Updating Financial Assistance Policies Amid Potential Medicaid Changes: Laxmi Patel
Laxmi Patel
Laxmi Patel outlines how Medicaid reforms could raise bad debt, urging providers to strengthen financial counseling, assistance, and price transparency.
As coverage losses mount under
In this interview, Patel recommends that providers adapt by updating
Check out the
This transcript has been lightly edited; captions were auto-generated.
Transcript
How might hospitals adapt their revenue cycle processes to manage potential increases in self-pay cases and mitigate the risk of bad debt?
Coverage losses will increase uncompensated care and bad debt, because when you have loss of coverage, these become self-pay patients, and these are going to be, in most cases,
Providers should really start to think about updating their financial assistance policies, maybe rebuild their presumptive eligibility tools, or scale kind of that patient financing program. Because with bad debt in collection, we're probably going to see some higher denial rates, uncollectible balance, going to need stronger financial counseling. Really, price transparency in the application will become a bigger role in educating patients what their self-pay amount is going to be, because it's no longer about deductibles and coinsurance. It's really about what self-pay discount, charity options, financial assistance programs they may have. And then really thinking about that correlation of bad debt increases and different ways to offset that from a system strategy standpoint.
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