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Finding A Primary Care Provider

In addition to the criteria above, there are a few other things to keep in mind when choosing your doctor for family medicine, pediatrics, women's health, or men's health.

Clinic Location

Choose a primary care doctor who practices in a location that is convenient. That could be a place close to where you live, or may be a clinic that is close to where you work if you think most of your visits will take place during daytime hours. Some physicians and APCs also practice in multiple clinic locations, so you may be able to find a provider who can see you in clinics near your home and your work.

Clinic Hours

Another important thing to check is the hours a clinic is open to see patients. If you have a hard time getting in during "regular" business hours, finding a clinic that has extended morning, evening, and weekend appointments can fit your lifestyle better. This makes it more likely you will be able to get in to see your doctor not only when you are sick, but also for regular check-ups.  

Appointment Availability

Before choosing a primary care provider, find out if he or she is accepting new patients. If yes, find out how long it usually takes to get a new appointment. Clinics that have a wait time of several weeks or even months to see a doctor might not be the best choice for every patient, especially those who need to see a doctor frequently for urgent or acute care. Find out if the clinic offers same-day or next-day appointments in case you need to get in for an urgent visit when you get sick. Many of our primary care physicians leave slots open on their schedule for same-day or next-day appointments.

Some doctors also see patients virtually through our Virtual Care services. These visits offer convenient hours and same-day availability for non-emergency care through your smartphone, tablet, or computer.

Certifications and Training

Check the doctor's credentials—not just the type of degree that he or she has, but also whether they stay up-to-date on the latest advances and changes in medicine through board certification or affiliation with groups like:

  • American Academy of Family Physicians
  • American Academy of Pediatrics
  • American College of Physicians
  • American Geriatrics Society
  • Your Ability to Connect with the Provider

    Along with finding a physician or APC who is competent and skilled at what they do, it's important that you feel comfortable with him or her. During your first visit:

  • Make sure the provider communicates with you in a way you understand.
  • Make sure you feel comfortable asking questions and discussing your health concerns.
  • Find out how you can communicate with the doctor's office. Many offer electronic communication through an online patient portal to make it easy to ask simple questions, receive lab results, or get medication refills between appointments.
  • Evaluate the staff in the office (like nurses, medical assistants, and receptionists) to ensure you are comfortable with them, since you will talk to them to schedule appointments, help with medication refills, and more.

  • No Empty Promises: How Home-Based Care Providers Actually Plan To Use AI

    Artificial intelligence is likely to be a society- and business-altering technological development.

    But, just like the advent of the internet before it, AI's emergence will undoubtedly lead to as many empty promises from business leaders as it does actual use cases.

    That'll particularly be the case in the early innings of AI, which I believe we are currently in.

    At any health care conference over the last five years or so, AI chatter was as ubiquitous as COVID-19 chatter was during the early days of the pandemic. But I'd often come away from that chatter with no more information on how providers planned to put AI to use than I had before.

    This year is likely to be one of the first where a good chunk of providers are actually putting AI to use, however. That's why, in Home Health Care News' trends for 2024, we included the prediction that "providers will find ways to more seamlessly and strategically integrate AI."

    Over the last few months, I have tried to cut through the empty promises and ask providers directly: How are you currently using AI, or how do you foresee your organization using it in the near-term future?

    More direct questioning, unsurprisingly, led to more direct answers.

    In this week's exclusive, members-only HHCN+ Update, I hope to take you behind the curtain on providers' AI strategies across home-based care.

    An AI prologue

    First things first, every provider I talk to about AI generally starts off with a similar opening statement on AI, which is that they do not believe AI or other technology will be able to replace hands-on, human care.

    Particularly in the early innings, that seems like the right mindset.

    "We hear so much about tech in the home," Visiting Nurse Health System CEO Dorothy Davis told me. "Not that I don't think that's an important piece, but I think the revolution is going to be on the consumer side and on the caregiver side. Tech is an enablement. If the user and the person impacted doesn't understand it, the tech means nothing."

    That's a key caveat. If AI cannot be implemented in a way that can be understood by a select few people – or in some cases a large group of people – then it is useless.

    It's also generally useless, particularly for generative AI, if there is not good data to feed into it.

    Providers can't go from an archaic operation with no data tracking capabilities to a future-facing, AI-embedded operation in one jump.

