Saturday, July 01, 2006
Talking it through: busy physical therapy practice converts from manual transcription to voice recognition - What Works: Speech Recognition
Fulfilling the requirements for Medicare compliance is a challenge for every healthcare organization. For a paper-based physical therapy practice, the challenge is accentuated by volumes of referral paperwork and documentation on patients' progress. Switching from handwritten reports and outsourced transcription to a voice recognition System helped us meet the challenge and save money in the process.
PROBLEM
Mid-Florida Physical Therapy is a large, 22-year old private practice located in Ocala, FL. We have six satellite offices and 17 providers, including eight physical therapists and assistants, and one occupational therapist and an assistant. On average, we see 545 patients per week and dictate 600 notes within the same timeframe.
Since the practice was established, we have outsourced our dictation to an external transcriptionist. This worked well in the beginning, but as the number of providers increased and our patient volume multiplied, the method proved costly, with monthly fees ranging from $2,500 to $3,000.
An additional ramification of our practice's expansion was that the transcription service slowed. Larger patient volume meant that reports might take from five to seven days to complete, and often up to 10 days total, from the time we initiated them to the time they were returned to our office.
This, of course, produced a subsequent slow down in billing, which only increased the lag time between service delivery and reimbursement. When the transcriptionist announced her retirement, we decided it was time for a change.
SOLUTION
In early 2000, we began our research to identify an alternative transcription solution. Our first idea was to use a telephone system for dictation and to hire a full-time transcriptionist. After evaluating six or seven different systems, we eliminated the idea of a new hire and narrowed the list down to two information technology products. One of those was a template-based point-and-click system, and the other was TalkNotes[R] from ProVox Technologies.
We used the template system on a trial basis for 30 days. One of our original goals was to afford our therapists greater freedom in using a dictation system to capture the detailed, yet free-form, notes they wanted to dictate. During the trial period, we determined that the presets in the template system were too uniform, forcing most of the dictation into "canned" format. Our therapists were unable to free-form dictate as they wished.
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