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Efficient Scheduling: Why Paperless Is the Way To Go

Scheduling patients efficiently and accurately is a widespread challenge in the chiropractic profession. This seems to be the case whether an office is big or small, and whether one CA or several are doing the scheduling.

For example, consider this dilemma presented by one practice: “We have a huge problem in our office. With six chiropractic assistants working the front desk, we are very inefficient at scheduling appointments. Everyone needs access to the appointment book at the same time. Staff will write notes and forget to schedule things. What should we do?”

When I was asked this question by e-mail, I put on my best “thinking cap,” and asked the following questions: “Do you have a network, and how many computers are available on the network? (Perhaps adding one or two computers will solve the problem.) What speeds are the computers? (Maybe the problem is old, antiquated computers, which take too long to load the appointment book program.) What software are you using? (Is the software itself the problem?)”

Did I ever feel silly when I received this response: “We have a paper appointment book. My CAs are tripping all over each other trying to answer phones and get to the book. We routinely schedule 300 visits per day, with three doctors on staff. Although we have a computer system, we are still scheduling appointments on paper — the way we’ve been doing it for years.”

I envisioned CAs with phone cords stretched to the limit and wrapped around them as they squinted at a tattered, cramped appointment book. Obviously, the solution to this office’s problem lay with an easy-to-use software program with strong scheduling capabilities.

I am certain the doctor had no idea how much that inexpensive paper appointment book was actually costing him in the scheme of things. I guesstimated that the practice was wasting at least 20 staff hours per week struggling with scheduling issues related to keeping the scheduling on paper, and that was only part of the overall cost.

It’s impossible, for example, to quantify the dollars lost from patients who missed their appointments and never received a follow-up call. How many dollars are lost when patients slip through the cracks and are not scheduled at all? With these factors in mind, an efficient scheduling system is obviously an important aspect of your bottom line.

Going Paperless

A computerized appointment scheduler can play an essential role in directing the flow of the office. It serves as a point of entry for new and returning patients, so it should interface logically and smoothly with other components of your office software, such as transaction entry, billing, reports, and SOAP notes. If the scheduler is weak or inefficient (and/or still on paper), the rest of the office may suffer as the inefficiency trickles down.

What are some of the characteristics you should look for in a computerized scheduler?

Rating Your Priorities

After reviewing the types of features a computerized scheduler may include, decide which features are most important to you. Consider rating the different features on a 1-10 scale, with 10 representing the features most important to you (see chart, this page). Then, shop and compare.

A strong scheduler is just as important as the other components included in your office software. Without a strong point of entry, patients slip through the cracks too easily. A computerized scheduler can control the work flow and make every aspect of the office more efficient.

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