4 Key Trends to Affect Healthcare Significantly in 2020

Dec 14, 2020

4 Key Trends to Affect Healthcare Significantly in 2020

December 29, 2019
Brian Robertson
Healthcare finance sub-trends that will make a significant impact on healthcare in the new year.

It’s that time of year again where everyone seems to want to tap into their internal Nostradamus and make predictions for the upcoming year.

Often these prognosticators are given to wild speculation, predicting the healthcare equivalent of a future filled with flying cars. But when it comes to healthcare finance, it’s important for the predictions to be grounded in reality.

For example, it would be easy to predict this is the year value care or fee-for-value (FFV) in all its iterations begins to replace fee-for-service (FFS) as the dominant payment system. But it’s unlikely to happen for one simple reason: the soup is only half cooked. Nearly everything in healthcare takes time. And while the alignment of incentives to deliver high quality care at optimized costs is continuously, yet gradually improving, FFS remains much easier to administer. Payments for value can be highly complex.

With that in mind, there are several healthcare finance sub-trends I believe will make a significant impact on healthcare in 2020.

Here are four:

  1. Self-pay solutions and analytics will play a bigger role in the healthcare finance ecosystem.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 45% of Americans aged 18-64 who have employer-based insurance now have high-deductible health plans (HDHPs). That percentage is expected to continue to grow over the next few years, which means providers and payers will need to have an atomic level understanding of the financial aspects of their patient/guarantor portfolios.

    Related: Technology-related Predictions for 2020

    They will also need to get really good really fast at understanding how to get patients to pay “an affordable” share of cost. Affordability, propensity, and ability to pay all require deep segmentation and analytics. That understanding will come through advanced analytics, powered by data science and machine learning, designed to find the “sweet spot” of optimal payment/liquidity. Equally important is offering patients payment options that are most convenient including Venmo, PayPal, and other mobile payment platforms.

    Study after study indicates patients/guarantors want a clear, rational understanding of how much they owe and what options they have to pay it. The providers and payers who succeed will be the ones who can deliver clear and, dare I say, rational pricing in the eyes of the healthcare consumer/patient.

    Providers and health plans must also understand as deductibles and coinsurance continue to go up, many patients are delaying or foregoing care due to the cost. That goes completely against the goals of value care, with its focus on long-term health outcomes.

    Providers and payers will need analytics to determine how to help make healthcare affordable for all their populations. Providers in particular will need to develop payment plans that work and continue to make payment available simple and easy at the point of care/sale.

  2. Denial Management will increasingly be driven by advanced analytics.

    Denials are the bane, or supervillains, of healthcare providers’ existence. At any given time, as much as 40% of providers’ accounts receivable (A/R) portfolio is in some state of denial placing tremendous stress on full realization of net patient revenue. With more of a provider’s revenue already at-risk due to patient self-pay, it becomes more important than ever to avoid denials to the greatest extent possible. Especially given that only two-thirds of denials are recoverable but 90% are preventable.

    The more providers deeply understand why their claims are being denied with very granular root-cause understanding, the more they can solve things upstream and systemically including training all staff involved in the claim cycle.

    Deep root cause understanding often provides important information on ensuring continuous enhancements to systems of records, related software, and sub-systems such as EDI Claim Scrubbers.

    Advanced Analytics can also give providers insights into clinical and medical necessity type denials so health plans and providers can come to a mutual understanding faster. With deep and comprehensive longitudinal analytics, providers can demonstrate conclusively they are meeting the terms of their contract and can hold health plans accountable for paying negotiated reimbursement in a timely manner. In addition, deep analytics allows both sides to have data and insights to design more meaningful value for their patients/members.

    This, incidentally, is where robotic process automation (RPA) driven by artificial intelligence (AI) can be a game-changer. With manual processing, revenue cycle staff often have to review every denied claim and with far too much time spent to research problems, it’s a time-consuming, expensive and laborious process still prone to error. Intelligent Process Automation, where advanced analytics and RPA work in harmony has tremendous potential to better automate significant portions of the claim resolution lifecycle.

  3. We all live in a data economy now and big data will continue to mature.

    Healthcare organizations overall will continue to take more advantage of big data in 2020. That being said, it will still be managed in different parts of the organization rather than becoming totally or perfectly centralized.

    Great analytics is about driving action and has little to do with technology. The real value of analytics is about driving data driven outcomes rooted in deep understanding of business problems, understanding many complex use cases where problems often arise, and how things really work within the organization.

    That knowledge is still most often at the departmental or team level, which means for the organization to get good at big data and analytics the individual departments must get good at it. Either on their own or by working with a partner that is good at all the components required to work with and most importantly take meaningful action on big data.

  4. AI will become increasingly important for productivity and revenue optimization.

    Much of the value of AI and ML is in its ability to spot patterns in data that a human might miss, and at tremendous volumes/scale with continuous and ongoing decision-making improvements as it accumulates more “experience.” Put simply, AI learns from every closed account whether paid at full reimbursement with no issues and every other iteration of payment discrepancy.

    Humans can spend a lot of time reviewing a claim to determine why it was denied. Once its knowledge base is built, AI can do the same work in seconds. It can also group similar claims together, which means instead of calling about problems with each claim individually, providers can make calls about batches of many claims that have the same issue. That not only saves time and cost, (including reducing the number of people needed to call about claims) but helps providers recover reimbursement faster that may have been lost otherwise.

