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https://staging.levohealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Vector-2-21-45x45.png Fergus Linskey – Levo Health https://staging.levohealth.com 32 32 Key Takeaways from my Recent Chinese Healthcare Industry Trade Mission https://staging.levohealth.com/chinese-healthcare-industry/ https://staging.levohealth.com/chinese-healthcare-industry/#respond Fri, 04 Dec 2015 17:22:47 +0000 https://staging.levohealth.com/?p=6905 A few weeks back I was fortunate enough to be invited on a Chinese Healthcare Industry Trade Mission sponsored by the Chinese Government and the Medical Tourism Association. It was a quick dash to get my visa and itinerary in order, but after a 24 hour flight, I joined several prominent healthcare investors, executives, doctors and surgeons from around the US and Europe as we toured three provinces in and around south eastern China. Our trip commenced in Wuzhou at The 2nd International Healthcare Industry Resource Conference. After the conference was over our group traveled to Hainan Island, to tour a soon to be completed 1,000 bed Hainan Cancer Hospital in Sanya. We then traveled to Boao as guests of the 2015 Promotion Conference of Hainan Healthcare Industry where we learned about their multi-billion dollar medical city slated for completion in 2020. Following our visit, the trade mission culminated in beautiful city of Guilin with a 2-day trade show and exhibit dedicated to World Medical Tourism in the Asian-Pacific zone. Although the areas we visited varied greatly in culture, topography and climate, there were several key trends I observed across all locations on this trip: Healthcare’s Delivered on a Massive Scale With a population of 1.4 Billion, China is home to some of the world’s largest hospitals – with the largest in Henan Province housing 7,000 beds (the largest US hospital is NY Presbyterian with just 2,200 beds). Currently, there are over 26,000 hospitals in China with a 60/40 split between […]

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A few weeks back I was fortunate enough to be invited on a Chinese Healthcare Industry Trade Mission sponsored by the Chinese Government and the Medical Tourism Association. It was a quick dash to get my visa and itinerary in order, but after a 24 hour flight, I joined several prominent healthcare investors, executives, doctors and surgeons from around the US and Europe as we toured three provinces in and around south eastern China.

Our trip commenced in Wuzhou at The 2nd International Healthcare Industry Resource Conference. After the conference was over our group traveled to Hainan Island, to tour a soon to be completed 1,000 bed Hainan Cancer Hospital in Sanya. We then traveled to Boao as guests of the 2015 Promotion Conference of Hainan Healthcare Industry where we learned about their multi-billion dollar medical city slated for completion in 2020. Following our visit, the trade mission culminated in beautiful city of Guilin with a 2-day trade show and exhibit dedicated to World Medical Tourism in the Asian-Pacific zone.

Although the areas we visited varied greatly in culture, topography and climate, there were several key trends I observed across all locations on this trip:

  1. Healthcare’s Delivered on a Massive Scale
    With a population of 1.4 Billion, China is home to some of the world’s largest hospitals – with the largest in Henan Province housing 7,000 beds (the largest US hospital is NY Presbyterian with just 2,200 beds). Currently, there are over 26,000 hospitals in China with a 60/40 split between public and private respectively. Even with this type of bandwidth, many Chinese hospitals are continually strained under strong demand for services and on average 2,000 new hospitals are being built each year to meet demand.

  2. Aging Population Driving Long Term, Memory, and Elder Care Industry Boom
    While the recently repealed One Child policy succeeded at curbing runaway population growth over the last three decades, it’s also created a top heavy demographic profile with an estimated 265 Million Chinese over the age of 65 – a number that’s expected to reach 320 Million by 2020.

    Compounding the issue is the fact that in China, traditionally the eldest son is responsible to care for their parents at home. Due to the One Child Policy, many families are left without male heirs; placing added pressures to deliver quality elder care for a large percentage of senior citizens. As a result, in many of the provinces we visited, there are currently government-backed projects to develop expansive healthcare cities with large elder care and long-term care facilities as key parts of their plans. Local municipalities and Chinese investors are looking to the west for guidance in building hybrid models that call on best practices found in US health systems while still allowing for traditional Chinese family values and medicine to be a part of the equation.

  3. Second Child Policy Creates Huge Need for IVF and Surrogacy Services
    China is projecting a mini-boom of about 11 Million new children as a result of the new 2-child policy. Due to a more urban, affluent population and lower fertility rates of older couples, this number may only reach 1 million based on early registration trends. As a result, IVF and Surrogacy markets are seeing strong demand; and many affluent Chinese are actively seeking services abroad. With strong government support driving this initiative, strengthened cooperation and demand for US based IVF services will increase near term.

