Healthcare has always been driven by data, and today, providers have access to an unprecedented amount from a wide variety of sources. While this influx could be a blessing to the healthcare industry as a whole, it also poses a number of challenges, particularly when it comes to patient identity management. With a soaring volume of patient information coming in from numerous sources, identity errors become increasingly more likely, as well as the potential consequence of fatal mistakes. Keeping this in mind, the importance of effective identity management cannot be overstated. Every year, an estimated 195,000 people die due to medical mistakes. More than half of those deaths – 10 out of every 17 – are the result of identity management errors, such as duplicate records and mistaken patient identities. While current healthcare IT solutions attempt to tackle these discrepancies, they only succeed in identifying about 10 percent of all duplicate records. Consequently, patients often undergo repeated tests or receive incorrect treatment or medication that can result in adverse effects to their health. Also, there is limited coordination of patient data throughout the healthcare ecosystem. The main culprit of this is the lack of secure data transfers that compromise patient records and identity. This raises the question: How can healthcare organizations better manage the massive amounts of data related to each patient’s medical identity? Luckily, such issues can be improved with Experian Health’s Universal Identity Manager (UIM), which creates a single identity for individual patients across multiple disparate healthcare databases. Upgrade your identity management system The ability to share patient information across multiple healthcare organizations with different care management programs is at the core of optimizing overall patient care. Properly utilizing patient and population health data can dramatically improve an organization’s efficiency, raise its quality of care, and lower its readmissions rate. For patient data to be useful, however, providers require a robust infrastructure that allows for secure, precise, and accurate storage of patient data. The same framework should be able to assign patients unique identities across the entire network. In turn, a single, universal patient identity system allows for better analytical insights and more effective care personalization. This kind of management system also allows an organization to add relevant data to a patient’s medical profile faster and more accurately, creating an improved dynamic database that can develop personalized patient engagement and care plans. How Experian Health’s universal identity management software helps Administrative slip-ups in healthcare can have drastic consequences for a patient’s health and wellbeing. Eliminating these inaccuracies is the main goal of Experian Health’s UIM solution. Experian Health has the benefit of leveraging data assets available to us from being part of broader Experian. As a result, the identity management software generates and assigns a unique identifier to each patient that remains consistent across various healthcare systems, such as hospitals, therapeutic facilities, pharmacies, and healthcare payers. Drawing on decades of experience in identity management, Experian Health's multi-matching methodology approach eliminates duplicate and erroneous data through comprehensive search and alert processes. It provides a high degree of likeliness because it expands beyond the limitations of the conventional single-matching methodology that most health systems use today. Even records created on disparate healthcare systems can be automatically analyzed and assigned to the appropriate patient identity. In addition to eliminating discrepancies that could affect the quality of patient care, universal identity management also reduces medical and billing errors, ultimately minimizing an organization's risk of fraud. The solution also works in tandem with Experian Health’s suite of patient engagement and transparency tools, including its Patient Self-Service portal, to further optimize an organization’s ability to deliver personalized, high-quality care. Unique patient identifiers are critical for healthcare organizations to reduce the risks of inaccurate and duplicate records that lead to errors and low-quality care. Combined with Experian Health's suite of patient engagement and price transparency tools, its identity management software is a leap toward making efficient and reliable interoperability more possible across the healthcare ecosystem.
