The Challenge: Three large health systems in the Midwest were trapped in a counterproductive cycle. Efforts to minimize payer denials by adopting payer criteria, selectively appealing cases, and prioritizing A/R days led to an unsustainable financial situation. Nearly half of all long-stay patients were reimbursed as outpatient stays due to attempts to remove friction in the authorization and denials process. This approach significantly reduced reimbursement rates without offering a clear resolution, creating a critical need for change.
Strategic Approach: Recognizing the unsustainable trajectory, each health system embarked on a journey to reclaim the patient status decision-making process, despite the risk of increased denials. A key move was to form a steering committee encompassing finance, compliance, IT/Analytics, revenue cycle, and clinical leadership. This committee was charged with agreeing on a new approach and understanding its implications.
The three large Midwest Health systems decided to resist payer influence by establishing strategies that accepted payer friction as a necessary dynamic to enhance reimbursement. This shift was underpinned by:
- Collaboration among corporate leadership across finance, clinical, and compliance sectors.
- Partnering with local leaders to foster change and adopt system-wide consistency.
- Establishing benchmarks, targets, and KPIs to gauge the initiative’s impact.