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HIMSS19

By Bill Siwicki | 09:44 am | January 18, 2019
The forthcoming Cloverleaf 19.1 will be the core of Infor's suite, with support for API management.
By Susan Morse | 06:23 pm | January 17, 2019
Minor differences in co-payments sometimes mask exponential differences between similar generic formulations.
By Susan Morse | 06:20 pm | January 17, 2019
By empowering patients with a single access point to all their data, the exchange also benefits providers and payers.
By Bill Siwicki | 03:20 pm | January 17, 2019
Hospitals can use artificial intelligence-driven technologies to automate manual and expensive processes. For instance, communicating with payers has become one of the most arduous responsibilities for revenue cycle departments. This is one of the messages health IT vendor Recondo Technology wants to get across to attendees at the upcoming HIMSS19 conference. "Anyone outside this department would be shocked at the sheer volume of transactions to process," said Eldon Richards, chief technology officer at Recondo Technology. "And payers typically will only go over three at a time on the phone. When you have on average 16,000 queries to wade through a month, that's not going to cut it." The other option – to look up authorization status on the payer's website – is less time-consuming but still requires a lot of staff hours, he added. Automation is the key Automation is a proven alternative that substantially reduces time and human effort to the entire authorization process – from querying the payer's website to find out if prior authorization is required, to automating the retrieval of the payer's answers, said Richards. Recondo Technology will be discussing a variety of trends with HIMSS19 attendees, though two stand out: AI and price transparency. "AI has been under an intense spotlight. Healthcare leaders really need to be able to discern where the ROI opportunities are biggest right now." Eldon Richards, Recondo Technology "AI has been under an intense media and industry spotlight," Richards said. "Healthcare leaders really need to be able to discern where the ROI opportunities are biggest right now. We believe based on our customers' successes that automating revenue cycle management processes are among the most significant ROI opportunities at present with AI – specifically, via robotic process automation, and even more so when this automation is further enabled with machine learning and natural language processing." Interest in price transparency has redoubled since CMS mandated that hospitals must post their chargemaster lists online, he said of the other trend. "That mandate goes into effect this month, so I expect price transparency will be top of mind with many HIMSS19 attendees," he explained. "I would caution that simply complying with this mandate will not be enough to bring true price transparency to patients, as many will be confused to discover that what they will actually pay for services is markedly different than what's on the chargemaster list. So HIMSS19 attendees should be on the lookout for solutions that do give that authentic transparency into cost." Breaking through the AI hype And Richards has more advice for HIMSS19 attendees. "A lot of CIOs and CTOs will be heading to HIMSS19 with the intent to find out where AI is really working, because there's just been so much hype surrounding the topic the last few years," he said. "Now it's time for the rubber to hit the road, so to speak. My advice for separating the 'fake it till you make it' vendors from those who have an authentic AI solution to offer is to look for three basic proof points: cost, time and the use of neural networks." If an AI system can process a lot of transactions in a short amount of time but at a high cost, that's an indicator that human effort was used instead of AI-driven automation, he advised. "If it can process a lot of transactions at a cheap cost but over a longer period of time, that's also a sign that humans were doing most of the work," he said. "These first two proof points are more geared toward evaluating AI technology such as robotic process automation. When evaluating claims that a solution is machine learning-capable, make sure to verify the solution is powered by neural networks versus standard rules-based engines." With price transparency, HIMSS19 attendees should consider the CMS mandate a marketing opportunity to retain more patients, Richards said. "The mandate will drive more potential patients to the hospital's website," he commented. "An online price calculator that's easy to use, gives an accurate estimate of the patient's cost and even provides payment assistance options will give them a reason to schedule services with your hospital."   .jumbotron{ background-image: url("http://www.healthcareitnews.com/sites/default/files/u2556/HIMSSSignJumbotron.jpg"); background-size: cover; color: white; } .jumbotron h2{ color: white; } HIMSS19 Preview An inside look at the innovation, education, technology, networking and key events at the HIMSS19 global conference in Orlando. Twitter: @SiwickiHealthIT Email the writer: bill.siwicki@himssmedia.com
By Tom Sullivan | 10:41 am | January 17, 2019
The private sector and government have accomplished a lot and the next phase is critical to the best use of APIs.
By Bill Siwicki | 10:25 am | January 17, 2019
The health system saw an opportunity to leverage Information Technology Infrastructure Library best practices and key concepts to improve its remote care.
By Laura Lovett | 05:11 pm | January 16, 2019
Charlotte Yeh discusses the assets of age and which technologies could help address isolation and loneliness.
By Mike Miliard | 12:38 pm | January 16, 2019
The health system takes a practical approach, building analytics dashboards for nurses to enable proactive quality improvement.
By Bill Siwicki | 10:42 am | January 16, 2019
Health orgs are using AI to enhance decision making and drive greater value for patients and providers, AWS says.
By Beth Jones Sanborn | 06:13 pm | January 15, 2019
Executives and board members aren't cybersecurity experts so putting it in terms they can digest is crucial -- and that takes "real-life resonance."