The evolution from paper to online medical records is an opportunity to engage patients more fully in their care while making healthcare organizations more efficient. However, while patients enjoy the convenience of self-service access to all of their medical information, the portals offer cybercriminals a one-stop-shop for identity theft as well. According to Identity Theft Resource Center in San Diego, medical identity theft is the fastest growing type of identity theft, increasing at 32% annually. In fact, healthcare-related data breaches are already 10 times more frequent than data breaches in the financial services sector. And unlike stolen credit card information, which is often detected within a few transactions, medical identity theft often goes undetected for over a year. The comprehensive data contained in patient portals is especially lucrative to fraudsters, demanding a premium price in the underground market. While a stolen credit card number may sell for a dollar, a full set of medical records can command hundreds of dollars. The breadth of data within a patient portal offers fraudsters multiple opportunities to “cash in.” Compounding the problem is the level of detail presented on patient portals, often including unmasked insurance IDs, full images of patients’ insurance cards, problem lists, prescription histories. Stolen medical identities are used by criminals in two ways: obtaining medical care under the victim’s identity and using the identities to fraudulently bill for services or durable goods, which were never delivered. Problem lists, which are a mandated component of patient portals, are particularly useful to criminals, because they allow classification of each victim by the type of fraud which their identity could support. The problem lists typically use standard terminology, which makes them particularly useful for classification purposes. Using malicious software, criminals can search the lists for “key words” describing conditions that demand specific types of services or durable goods. This targeted approach would make fraud more personalized to the victim’s profile and harder to detect. Most patient portals use simple password protection, which can be easily captured by key-logging malware. This type of malware lays dormant on the victim’s machine, waiting for the victim to log into a patient portal site. When the patient logs in, the malware wakes up and captures the victim’s username and password. Using the stolen credentials, the criminals can get into the site, and once in can collect extensive information about the victim. Medical identity theft has severe consequences for both patients and providers. Patients are faced with the financial costs of covering fraudulent bills and medical costs stemming from treatment of other individuals. Comingling of the victim’s and the criminal’s medical records can also put the patient in life-threatening situations if treated or diagnosed incorrectly. Providers face steep financial costs from retribution payments and HIPAA violation fees up to $1.5M per violation, however arguably the most significant consequence they face is damage to reputation. Complicating matters is the fact that security measures cannot be so onerous that they dampen consumer adoption. Towards that end, use of covert technologies to analyze the identities and devices enrolling into a patient portal or logging in to it can increase security without impacting user experience. Precise ID® with FraudNet for healthcare portals provides healthcare organizations with a way to confidently authenticate patients and reduce risk during enrollment and ongoing access to healthcare portals. It does so in a streamlined manner without burdening patients with increased wait times and complexities. Together, these solutions identify fraud, authenticate patients and validate devices – all in a single platform. To learn more, view Experian Health’s complimentary on-demand webinar, “The Hidden Risks of Healthcare Portals,” or download the new white paper, “The Pitfalls of Healthcare Portals,” where we outline why your portal may be more vulnerable than you think.
We encounter gatekeepers every day, ranging from TSA agents at the airport and call-center operators for online retailers to office receptionists and hotel front desk staff. Gatekeepers have a tough job as they manage access, filter information, provide advice and maintain order. Their attitude and actions dramatically impact our experience as consumers. The healthcare industry must shift from a patient focus to a consumer focus — and it all starts with patient access. Patient access staff act as the frontline — the gatekeepers — as they gather critical patient information at the start of the patient visit and set the stage for the remainder of the encounter. They’re moving beyond simply performing routine registration tasks and collecting co-payments to engaging in a holistic approach to patient interactions. As a result, these critical staff members can create and facilitate compassionate financial discussions while handling revenue-related activities such as pre-service collections. It’s no small task, nor one that can be done without data and analytics. For example, staff can use tools driven by data and analytics to verify patient identity, which prevents fraud and identity theft and results in more accurate registration. Moreover, after reviewing insurance eligibility, patient access staff can leverage data and analytics to create accurate patient payment estimates, review data to assess a patient’s ability to pay and evaluate financial options. The bottom line impact creates a positive environment for financial discussions and improves collections on the front end, while reducing the likelihood of collections calls and bad debt on the back end. Patients benefit in that they gain a sense of confidence — and oftentimes relief — because they know where they stand financially and can focus their energy and attention on getting well. The time is right to establish patient access staff as gatekeepers of the patient experience by equipping them with knowledge and tools to empower them to improve the revenue stream and patient satisfaction.