With many of the improvements and expansions in the healthcare sector being aggressively backed by the government and driven by demographic trends, it’s an exciting time for China’s healthcare industry. As a result of the contacts we’ve made, we’re actively pursuing consulting agreements with several municipal and private investors to help incorporate best practices for medical marketing and patient engagement into their operations. If you’re active in the Chinese healthcare market or are looking for new partnership opportunities we’d look forward to comparing notes.

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Reach the Right Patients, at the Right Time https://staging.levohealth.com/reach-the-right-patients-at-the-right-time/ Wed, 03 Jun 2015 17:07:18 +0000 https://staging.levohealth.com/?p=6806 The post Reach the Right Patients, at the Right Time appeared first on Levo Health.

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Target Patients in the Later Stages of the Healthcare Decision Making Process

When a patient’s physician recommends surgical intervention to address a health concern, the patient inevitably has questions and begins researching things like the recovery time, the top surgeon, the cost and whether or not their insurance covers the procedure. During this research phase, there are many opportunities for providers to help shape the patient’s care decision.

The decision to commit to a surgical procedure can be lengthy. Targeting prospective surgical candidates in the later stages of their healthcare decision making process will deliver higher quality leads that are more motivated to schedule and thus have shorter acquisition cycles. These patients have done the research and are actively looking for the best surgeon, value and outcomes available.

Using traditional marketing media channels to target these “late stage” healthcare consumers simply won’t work. Reaching these patients requires an expert understanding of the highest converting online channels and key search terms to deliver hyper-targeted messages that deliver immediate solutions to their most pressing needs.

These campaigns are most effective when they combine paid search, conversion friendly landing pages and dynamic nurturing campaigns to identify the patient and follow them throughout their healthcare decision making process.

Did you know?
In 2012, approximately 97.5 million Americans (nearly one of three adults) used search engines, social media sites, health focused websites, and physician review websites to obtain information prior to calling a physician’s office.

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Responsive Design In Healthcare: Is It Really Important? https://staging.levohealth.com/responsive-design-healthcare-really-important/ https://staging.levohealth.com/responsive-design-healthcare-really-important/#respond Tue, 11 Nov 2014 18:00:02 +0000 https://staging.levohealth.com/?p=6616 Responsive Design isn’t new to the digital world – in fact, since being recommended by Google as the best strategy for mobile-optimized websites in 2012, it has become the gold standard of web design. However, in line with digital trends in the past, the healthcare industry is one of the last to be seeing this shift in adapting responsive design techniques to their websites. Healthcare organizations, independent practices, and hospitals can be hesitant to redesign their websites to be responsive, as it can be a costly investment, with most just recently establishing their web presence within the past 5-10 years. With the rise in mobile users utilizing their smartphones, tablets, and other media devices to access healthcare information, search for providers, and read hospital reviews, responsive design and mobile access is extremely important in the changing landscape of healthcare marketing. HealthCare.gov, the government’s Health Insurance Marketplace, which features a responsive website design, had 7.5 million users utilize the website to sign up for health insurance as of April 2014, exceeding their original expectations for engagement. More than one-fourth of these users signed up from mobile devices – that’s over 1.8 million people! Without a responsive design that allowed users to sign up from mobile devices, would HealthCare.gov have exceeded its original expectations? In my opinion, it is highly unlikely. Responsive design is extremely important for healthcare organizations and practices to adapt because: Cost vs. ROI: Although the cost of redesigning a website to be responsive can be an investment for […]

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Responsive Design isn’t new to the digital world – in fact, since being recommended by Google as the best strategy for mobile-optimized websites in 2012, it has become the gold standard of web design. However, in line with digital trends in the past, the healthcare industry is one of the last to be seeing this shift in adapting responsive design techniques to their websites.

Healthcare organizations, independent practices, and hospitals can be hesitant to redesign their websites to be responsive, as it can be a costly investment, with most just recently establishing their web presence within the past 5-10 years. With the rise in mobile users utilizing their smartphones, tablets, and other media devices to access healthcare information, search for providers, and read hospital reviews, responsive design and mobile access is extremely important in the changing landscape of healthcare marketing.

HealthCare.gov, the government’s Health Insurance Marketplace, which features a responsive website design, had 7.5 million users utilize the website to sign up for health insurance as of April 2014, exceeding their original expectations for engagement. More than one-fourth of these users signed up from mobile devices – that’s over 1.8 million people! Without a responsive design that allowed users to sign up from mobile devices, would HealthCare.gov have exceeded its original expectations? In my opinion, it is highly unlikely.

