In coordination with the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME), Med Tech Solutions recently gathered 13 healthcare executives to pinpoint best practices for agile IT support to maximize current EHR investments. We’ve highlighted four major takeaways from the C-suite focus group, starting with IT support team flexibility.
- Structuring IT support teams for scope scalability
The past year in healthcare has underscored a greater need for flexibility within internal IT staffing and strategic partnerships. Whether it’s supporting mission-critical events like system go-lives or EHR new version upgrades, IT departments must have quality resources that ebb and flow as necessary. Gartner published that one way to achieve this is through a targeted outsourcing strategy with IT partners who can deliver a flexible yet reliable IT infrastructure on demand.
In the past, many hospitals utilized “skeleton crews” on the help desk to get through nights and weekends, which enabled a continuous cycle of extended ticket times and subpar resolution. Others used call rotations for internal analysts to handle during assigned shifts, but this led to quick burnout and high staff turnover. What seemed like cost-cutting initiatives actually propelled resolution cost inflation to fully handle, address, document, and resolve tickets. Many competitive health systems are expanding help desk scope to include Tier 2, more clinically focused capabilities, but some struggle with finding the right resource placements and balancing project work versus ticket resolution.
- Demonstrating clinically-focused tech support
In the 12th annual Health IT Industry Outlook report, half of the surveyed healthcare CIOs reported “clinician end-user education and knowledge transfer” as the top area for stronger IT support to mitigate clinical care delays and ultimately improve physician satisfaction and care efficiency. Additional best practices for incorporating clinician-focused tech support into an overarching IT strategy include:
- Expanding the IT help desk’s capability to a larger support scope to avoid the confusing ticket escalation runaround
- Emphasizing thorough, well-documented multi-format end-user and new hire training
- Offering provider concierge line capability and one-on-one provider customization/training sessions, helping providers get the support they need at their convenience, so they can focus on patient care
- Matching the right staff and skillsets for the right IT support role to ensure issue tickets can be resolved in the first interaction. This also avoids staffing overspend where overqualified staff may be stuck handling password resets, for example.
- Improving help desk performance visibility to executive management
- Placing a higher focus on true first-call resolution versus just ticket taking
- Conducting IT support virtual rounding beyond hospital facilities for physician support out to the clinic and physician practice teams to help resolve common issues.
- Strategizing remote access best practices moving forward
For many healthcare organizations across the country, one hurdle has been handling secure remote access and getting remote employees or off-site rounding groups the support they need, especially as health systems grow with M&A. This causes user hesitancy and uncertainty on how to use the technology, as well as a rise in employee-behavior security risks. Now, IT support teams feel like they are treading water to keep up with the ongoing influx of remote user needs and higher call volumes, especially with new resident rollouts, IT application upgrades, and constant device and user security threats in mind.
- Deploying telehealth enablement for care continuation and revenue stabilization
Expanding beyond the traditional IT help desk, today’s service desk hubs are now focusing on telehealth and patient engagement enablement as critical components in the competitive growth era. To effectively support internal clinicians with virtual care, many health system IT teams across the country rolled out telehealth programs with a one-week turnaround, noting frustrations around the need for EHR (especially scheduling) workflow adjustments and customizations in the transition. Initially fearing that virtual appointments would boost no-shows, many have found that the increased utilization of virtual patient reminders has allowed more efficient back-to-back scheduling and patient adherence.
On the patient support side, many internally-operated help desks typically cannot handle patient or external end-user inquiries. This can be problematic for issue resolution as patient user groups are not set up in ticketing systems. With IT support teams already short-staffed, it can be difficult to manage these additional requests since patient user groups may be unfamiliar with applications and require longer call handling times for end-user education. With the shift to telehealth here to stay, healthcare organizations are looking to external help desk options to supplement both patient portal and telehealth enablement for patient engagement efficiency. This tactic ensures more effective utilization of both telehealth processes and EHR systems to make the most of technology investments.
Moving forward, hospitals and health systems can utilize this peer executive feedback when planning the next steps for structuring scope scalability, aligning continued end-user satisfaction efforts, strategizing remote access support, and deploying telehealth enablement initiatives.
Stay tuned for additional healthcare technology insights.
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