Analyze and delight to improve patient retention
While every healthcare business focuses on getting new patients to grow, no number of new patients can help a practice if they don’t stick around. That’s why patient retention rate should quickly become one of the next priorities for healthcare businesses.
Introduction
If there is anything that businesses focus on as much as getting new customers is how to keep those customers around for long. Corporations spend just as much time on ensuring that their customers stay loyal as on bringing them over in the first place. This is because while customer acquisition can be incredibly expensive, customer retention is much more lucrative in comparison. Not only do businesses spend less when trying to customers but they reap bigger investments as a result.
But retention is important in
every consumer-facing business. Patient retention is a crucial part of any
healthcare business. Patient acquisition costs are one of the biggest financial
drains for healthcare businesses and medical practices. With retention,
healthcare businesses are able to focus on ensuring that all their hard work to
attract patients doesn’t go to waste with short relationships.
Retaining patients is an
opportunity to build relationships with patients and develop trust before they
even enter your premises, as well as get them back when they need you most. But
it doesn’t happen by accident: it takes time, effort, and investment to turn
patients into loyal customers. While retaining patients can be extremely
beneficial, it can’t be an ad hoc process for your healthcare businesses.
Without adequate focus and resources, retaining patients is extremely tough.
Below are some tips for
improving patient retention by analyzing and delighting your patient’s needs.
What is patient retention?
Patient retention is a key metric in measuring the success of a healthcare provider. It’s also an important indicator of the quality of care a patient receives. Patient retention measures how many patients return to your practice or hospital after they have been discharged. For most medical businesses, it is measured by calculating the percentage of patients out of the total patients who visit your business multiple times.
Patient retention is important
because it shows that you’re providing quality care and keeping your patients
happy, but it can also indicate other things about your practice’s patient
experience. Patient retention allows healthcare businesses to understand how
long-term trends can play out for their business. Higher retention rates mean
that a medical business can hope to have longevity in its success and can more
effectively navigate environmental changes. While you can always try to get more patients,
the more patients you lose the higher the number of new patients you’ll need.
Also importantly, retention is
also a proxy indicator of patient experience in hospital settings. Why? Read on
below.
Why is patient retention important?
Patient retention is important for all companies. A business that loses customers will quickly go out of business. The same applies to healthcare businesses like hospitals, clinics, and doctors’ offices. When patients are unhappy with the service they receive at a medical practice, they often leave and never return. This results in less revenue for the practice and higher costs from lost reimbursements from insurance companies.
Retention is also important
for patients themselves. If you have a health condition that requires regular
treatment or monitoring by a doctor or nurse in order to stay healthy, it makes
sense that you would want to keep seeing that same provider over time so you
don’t have to go through the learning curve again with someone new each time something
changes in your condition (or if there’s any chance of miscommunication).
Patient retention can often be
seen as a realized indicator of the patient experience during the healthcare
journey in a healthcare setting. Lower retention rates may be indicative of low
patient satisfaction scores and poor patient experience. At the same time,
higher retention rates indicate that there is high patient satisfaction and
high patient experience because patients would not return for no reason.
But as healthcare businesses
understand more profoundly why patient experience is important, they also
realize that improving retention rates is not an easy task.
How to improve patient retention
At the end of the day, every
patient is different. So how do you know what your patients want? The solution
is simple: ask them.
There are a number of ways to
do this—you can survey your current patients through email, social media or
even using a tablet at the front desk. You could also use an online platform
like Survey Monkey or Qualaroo that makes it easy for you to set up surveys in
one click without any programming knowledge needed.
Once you’ve asked your
patients what they want and started implementing changes based on their
feedback (which means making it easier for them to book appointments, get
prescriptions and pay), take another step back and check whether they’re happy
with their experience overall by asking them again!
But there are other questions
that you can ask as well but not to your patients but to your practices and to
yourself. Through careful analysis, you can find out the answers to questions
about your post-operative care, non-medical support for patients, and
understanding which touchpoints matter the most for your patients. Questions
like, are you offering enough post-operative support for those who have had
surgery, are there enough resources for new mothers when they leave the
hospital with their newborns, and how do people feel about their experience at
your facility after seeing specialists on an outpatient basis, will help you
understand which areas need improvement to see higher patient retention rates.
But while that covers the
analysis portion of the retention improvement process, the other portion is
just as important.
Patient experience
Patient experience is the
emotional connection between a patient and your brand. It’s more than just the
patient experience you deliver, it’s the sum of all interactions that occur for
that patient to reach their desired outcome (i.e., being seen at a visit,
having a prescription filled). The following diagram illustrates this concept:
The key takeaway here is that
no matter how great your care is, if you don’t make sure it’s delivered
consistently, every time, and however they want it (online or in-person), then
you’re not going to retain patients long-term.
To improve patient retention,
you first need to understand what your patients want. Then, once you have a
better idea of their needs and wants, it’s time to continually delight them.
To do this, you’ll be using
data: both the information that’s already in your system and the data that
comes in from other sources. You can also use this information to create
personas or customer profiles based on your patients’ characteristics and
experiences with your practice. This will help guide how best to improve their
experience at every step along their journey with you (which we’ll explain more
about later).
Your earlier analyses will
help you in understanding which parts of your healthcare processes need the
most improvement and which processes have the best impact on your patients. The
happier your patients are, the more likely they are to stay loyal to your
medical business.
But another important way that
you can delight your patients is through better engagement. Using digital
marketing channels to improve your engagement with patients is one of the best
ways to drive greater patient experiences. Patients today want medical
professionals who listen to them and explain to them what their medical
journeys will look like. Patients also rely on medical professionals to
understand what their healthcare costs will look like. With so much
dissatisfaction in these areas, there are plenty of opportunities for your
medical practice to use engagement to fulfill these needs that patients have
and drive higher patient experiences.
Conclusion
We’ve covered a lot of ground
in this article, from defining patient retention to understanding its
importance and how to improve it. By keeping these tips in mind, you can start
to make a difference in the lives of your patients today.
Patient retention today is
quickly emerging as the key metric that helps medical businesses understand
their real-world success and what their longevity may look like. Retention
doesn’t only have a purely financial impact but as a proxy indicator of patient
experiences, it also helps medical professionals understand what their medical
practice is doing right or wrong.
BraveLabs helps medical businesses to improve
their patient retention rates by providing analytical tools to measure their
processes and digital marketing solutions to improve their communication and
engagement with their patients. Contact us today to learn how much your patient retention rates can
improve.
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