Responsive design is extremely important for healthcare organizations and practices to adapt because:

  • Cost vs. ROI: Although the cost of redesigning a website to be responsive can be an investment for some practices, it is, in most cases, equal to or less than the cost of developing a standalone mobile application. It eliminates the need to update two websites simultaneously, as organizations would create separate, mobile-only versions of their websites that had less visual content, and served more as a landing page for mobile users. Making your current website responsive will ease costs associated with additional hours of work from your marketing agency by eliminating the need to update, troubleshoot, and maintain a separate mobile-only version of your website. Additionally, the increased compatibility with more mobile devices will increase the amount of users that will access your website.
  • Eliminating The Need For Expensive Mobile Apps: Although the first point touched on this, mobile applications are becoming more and more of a wasted expense for healthcare providers. According to The Social Media Hat, “99% of apps only get used once. Unless your app does something amazing that no one else’s does, then the reality is that it will get downloaded, opened and forgotten about.” Is your practice realistically prepared to develop a mobile app that will outshine WebMD’s app? Odds are that it isn’t. A responsive website will cover the need for your practice to have a mobile online presence without the unnecessary cost of developing a standalone mobile application.
  • Reach: According to CNN, as of February 2014, Americans use smartphones and tablets more than PC’s to access the Internet. 55% of American adults own smartphones, and 42% own tablets. As I mentioned earlier with HealthCare.gov, having a website that is responsive and mobile-friendly is key to reaching this significant portion of the market. Without this portion of the market, you limit the reach of your campaigns, which will also affect the efficiency of any marketing efforts, again coming back to your ROI.

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Practice Management | LEVO Health CEO Fergus Linskey Featured in Part B News Article – “6 Spending ‘Black Holes’ to Seal at Your Practice When Revenue Drops” https://staging.levohealth.com/levo-health-ceo-fergus-linskey-featured-part-b-news-article-6-spending-black-holes-seal-practice-revenue-drops-practice-management/ https://staging.levohealth.com/levo-health-ceo-fergus-linskey-featured-part-b-news-article-6-spending-black-holes-seal-practice-revenue-drops-practice-management/#respond Wed, 16 Jul 2014 09:30:58 +0000 https://staging.levohealth.com/?p=6538 LEVO Health CEO, Fergus Linskey was featured in the latest installment from Decision Health’s Part B News where he proposed several practice management solutions to curb spending when revenues drop. Read the full article from Part B News, titled “Practice Management – 6 spending ‘black holes’ to seal at your practice when revenue drops” below. Practice management 6 spending ‘black holes’ to seal at your practice when revenue drops (Featured in Part B News – www.partbnews.com – July 7, 2014 | Vol. 28, Issue 26) When your practice needs to scale back expenses, don’t cut willy-nilly; first check some common “black holes” where money tends to disappear. That’s particularly important for cardiology and ob/gyn practices, which saw an overall drop in practice income, according to the recently released Joint Statistics Report of Medical and Dental Statistics on Income and Expenses from the National Society of Certified Healthcare Business Consultants (NSCHBC). When practice revenue falls, the typical reaction is to try to make more money to close the gap, but “uncontrollable environmental factors” such as increased competition or declining population can make that hole harder to dig out of, says Drew Stevens, a practice management consultant and business coach in St. Louis. If you can’t bring in more revenue, you have to cut expenses, says David Zetter, lead consultant, Zetter Healthcare Management Consultants, Mechanicsburg, Pa. But NSCHBC’s statistics “reflect exactly what we see in each practice every day — efficiencies and expenses are not being reviewed,” he says. Review these six black […]

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LEVO Health CEO, Fergus Linskey was featured in the latest installment from Decision Health’s Part B News where he proposed several practice management solutions to curb spending when revenues drop.

Read the full article from Part B News, titled “Practice Management – 6 spending ‘black holes’ to seal at your practice when revenue drops” below.

Practice management
6 spending ‘black holes’ to seal at your practice when revenue drops
(Featured in Part B News – www.partbnews.com – July 7, 2014 | Vol. 28, Issue 26)

When your practice needs to scale back expenses, don’t cut willy-nilly; first check some common “black holes” where money tends to disappear.

That’s particularly important for cardiology and ob/gyn practices, which saw an overall drop in practice income, according to the recently released Joint Statistics Report of Medical and Dental Statistics on Income and Expenses from the National Society of Certified Healthcare Business Consultants (NSCHBC).

