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Physicians Practice. Vol. 16 No. 17
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The Tech Doctor: Streamline Your Practice With Online Services

The emergence of EMRs and the ubiquity of high-speed Internet access are quickly increasing the number of online services for medical practices. This is both good news and bad news.

By Bruce Kleaveland | November 15, 2006


The first online services marketed to providers dealt with billing functions — specifically the electronic transmission of claims (now a HIPAA requirement for most practices). While new services maintain a strong connection to practice management and administrative functions, they are also beginning to directly relate to the physician's sphere, helping you save time and improve patient service.

E-prescribing

One new offering that's directly affecting the way physicians work is e-prescribing — the ability to send prescriptions you create with your EMR or hand-held e-prescribing tool (such as a PDA or tablet PC) directly to selected pharmacies. You may also receive electronic refill requests from pharmacies. This is different from faxing scripts from your EMR using fax server technology in that electronic transmission allows two-way communication between pharmacies and physicians.

Leading the way is Surescripts, a company that represents the majority of retail pharmacy chains in the United States.

Here's how it works: First you need to have an EMR or e-prescribing tool that has been certified by Surescripts. Then, when you "write" a script, it is electronically (and securely) sent to the Surescripts network, which directs the script to the appropriate local pharmacy. The patient is then simply directed to pick it up.

This service eliminates most of the hassles associated with handwritten or printed scripts (i.e., illegibility, losing the script), and it provides a more efficient way (secure e-mail versus phone) of communicating with pharmacies for routine but high-volume tasks, such as refill requests. Ordinarily, physicians incur no expense for the service. (Retail pharmacies pay Surescripts because e-prescribing is a more efficient way for them to receive prescriptions.)

Possible drawbacks? Not all retail pharmacies work with Surescripts, and to use the service your software must be certified by the company. (See www.surescripts.com for a list of certified vendors.)

Electronic pharmacy services

A portfolio of tools that allow you to check patients' pharmacy benefit eligibility, drug formularies, and medication histories is offered through a unique organization called RxHub on behalf of the country's major pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). The basic idea behind RxHub is to offer services at the point of care — that is, as physicians are writing scripts — that help improve formulary compliance. As with Surescripts, these services are offered only through RxHub-certified technology partners — either e-prescribing or EMR companies. (See www.RxHub.net for a list of the company's partners.)

How does it work? Using a certified technology partner's software, a physician makes an eligibility request for pharmacy benefit information on behalf of a patient using RxHub. Assuming that there is a patient match (about half of eligibility requests result in a match), RxHub delivers the information directly to the requester, including the patient's specific formulary plan as well as any benefit limitations or exceptions that the patient's payer may impose. When the physician writes the script, the system tells him whether the drug is on that payer's formulary list; if not, it offers formulary-compliant alternatives.

This service can avoid unpleasant surprises for your patients when they show up at their local pharmacies to fill their scripts. RxHub is also able to provide clinicians with a patient's medication history based on that patient's PBM claim data. This is particularly useful for new or referred patients who have poor or unreliable sources for their medication history. And like Surescripts, RxHub typically offers its services at no charge to providers. (PBMs support RxHub, as they have a strong financial incentive to help physicians prescribe according to drug formularies.)

Online eligibility checking

The ability to check a patient's insurance status can help you determine if he's covered before you provide services (rather than after his claims are denied). Many offices can easily perform this task online using the practice management software they already own. (This capability is commonly located within the scheduler portion of practice software packages.)

To check for coverage, providers can make an eligibility request for either a single patient or a batch of patients (such as the patients scheduled for office visits the following day). An online service, offered through a claims clearinghouse such as Emdeon, searches for the patients within its database. Assuming it finds a match, it will make an electronic request for eligibility status directly to a patient's payer. The payer's reply to the request is sent back to the clearinghouse, which directs it to the person making the request. All of this occurs within seconds.

Remember that the ability to perform such eligibility checking is a function of your practice management software — it either offers this capability or it doesn't (and if it does, the service will most likely cost you an additional fee). The ability to access this service is also payer-dependent. While many payers do make the data available to their clients (at my last informal count, more than 1,000 payers did), it's not universal. And as you might expect, the service is not always able to match your patient with the patients in its database, which means that a request may not yield any meaningful information. Nevertheless, online eligibility checking is much more efficient and reliable than more traditional methods, including calling the payer directly or asking the patient.

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