an account is in days not final billed is a great indicator of revenue cycle efficiency. High claims denial rates and slow adjudication processes can delay patient billing for up to four months or longer. “Hospitals forecast receiving patient payments within a certain timeframe,” says Ms. Prince. When patients don’t get bills on time, hospitals likely won’t get paid on time, she says.

In recent years, hospital revenue cycles have struggled to remain efficient under a mountain of new regulations and reporting measures implemented by the ACA. Because of the increased demand for documentation under ICD-10, physicians are required to perform clinical and time-intensive administrative duties with no increase in compensation, says Ms. Prince. Tedious, administrative tasks can slow down the claims submission and billing process, causing patients to receive bills later than anticipated.

Survey: Hospitals saw 10% increase in self-pay dollars in past 5 years

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/survey-hospitals-saw-10-increase-in-self-pay-dollars-during-past-5-years.html

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With the rising popularity of high-deductible health plans, hospital and health system executives know they must find effective ways of communicating with patients about their financial responsibility and develop strategies to ensure proper payment. Many executives have made strides in these areas, but there is still room for improvement, according to a Healthcare Financial Management Association survey sponsored by Parallon.

HFMA researchers surveyed 117 senior finance executives and revenue cycle leaders to examine their organizations’ self-pay processes and patient financial engagement efforts.

Here are six survey findings:

5 hospitals with strong finances

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/5-hospitals-with-strong-finances-september22.html

Market Power

Here are five hospitals and health systems with strong operational metrics and solid financial positions based on recent reports from Moody’s Investors Service, Fitch Ratings and S&P Global Ratings.

Note: This is not an exhaustive list. Health system names were compiled from recent credit rating reports. Systems are listed in alphabetical order.

Remember The ‘Public Option’? Insurance Commissioner Wants To Try It In California

Remember The ‘Public Option’? Insurance Commissioner Wants To Try It In California

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With major insurers retreating from the federal health law’s marketplaces, California’s insurance commissioner said he supports a public option at the state level that could bolster competition and potentially serve as a test for the controversial idea nationwide.

“I think we should strongly consider a public option in California,” Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones said in a recent interview with California Healthline. “It will require a lot of careful thought and work, but I think it’s something that ought to be on the table because we continue to see this consolidation in an already consolidated health insurance market.”

Nationally, President Barack Obama and other prominent Democrats have revived the idea of the public option in response to insurers such as Aetna Inc. and UnitedHealth Group Inc. pulling back from the individual insurance market and many consumers facing double-digit rate hikes.

The notion of a publicly run health plan competing against private insurers in government exchanges was hotly debated but ultimately dropped from the Affordable Care Act when it passed in 2010.

Health insurers have long opposed the idea, and other critics fear it would lead to a full government-run system

Dignity faces losses, liabilities and growing competition

http://www.bizjournals.com/sacramento/news/2016/09/23/dignity-faces-losses-liabilities-growing-competiti.html?utm_campaign=CHL%3A+Daily+Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=34808183&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8h_HMsvU2q90cDf3SnJ-eaFudwaRvjHdmz71VBVsoXo-Lvrdj1o4cfL_kDlmCYzaF_Sme8cV_fA6ymPj7my5BB8Nj3gw&_hsmi=34808183

The area’s third-largest private-sector employer faces financial challenges that could lead to cuts in its local workforce of 7,800, observers say