    Through machine learning, AI gets better and faster at going right to the source of issues based on past performance. For example, if a provider has a batch of denials because of errors in claim mapping or missing information, which may have impacted a very large batch of claims, AI is always learning from this experience and can be trained to look for other relationships and problems with better insights to ensure continuous process or system improvements in the claim lifecycle.

    Healthcare still has a long way to go before we can ensure high quality and affordable outcomes for all. However, 2020 definitely holds promise for some leapfrog moments.

    Brian Robertson is CEO and founder of Visiquate and has been a passionate pioneer and evangelist of the power of Big Data analytics as a force to disrupt the economics and quality of healthcare in the most positive way. After two decades of democratizing data and putting it in the hands of the people who need it most, he begins every day with the same boundless passion to help today’s enterprise compete and win on analytics.

Karie Bostwick

VP of People and Compliance

As VP of People and Compliance at Revenue Enterprises, Karie Bostwick oversees People functions including recruiting, training, onboarding, engagement and satisfaction. Additionally, she is responsible for compliance training, oversight and monitoring.

Karie has a long history of working in the revenue cycle support industry. Her skills span leadership, operations start up, policies and procedures development, operations workflow, budgeting and client management.

She is passionate about the experience of our people, patients and the Healthcare clients we serve and believes that a team of diverse, talented and motivated individuals working together toward a common goal can make a difference.

Robert Sterett

VP of Information Technology

As a transformational leader Robert Sterrett has leveraged his 20 years of experience to build effective service lines and exceptional teams. In his role as VP of Information Technology at Revenue Enterprises, Robert excels at taking a unique, balanced, and strategic approach to technology leadership with people first for the best possible outcome. Using his experience from engineering, project management and service line management he takes a multi-faceted approach to ensure the right people are in the correct position coupled with the best technology to meet or exceed all expectations from security to compliance and business continuity.

Robert’s leadership style lends itself to building long term relationships and has consistently been a relied upon strength in many organizations. Over Robert’s time as an IT operational and project leader, he has spent significant time in both hands-on technology facing roles and client centric management roles to bring the best solutions that strive to meet the business and client needs.

Focusing heavily on his personal development skills and opportunities, Robert continues to foster coaching and mentorship relationships everywhere in his life, and the lives around him.

Douglas Dunbar

VP of Sales & Marketing

As VP of Sales and Marketing for Revenue Enterprises, Douglas Dunbar leads with a passion for building strategic partnerships, nurturing relationships, and upholding customer service excellence. In his role, Doug focuses on marketing and brand strategy, sales team leadership, and working closely with members of the management team to best serve company goals.

Doug has over 28 years of National sales and marketing call/contact center leadership, with 10 years of service specifically at Revenue Enterprises. Currently, Doug serves as part of Wyoming HFMA Chapter leadership and has held various roles in Colorado HFMA Chapter leadership for over 9 years.

In his spare time, Doug is very family oriented. Additionally, he loves traveling, cycling, golfing, fishing, hunting, and boating.

Kris Brumley, MBA

SVP/COO

As SVP/COO of Revenue Enterprises, Kris Brumley is a collaborative partner within the executive team and a leader for operational functions across the organization. Kris productively shares vision, drives innovation, and supports those around her in a way that elevates them and fosters continuous improvement and results. She has helped create a supportive environment for clients resulting in 98% client retention and a 65% NPS score for all clients and 75% for top clients by revenue.

Kris possesses an MBA in data analytics and has twenty-five years of experience in the healthcare industry, with 19 specifically in revenue cycle. She brings a wealth of customer service experience to her role and has worn many hats at Revenue Enterprises including Director of Business Development, EBO Division Director, and VP of Client Experience Management.

In her personal life, Kris is as busy outside of work as inside. She values spending time with her family, and enjoys fishing, hiking, traveling and interior decorating and design.

Timothy (Tim) Brainerd

CEO

As CEO of Revenue Enterprises for almost 20 years, Tim Brainerd leads by example. He promotes a shared vision and stewards a culture of Integrity, Passion, and Respect. He has assembled and empowered high-performing talent and teams to support customers, facilitate strategic planning and manage the capital of the company. Under his leadership, Revenue Enterprises has doubled in size three times over the past fifteen years while maintaining a culture of caring and gratefulness.

Tim has close to four decades of revenue cycle experience, including nineteen years with RSI
Enterprises. He has been a past president of Colorado Chapter of the HFMA and a presenting speaker on the topic of Leadership. He is a fifteen-year member of Vistage International, the world’s largest CEO coaching and peer advisory organization for small and midsize business leaders.

Raised in the Midwest, Tim values humble principles like being respectful, caring, passionate, self-reliant, and most importantly grateful. His most important lesson and the lesson he hopes to pass on in all relationships is living the Golden Rule–do unto others as you would have them do unto you. He is intentional in his choices and believes in making decisions, taking action, being accountable, and loving your neighbors.

Whenever possible, Tim spends his time with his wife of nearly forty years, his adult children, and his grandchildren. His hobbies include fishing, golfing, traveling as well as game nights and sharing great food with his family.