    "I often describe data as the clay," Guillaume Vergnolle, a senior data scientist at AlayaCare, told me on stage at Aging Media Network's Continuum conference. "It's your best material to come up with an [AI] solution. You need the right kind to come up with the solutions. So, when it comes to the retention problem, make sure that you're actually collecting the right data to mirror what you're trying to solve."

    AlayaCare is one of the home-based care vendors aiming to help providers out with AI. Its commitment to AI solutions – along with WellSky's, for instance – is a heavy indication that providers will soon be further along with practical implementation.

    Where AI will be useful

    Compassus COO Laura Templeton told me that she sees AI becoming useful in two areas in the near-term future: documentation and scheduling.

    "We currently have a couple of work streams right now — one being for clinicians — around how AI can make their job and role easier or better," Templeton said. "We've been looking closely at how to consolidate and optimize processes by utilizing AI tools."

    Compassus leaders were the first to divulge AI use cases to me in December at the Continuum conference.

    "We've piloted several scheduling programs where we're using our clinicians at the top of their license, and where we are sending the right clinician, at the right time, to the right place," Templeton continued. "Scheduling is one area that comes to mind where I'm excited to see what AI can do."

    Indeed, scheduling is one area where providers could use advanced help.

    After all, staffing is a top concern for nearly all home-based care providers. Within that, most leaders will say the key issue they're trying to solve is retention. Within that, scheduling is the No. 1 reason that home health workers turnover.

    "We're having humans doing things that humans don't have to do, scheduling being one of those," VitalCaring President Luke James told me. "Medical records. Systems work. Where can we apply some generative AI and some kind of workflow technology that can take most of it out of the hands of humans? Reacting to the exceptions only, for instance."

    Axle Health, a home health scheduling platform, announced a $4.2 million funding round Thursday.

    James also mentioned documentation, which Jordan Holland – the VP of value-based contracting at Compassus – also dove into in December.

    "Clinical documentation has always been a big one — which has a lot of different layered potential use cases," he said at Continuum. "There's the idea of talk-to-text, but then there's also talk-to-text to other discrete fields. Talk-to-text is great, but is that actually going to help you facilitate filling out an OASIS form? There's an added layer to that because that talk-to-text then gets submitted to another party."

    James added that VitalCaring "has to get more efficient in the back office with rates continuing to fall."

    That is the core driver of a lot of home health providers' AI strategies: finding ways to become more efficient to avoid fallout from any rate cuts from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

    Alivia Care CEO Susan Ponder-Stansel is taking the same approach, but through a different lens.

    A provider that has gone deep into value-based care over the last few years, Alivia Care wants to find ways to up reimbursement through better outcomes.

    "We want to really be able to stratify risk and create a patient profile," Ponder-Stansel told me. "There are certain algorithms that you can develop to say, 'Okay, when these particular things happen, you need an extra visit, you probably need to do a med rec.' Because all those things downstream help prevent that rehospitalization, help prevent that adverse outcome. So that's what we're looking at."

    Elara Caring CEO Scott Powers, meanwhile, told me that stripping caregivers and home health aides of non-value work is the "No. 1 use case" that he sees coming to fruition.

    The home care side

    Personal home care providers are generally approaching AI a bit differently, which is interesting to note.

    For instance, Home Helpers sees it helping most on the marketing side, particularly for franchises.

    "We use AI in our franchise-development process around identifying potential new franchisees, and doing some specific psychographic targeting," Home Helpers President and CEO Emma Dickison said during a HHCN webinar last year. "Internally, for the team, where we see the biggest lift with AI … is in the marketing department. But there are just so many applications."

    Similarly, BrightStar Care isn't writing big AI checks yet, but is, for now, using AI-enabled chats on its website to help out with back-office functions and to get feedback from clients.

    But there also are rate concerns for these home care providers, some of which are similar to home health providers' concerns.

    For those that are diving further into Medicare Advantage (MA), for instance, there's a need for more efficient processes to make MA beneficiaries worthwhile clients from a business sense.

    "I think you just have to prioritize where you can make the biggest difference on the margins," Kristen Duell, the EVP of experience and innovation at FirstLight Home Care, told me. "We need to create automation in certain areas, leveraging technology and leveraging machine learning so that we can reduce overhead costs – and sometimes field costs – so that we can take on those health plan [clients]. We need it to make economic sense."


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