Archive for the ‘Medical Industry’ Category

Cosmetic Image Marketing Endorses PatientNOW

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010 by copywriter

Cosmetic Image Marketing Endorses PatientNOW for Its Stimulus Ready EMR and Patient-Management Software Offered to the Aesthetic Industry

Catherine Maley, MBA, Author of Your Aesthetic Practice and President of Cosmetic Image Marketing has announced its endorsement of PatientNOW as a valuable resource for aesthetic physicians who need easy-to-use patient-management software for their practice.

Having worked with aesthetic practices for over a decade, Catherine Maley of Cosmetic Image Marketing knows the unique needs of the aesthetic physician and the solutions they require to give their patients what they want now.

PatientNOW has been named an important resource for their unique patient management software that makes it easy for the aesthetic physician to track their patient relationships so they return for more and refer their friends said Ms. Maley.

About Cosmetic Image Marketing

Catherine Maley, MBA is President of Cosmetic Image Marketing. The firm specializes in consulting with physicians to attract aesthetic patients to their practice.

About Catherine Maley

Catherine Maley is the author of the ASPS-endorsed book, Your Aesthetic Practice: What Your Patients Are Saying, a noted speaker and regularly contributing editor to numerous medical trade journals, and was recently interviewed by the New York Times. Visit her blog at www.CatherineMaley.com.

Marketing Your Medical Practice

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010 by copywriter

The recession has seemed to have dampen almost everything in the US except for the dramatic increase in online activity. Doctors really need to take notice of these new trends and how they market to their potential and existing patients. Combining two recent Internet statistics makes a compelling story for how physicians should re-evaluate their marketing strategy and how that strategy should be integrated with their medical practice management software.

A recent study by the Pew Internet shows that 83% of Internet users are going online to conduct research before buying a product or engaging with a service (Mandese, 2009). In addition, 80% of Internet users search for medical information online, making this activity the third most popular behind email (93%) and researching a product or service before buying it (83%) (Pew Internet, 2009).

By putting these two statistics together, people are searching for a wide variety of health information, such as H1N1, allergies, broken bones, laser peels, hip replacements, breast augmentations, and also information about the doctors that perform these procedures and treat them. Susannah Fox, author of the Pew Studies points out that “If there are doctors who are nervous, they should be nervous. This is a tried-and-true activity online, researching a product or service before you buy it.” (Chitale, 2009). The days of just getting your name in the phone book are gone.

Question: How can I better utilize my marketing efforts?

The medical industry continues to be a very competitive environment and physicians are needing to market themselves and their practices to attract new patients and keep existing ones. The question that doctors need to ask themselves is: How can I better utilize my marketing efforts?

Buying print ads in a variety of publications and seeing what response you get is not the correct way to go about it. Doctors need to have a marketing strategy and understand which campaigns generate revenue and which ones produce meager results. However, in order to completely understand the marketing efforts, a doctor needs to see more than just how many hits he or she is getting on their web site. They need to see revenue numbers based on procedures, campaigns, and other data points. This is how the doctors medical practice management software can reveal these numbers.

Yet, most medical practices can not integrate their practice management software with their marketing efforts and the possibility of truly understanding the result of their marketing endeavors is lost. The medical industry sees marketing and patient tracking as two separate parts of the medical practice. But patient tracking does just that…it tracks or records all the patient activities associated with the practice, including electronic medical records (EMR).

It is more important then ever to have these two sections of a practice connected. Looking how most advertising campaigns are run today, a practice runs a series of print advertisements. Potential patients or leads see the ad and go to the practices web site. The potential patient requests an appointment by submitting an online form or making a phone call. The practice receives the request and sets the appointment. At this point the lead has changed to a patient.

Marketing disconnect

However, this is where the disconnect starts. The information gathered from the web form or phone is rarely entered into the patient record. Any possibility of tracking the patient from a lead, to a patient, then understanding the behaviors of the patient is gone.

In addition, many medical practices market to their existing client base and not just to new potential patients. Look at all the recent advertisements and news concerning the H1N1 outbreak. Once the vaccine is available to the general public, all doctors who can administer it will want their existing patients to come into their office to get vaccinated. How does a practice track this type of marketing?

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The Flaws of SaaS in Medical Practices

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010 by copywriter

Software as a Service, or what is known as SaaS, has come on strong over the past few years. The concept of SaaS is that a company hosts their software application on a computer server that is attached to the Internet. The application is accessed by the customer from any other computer connected to the Internet. Many software companies focus their entire business on SaaS. Google’s Gmail is a perfect example of SaaS where a user can access their email from any computer, not knowing or caring the physical location of where their email is stored.

So how will SaaS function in the healthcare industry, specifically medical practices?

As we know, the medical industry will be moving to electronic medical records (EMR) over the next five years due to the adoption of the Stimulus Plan earlier this year which provides physicians with up to $44,000 in reimbursements over a five year period for implementing and using an EMR system. Patient records will be easily accessible by the physicians from within their medical practices, instead of having to find the patient file in the sea of manila folders.

Patient Record Size

A patient record stores a wide variety of information such as correspondence, x-rays, lab results, EKG readings, and examinations. A single visit to the doctor can generate over 10 to 15 pieces of paper (Blau, 2004). More information will be added to these files as the industry moves to EMR. The amount of information going into a patient record is not slowing down anytime soon.

In addition, much of the existing data that is stored in the patient’s file will need to scanned and attached to the patient’s electronic record. X-rays, for example, will be scanned and stored as an image, increasing the size of the patient record considerably. Any new x-rays that are taken will be received as an image and also stored int he patient’s record. Dermatologists, cosmetic surgeons, reconstructive surgeons, and plastic surgeons all use photography as part of their medical practice. Before and after photos are taken from multiple angles and distances, and are then stored within a the patient record.

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