
Adapting to challenges of COVID-19 with trends in health care payments
Providers still struggle to consistently and successfully collect from patients.
Every year, the Trends in Healthcare Payments Annual Report is distributed to start a conversation about the current state of the industry and shine a light on areas where change is needed. For healthcare providers, the report has consistently found that more of their revenue is dependent on out-of-pocket payments from consumers and less is covered by payers. The data also showed slow progress made by providers in adapting to these changes in how they got paid.
The recently-released tenth report finds that providers are still struggling to adapt to consistently and successfully collecting from patients. Providers have not universally embraced the digital payment options that consumers overwhelmingly demand and still depend on outdated paper-based processes for healthcare payments. Providers no longer have the luxury of waiting to see how trends in healthcare payments play out as they did when the first report was published. The long-term impacts of COVID-19 are predicted to bring additional spotlight to eradicating manual, paper-based, human-dependent approaches to payments.
Adapting to a New Normal Presented by COVID-19
Stay-at-home orders and social distancing guidelines due to the COVID-19 pandemic have changed business as usual for most organizations. Before 2020, rapid tech adoption was leveraged to connect us for entertainment, like Instagram reaching 100 million active users in two years or Fortnite hitting 100 million monthly active users in 18 months (
Provider organizations, in particular, have found that digital connections with consumers are no longer a “nice-to-have” tool. After decades of limited adoption, more providers are turning to virtual options for connecting with consumers. According to a recent
Existing Digital Demand Not Matched by Reality
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many healthcare providers managed to avoid the digital revolution that many consumers now embrace. Existing digital options such as a standalone provider portal with limited payment functionality only scratch the surface of the payment experience that consumers expect. In fact, 77% of consumers want to enroll in eStatements from providers, yet only 23% of consumers receive eStatements (
This gap is especially evident for younger generations that have been inundated with digital since their youth. The demand for eStatements is almost universal among Millennials as 90% of that age group want them (
The Pain of Outdated Collection Practices
From start to finish, providers are almost entirely dependent on paper for patient encounters. Nowhere is that more clear than collection where 87% of providers leverage paper and manual processes (
Paper is not just part of patient collections as 91% of providers reported receiving paper checks from one or more payers (
) .
The Growing Importance of Streamlined Payments
Providers struggle to keep up with increases in patient collections. Yet, they are not universally adopting tools that would eliminate some of the burdens of collections, while increasing their overall payment assurance. Additionally, consumers overwhelmingly prefer streamlined options that increase digital connections:
- 83% of consumers prefer electronic payment methods for medical bills (
- 85% of consumers want to make all of their healthcare payments in one place (
Meanwhile, 66% of consumers are willing to consider switching providers for a better payment experience (
The Future for Providers in a COVID-19 World
In the last decade of trends in healthcare payments, providers have continually struggled to adapt to changes presented by increasing consumer payment responsibility. Slow adoption of new technology and streamlined processes seemed to be a recurring theme for providers. The consequences of inaction take the form of bad debt, wasted spending and damages to brand trust and loyalty.
The impacts of the COVID-19 are forcing providers to rethink all the options to connect with consumers as the recent growth telehealth has shown. Providers must extend that mindset to collections as well with the operational restrictions due to stay-at-home orders and social distancing keeping many from processing human-dependent and paper-based payments. Even as the pandemic subsides in the future, organizations will continue to benefit from the savings and increased payments realized from streamlined payments.
To dig deeper into these trends and more, the full Trends in Healthcare Payments Annual Report is available online at
Deirdre Ruttle is Chief Marketing Officer at InstaMed.
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