
Healthcare in a Post-COVID World: Are You Prepared?
By avoiding routine care, your members may be getting sicker and experiencing poorer overall health outcomes, which could negatively impact your plan’s quality ratings.
By avoiding routine care, your members may be getting sicker and experiencing poorer overall health outcomes, which could negatively impact your plan’s quality ratings.
The difficulty health plans face with member satisfaction may not be due to a lack of desire to communicate but a lack of ability to communicate effectively.
From a technology perspective, the evolution of COVID-19 has turned out to be a proving ground. Efforts to achieve connected care through data optimization are ever more critical.
The levels of technological sophistication run the gamut in the healthcare industry, and in a pre-COVID-19 world, providers set their own pace. Today, we’re seeing a massive acceleration in technology adoption.
As the United States faces the growing COVID-19 health crisis, the delivery of healthcare is changing rapidly – particularly regarding the use of telehealth.
The problem with data quality goes beyond data entry errors. Patient data erodes at an estimated 3% per month. It’s in a continual state of flux as individuals change jobs, phones, addresses and more.
Provider directory inaccuracies are responsible for patients visiting a doctor mistakenly believed to be in-network, or even worse, enrolling in a plan their provider doesn’t participate with.
When the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released its five-year strategic plan last week, the agency made one thing clear: it can’t accomplish its goals alone.
Healthcare providers and health systems have worked diligently to protect data privacy and security. The unfortunate reality? Hackers have worked even harder to access that data.