Personalizing Healthcare: Strategies to Drive Patient Engagement and Financial Impact Podcast Por  arte de portada

Personalizing Healthcare: Strategies to Drive Patient Engagement and Financial Impact

Personalizing Healthcare: Strategies to Drive Patient Engagement and Financial Impact

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In this episode, Casey Williams, SVP of Patient Engagement at RevSpring, discusses personalizing healthcare, strategies to drive patient engagement, and financial impact. Highlights of this episode include: What RevSpring does and the difference it makes for healthcare organizationsBiggest challenges healthcare organizations face when trying to protect their finances while also helping patientsPersonalization and how it impacts patients and providersPractical strategies for meeting patients where they are financiallyRevSpring’s approachWhat trends or innovations that will shape healthcare communications and finance Kelly Wisness: Hi, this is Kelly Wisness. Welcome back to the award-winning Hospital Finance Podcast. We’re pleased to welcome Casey Williams. Casey leads solution consulting and sales efforts for new direct healthcare customers at RevSpring. He has 20 years of experience in developing customized patient engagement and payment solutions for over 100 healthcare revenue cycle clients. His knowledge of patient engagement strategies, including self-service optimization, has made him an advocate for change for RevSpring clients and the wide healthcare revenue cycle market. In this episode, we’re discussing personalizing healthcare, strategies to drive patient engagement, and financial impact. Welcome, and thank you for joining us, Casey. Casey Williams: Kelly, thanks for having us. We appreciate it. Kelly: Yeah, we’re glad to have you here. So, let’s go ahead and jump in. So, Casey, can you tell us about your background? And how did you end up in your position at RevSpring? Casey: Yeah, it’s a great question, Kelly. I think by default is probably the most honest answer. Coming out of Bowling Green State University, studying interpersonal communication, there was nothing that screamed healthcare finance from that background. But actually, I think kind of started as most people start their jobs or their careers where I had a friend working in a company, a smaller company, at that time called Data Image. And they had just had some transition in their sales environment. And the owner, founder had asked me to join. And that kind of began the path into communication, payments, and engagement overall. And really started at that smaller company involved in the hospitals in and around central Ohio and then expanded into the greater Midwest. But really got a great appreciation for when you’re a small company at that time, you not only position what the value is, but when you do that successfully, then you actually do the setup or the implementation, and then you service it. And then when there’s a billing question, you’re actually the finance arm as well. So, I was very blessed to be able to have such exposure at such a young time in my career to where I got a lot of different experiences within that and have just enjoyed it ever since. And we at RevSpring, which Data Image then sold into what then became RevSpring in 2010– and we’ve continued to acquire value across the market in how we are trying to build our technology stack today. So, by happenstance, I got into it, but I have been fully immersed and fully engaged ever since. Kelly: That’s awesome. It’s great how those things happen. For someone who isn’t– for someone who isn’t familiar, how would you describe what RevSpring does and the difference it makes for healthcare organizations? Casey: Yeah, Kelly, it’s a great question. I think the most simplistic answer to that question and one that I get from my kids all the time is they see me going into hospitals and thought for many years that I was a doctor. And then at one time, we had an office inside a bank, and then they thought I was a banker. So, I practiced this answer a lot over the years. But primarily, we are a patient engagement and communication company with an emphasis on payments. And the sense of this is that when patients need services, we handle everything from the intake to the scheduling to the registration at time of service to estimating the balance that that patient would owe, do our absolute very best in terms of trying to capture payment at that time or a method of payment so that autopay could be performed. Once that individual service, if not collected in full at time of service, goes to be billed from an insurance standpoint and that amount is adjudicated, then there’s a self-pay after insurance balance. We are then engaging within that patient population to let them know that there is a balance to meet them where they are, meaning that if they are unable to pay that balance in full, we have predictive analytics that address how much that patient can afford to pay on a monthly basis. And so, whether that engagement is print, we produce about a billion and a half communications a year from that standpoint, or we engage digitally within that to be able to facilitate payment and those outcomes. And so, I think that’s probably the simplistic ...
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