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Posts Tagged ‘healthcare consumerism’

5 Ways to Improve Your Dental Practice Email Marketing

Thursday, October 6th, 2022

Email marketing is a highly effective way to communicate the latest news about your dental practice to patients. However, stale newsletters and practice announcements are not enough to keep patients engaged with their oral health. Take your dental practice email marketing to the next level with these tips to improve your messaging. 

1) Choose an email marketing platform that allows you to use ePHI

Identifying the tools to market your practice is often trickier than it appears. Dental practices must abide by HIPAA regulations, affecting how they can transmit information about their services to their patients. Any vendor that handles PHI on behalf of a dental practice must sign a Business Associate Agreement outlining how patient data will be stored, transmitted, and disposed of. Don’t choose a vendor who is unfamiliar with HIPAA’s stringent requirements.

Also, watch out for quasi-compliance. Some self-identified “HIPAA-compliant” email vendors can protect data at rest but not in transmission, rendering their services moot. What’s the point of using a HIPAA-compliant email marketing service that doesn’t allow you to transmit relevant information?

quasi compliance

Some organizations try to avoid HIPAA regulations by having patients sign consent forms to waive their rights under HIPAA. However, this is unwise for several reasons. Even if patients agree, it does not remove the organization’s obligations to secure PHI under the law. If protected health information is improperly accessed, it is still a breach and can lead to severe financial and reputational consequences. Plus, keeping track of waivers and keeping email lists up to date is a major hassle. It’s much easier to do the right thing under the law.

2) Encrypt marketing emails to comply with HIPAA

Many marketing emails imply a relationship between patients and providers and, as such, can often be classified as protected health information. PHI must be encrypted in transit and at rest to comply with HIPAA. Ensure your email marketing platform encrypts every email automatically instead of relying on your marketing team to secure sensitive data.

However, not all email encryption is created equal. TLS encryption meets HIPAA transport encryption requirements and provides a better user experience. Emails encrypted with TLS are sent directly to the patient’s inbox and are opened just like a regular email. This means that marketing emails sent with TLS encryption are more likely to be opened than those sent to a patient portal which requires users to login to read the email.

tls vs portal pickup

Learn more about the differences between TLS and Secure Portal Pickup.

3) Use PHI to send personalized emails that are relevant to your customers

Once you’ve selected a tool that complies with HIPAA email encryption transmission requirements, use patient data to create highly relevant messaging. Some organizations try to get around HIPAA requirements by sending very generic marketing content. However, these tactics do not deliver results. Marketers in other industries have found that using customer data to segment their audience allows them to create highly relevant messaging that delivers better open and click rates. 

personalization stats

Dental marketers can use PHI to segment and personalize emails and delivers results for both your practice and your patients. Healthcare marketing emails can be personalized as long as the proper safeguards and precautions are in place to protect patient privacy and meet compliance requirements.

4) Use email marketing to engage patients 

Healthcare consumerism is rising, and patients are willing to change providers if they are unsatisfied with their experience. Educating and informing current and potential patients about your services is essential to improving new customer acquisition and patient retention. Many patients now prefer to receive communications about their health status, upcoming appointments, and relevant offers via email. 

online marketing stats

Adapting your communications to fit patient preferences is an easy change that can go a long way to increase patient satisfaction.

5) Track the results and use data to improve messaging

Unlike other traditional marketing channels, email marketing campaigns deliver a wealth of data that can be used to inform your strategic plans. Unlike social media, email isn’t subject to the whims of the latest algorithm change. Reviewing performance over time makes it possible to tell what is popular and unpopular with your customer base. Email marketing is so effective at delivering a positive return on investment because it is straightforward to track what is resonating and what is not. 

Conclusion

Using HIPAA-compliant email marketing tools allows dental practices to achieve better marketing results via segmentation and personalization without sacrificing patient privacy. LuxSci’s Secure Marketing platform was designed to help organizations connect with their patients without violating HIPAA.

What is a Digital Front Door?

