If your practice is like so many others, the telephones ring constantly. Because the telephone requires synchronous communication -- the practice and the patient must be on the line at the same time -- it is inherently inefficient and has long been a source of frustration for practices and patients alike. Yet the telephone is the most frequently used means of communication for patients to access your medical practice. With high volume -- and high expectations -- the telephone is an area ripe for opportunity. This book gives ...
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If your practice is like so many others, the telephones ring constantly. Because the telephone requires synchronous communication -- the practice and the patient must be on the line at the same time -- it is inherently inefficient and has long been a source of frustration for practices and patients alike. Yet the telephone is the most frequently used means of communication for patients to access your medical practice. With high volume -- and high expectations -- the telephone is an area ripe for opportunity. This book gives you the tools you need to take charge of your telephones so you can: Optimize patient access Measure your telephones to understand their current performance Improve the management of each type of call you receive in your practice Staff your telephones to ensure that you have the right number and skill mix of staff Use telephone scripts and tools for message-taking and callbacks to optimize customer service Select a telephone system and its related components to fully leverage technology Prepare for mixed-channel communication with patients, such as texting, e-mail, and Web portal Assess whether you need a consolidated call center, and if so, design and implement one that is right for your practice The telephone is a critical access point that requires appropriate staffing and management to provide value -- high quality at low cost. Indeed, in some medical practices, more care is provided and/or coordinated via the telephone than ever before. Nurse triage and advice, case management, health coaching, patient navigation, and telehealth are expanding to provide patients with new access channels for care. In addition, patient expectations regarding service and turnaround times associated with the telephones are heightened, with patients requesting answers to their questions now. Gone are the days of patients telephoning the practice and being transferred directly to voicemail, which is checked only a few times durin
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