When practice revenue falls, the typical reaction is to try to make more money to close the gap, but “uncontrollable environmental factors” such as increased competition or declining population can make that hole harder to dig out of, says Drew Stevens, a practice management consultant and business coach in St. Louis.

If you can’t bring in more revenue, you have to cut expenses, says David Zetter, lead consultant, Zetter Healthcare Management Consultants, Mechanicsburg, Pa. But NSCHBC’s statistics “reflect exactly what we see in each practice every day — efficiencies and expenses are not being reviewed,” he says.

Review these six black holes where practices lose money and how to fix them:

1. Black hole: Inappropriate staffing. Many physician practices “run a business like a Fortune 500 company,” says Stevens. “When times are good, they hire, and when times are bad, they lay off.” It’s not an efficient way to handle expenses.

Solution: Check industry benchmarks for ratios and costs to see whether you’re in sync with practices that are your specialty and size, suggests Fergus Linskey, CEO of medical consultancy LEVO Group in Tampa. The Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) has that data, for example. If you’re at or below the average, you may not be able to cut without damaging care and efficiency.

Solution: Look for technical innovations to increase efficiency and spare staff. “If you’re spending a lot of revenue on transcription, I would consider a low-cost alternative such as Dragonspeak,” Linskey says. Certain other functions such as billing might be profitably outsourced.

2. Black hole: Empty rooms. Another difficult cut is real estate — typically the second-largest expense. If business is down, you may find you’re paying for space — such as exam rooms — that go unused.

Solution: Cut a new, more advantageous deal with your landlord if you’re renting space in an area with a lot of vacancies, says Joshua Yedvab, vice president of network development for South Nassau Communities Hospital, Oceanside, N.Y.

Solution: Sublet or share space with other providers. “Find someone who’s in the same boat and talk to them about consolidation,” says Yedvab. “You could combine space and even combine on staff functions like billing.”

If you have provider downtime — for example, if you have surgeons on staff who spend days at the hospital or ambulatory surgical center — sublet your staff and facilities to another doctor. “Some providers may want to be in your area but don’t want to invest in their own office just yet,” says Yedvab. You can find candidates in peer-to- peer activities such as hospital rounds or medical society events, he adds.

Solution: Make a big move. “We’re seeing a large population shift to the South, Southwest and Midwest,” says Linskey. “Those areas are underserved. They’re going to have doctor shortages.”

3. Black hole: Employee theft. Some of your money problems might be criminal in nature, says Arthur S. Shorr, owner of Shorr HealthCare Consulting in Rancho Mirage, Calif. In his southern California consultancy, Shorr says he’s discovered a “silent partner” employee, or thief, in one out of five practices.

“Let’s say there’s a loyal office manager who always works late, comes in on Saturdays, has been there forever and everyone trusts her,” he says. “Sometimes it turns out this person is keeping a shadow bank account in the same bank as yours but with a slightly different name or in some other way diverting practice income to themselves.”

For instance, “say you charge Blue Cross $100, and Blue Cross pays $60,” says Shorr. “This employee might take the patient’s cash co-pay or divert receipts from direct billing amount, claiming the patient didn’t pay and then writing it off as a bad debt.”

Solution: Create a policy that no one writes off debts except a partner, says Shorr.

4. Black hole: Payer shortfalls. Insurers don’t always pay the agreed-upon rate, Yedvab says. It often is uncovered only by mistake.

Solution: Payer review. “Whatever you contracted, make sure you get it,” says Yedvab. Review all payments from each payer on your top 10 codes to see that you’re consistently being paid the approved rate, he suggests.

He also recommends practices that use billing services to review their performances to make sure they’re getting good return on denials — another area in which MGMA benchmarks. “If you don’t like the numbers and the service is non-responsive, talk to your colleagues about other services,” says Yedvab.

5. Black hole: High supply costs. Small practices may not be getting the best deal on equipment and supplies.

Solution: Join a group purchasing organization (GPO). Often your local medical society can hook you up, Yedvab says. If not, talk to your local hospitals.

6. Black hole: Costs for liability, malpractice and other insurance. “These costs tend to go up, but reviews are not done on that,” Zetter says.

Solution: Negotiate rates regularly. “We’re reviewing insurance for our clients every other year,” Zetter says. “For one client, we literally just made an adjustment that will save them $95,000 a year.” That could save someone’s job. — Roy Edroso (redroso@decisionhealth.com)

Resources:
1. NSCHBC Statistics Report on Medical and Dental Income and Expense Averages: www.nschbc.org/statistics/index.cfm
2. MGMA Store — Surveys and Benchmarking: www.mgma.com/store/surveys-and-benchmarking/printed-reports

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