Summer InBusiness

November 4, 2008

FOCUS ON THE PRACTICE MANAGEMENT PROCESS

Like Focusing On The Clinical Process

Kathleen D. Schaum, MS

Not a day goes by that this author doesn’t receive a phone call or e-mail from a concerned wound care professional working in a hospital-owned wound clinic. The number of questions about the practice management process gives the perception that wound care professionals may not be given adequate orientation, education, and mentoring necessary to manage wound care practices. To verify this perception that wound care professionals may need to increase their knowledge about the ‘business of wound care,’ the author contacted a sampling of several different types of wound management companies and interviewed them about this topic. See Table I for the top 10 practice management issues that these wound management companies encounter. If any of these issues exist within the wound care clinic, be sure to request guidance and assistance from the administrator.
When some of the wound management companies were asked to identify the reasons that hospitals seek practice management assistance, the following reasons were given:
• Fear of failure
• Lack of knowledge/experience in wound care operations process; wound care is a specialty that requires a concentrated focus that includes evidence-based clinical guidelines, reimbursement, initial and ongoing education
• Lack of time and resources of a team dedicated to developing the operations side of the business
• Worried about billing correctly
• Minimize start-up costs
• Need assistance to bring physicians and hospital together
• Lack of marketing expertise
With these issues in mind, hospitals that are starting a wound care program from scratch, upgrading to a physician-driven clinic, or attempting to revamp a failing wound care clinic must focus on the practice management processes just like they focus on the clinical practice processes. Some hospitals can accomplish this work without any outside assistance. Other hospitals may need several days/weeks/months of assistance from one or more outside consultants to assist their staff in identifying and/or implementing steps to improve their practice management process. Still, other hospitals may prefer to transfer the entire burden of developing and/or managing the wound care clinic to an outside consulting firm. Regardless of who manages your outpatient wound clinic, certain steps can lead to success. See Table II
for the main steps to practice
management success.

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