Tuesday, July 19th, 2022

Patient engagement is a growing concern in today’s healthcare ecosystem. As many providers transitioned to telehealth during the pandemic, the concept of a “digital front door” evolved to describe how patients interact digitally with healthcare providers.

digital front door

Definition

The term “digital front door” describes an omnichannel engagement strategy that leverages technology to meet the needs of modern healthcare consumers.

With many people using online searches and digital tools to find new care providers, the term describes how patients first interact with a healthcare provider online. It represents how the patient journey is changing in response to consumer needs.

Just a few years ago, the design of a medical office was considered extremely important to the patient’s experience. Focusing on the digital front door refers to creating a positive digital experience for patients navigating a healthcare provider’s website, patient portals, and other online touchpoints.

Why utilize a digital front door?

There are many reasons to optimize the digital experience. Changing consumer preferences, healthcare staffing issues, and potential cost savings are just a few reasons healthcare practices are turning to digital solutions.

According to a study from Cedar, 41% of patients reported that they would consider changing providers for a better digital experience. Younger adults are four times more likely to switch than those over 65. Making it easy for people to schedule appointments, check symptoms, and refill prescriptions online can increase patient satisfaction and retention.

In addition, the ongoing healthcare staffing shortage is making it difficult for staff to spend time engaging with patients. Implementing digital engagement tools can empower patients to take control of their healthcare tasks and relieve operational burdens on staff members.

The prevalence of electronic health records means that patients can access, read, and add to their records through a well-designed patient portal. Using online intake forms, email messaging, and surveys can streamline processes and save time and money for healthcare practices.

The Benefits of Digital Front Doors

Some of the key benefits of properly designed and implemented digital front doors include:

  • Reduced patient wait times
  • Ability to interact with the healthcare system outside of regular business hours
  • Improved access and visibility into patient’s health records
  • Less paperwork and administrative waste
  • Reduced administrative costs
  • Focus on providing quality care compared to administrative tasks
  • Improved coordination and transparency between care teams
  • Improved feedback collection processes

What types of technology are involved?

No one specific technology is required to create an effective digital front door. Instead, different technologies are combined to create a positive user experience that matches the patient journey and meets the organization’s needs. Some of the technologies typically involved include:

  • Chatbots
  • Online appointment scheduling
  • Physician finder tools
  • Online intake forms
  • Personalized and automated email communications
  • Secure texting
  • Patient portals
  • Automated surveys

Of course, it’s not just about the technology involved but how it works together to meet the patient’s needs. Implementing tools that are difficult to use, don’t integrate, and are frustrating to patients will not deliver results.

An Example

Let’s use an example to illustrate how patients interact with a digital front door. Josh just moved to the area and is looking for a new primary care provider that accepts his insurance and is close to where he lives. He does a Google search and finds a provider with good reviews located only 0.5 miles away.

Josh goes to their website and uses a physician finder tool to search through the provider’s network of physicians to find one who accepts his insurance and is taking new patients.

Once Josh finds someone who is a good fit, he signs up to be a new patient and fills out a digital intake form. On the website’s back end, the provider automatically captures and stores these details in a secure, HIPAA-compliant database.

Josh then schedules an appointment online. He receives an automatic confirmation email, and a few days before the appointment, he also receives an email reminder.

On the day of his appointment, Josh can immediately see his physician because he has already filled out the intake forms online. The physician takes notes electronically during the appointment and refills Josh’s prescription. All this information is automatically added to his medical records. Before leaving the doctor’s office, a staff member helps Josh schedule a follow-up appointment for a few months later.

The same day, Josh receives a text message that his prescription has been filled and is ready for pickup at his local pharmacy. A week after the appointment, Josh receives an email asking about his experience and whether he has any follow-up questions for the physician. Thanks to the thoughtful use of technology, Josh was highly satisfied with his experience.

Conclusion

In today’s world, a solid online presence is not optional. Creating thoughtful online user experiences is essential to improving patient and provider interactions.