Overview
New patient access is the ability of a new patient to obtain an appointment at a practice at the desired time and with the requested clinician. Phone management, front desk check-in, referrals and scheduling all play an important role in patient access.
New patients learn about and contact your practice in multiple ways:
- Online search (e.g., Google)
- Websites (e.g., Mass General Brigham, MGH, physician directories)
- Word of mouth
- Insurance provider
- Clinical referral
Wait days are the number of calendar days between the scheduling date and appointment date; this metric is specific to new appointments and consults. (New patient wait days do not consider the time between the initial appointment request and/or referral.) New patient wait days have a direct impact on the patient experience; trends provide insight into a practice’s efficiency and capacity.
New patient access also affects:
- Quality of care
- A patient’s condition(s) may not be managed appropriately and may worsen because of a delay.
- A lack of urgent visits could result in unnecessary emergency department (ED) visits.
- Practice growth
- New patients generally have higher reimbursement rates and often require procedures, surgeries, etc.
- New patients waiting to be seen may contact another doctor for a more immediate appointment, cancel, or not show up for an appointment.
Standards
- Regularly document, inventory and review the entry points to your practice – including the practice/MGH website, all phone numbers, fax numbers, and Epic referrals.
- For each entry point, document the process from the time the request is initiated through scheduling.
- Document the barriers, problem points, strengths of each entry point and associated average turnaround times.
- Assess how accessible the practice is and help identify areas for improvement by keeping track of the following:
Metric | Significance | How to Measure |
Wait days | Indicates new patient appointment backlog | Elapsed wait days (new patient and consult)/Arrived (new and consult) |
Lost appointment rate | Indicates lost productivity due to no-shows and same-day cancellations | No-show + same-day cancellations (patient-based)/All booked appointments |
Provider-initiated cancellation (PIC) rate | Indicates practice scheduling efficiency, appointment rework and patient satisfaction | Cancelled appointments/All booked appointments |
Cancellation rate | Indicates rate of scheduling rework | Cancelled appointments (patient-based)/All booked appointments |
Percent of new patients | Indicates reimbursement and patient growth | New and consult appointments/Arrived appointments |
Arrived appointments | Indicates volume of arrived and completed appointments | |
No-show rate | Indicates lost productivity | No-show appointments/All booked appointments |
Percent of patients seen within 14 days | Indicates frequency of new patients seen within specified time frame; eliminates outliers | Arrived new and consult appointments seen within 14 days/All new and consult appointments |
Tools and Resources
- IPORT – patient access can be tracked at the level of department, location, and provider by using IPORT, an analytics tool that receives data feeds directly from Epic Cadence
- Ambulatory Dashboard – provides reports to help practices understand their new patient scheduling availability
- Practice Manager Reporting Portfolio – reference on running reports