You have to spend money to make money, but in order to maximize your profitability, you need to keep medical office operating expenses under control before they eat your practice alive (not unlike an antibiotic-resistant MRSA).
99 MGMT
Recent Posts
4 Cost-Saving Tips to Control Medical Office Operating Expenses
Topics: Operations, Practice Management, Financial
What Are Medical Practice Management Consultants? Do You Need One?
Medical practice management consultants analyze your practice and figure out where you can streamline processes and save money. They may also provide managerial services for your medical practice.
Topics: Operations, Practice Management, Consulting
4 Suggestions that Could Improve Your Medical Practice's Efficiency
Topics: Business Growth, Operations, Practice Management
11 HIPAA Technical Safeguards to Improve Healthcare Data Security
Topics: Operations, Compliance, Liability, HIPAA, Practice Management, IT
2019 ICD-10 Code (Chapter 1) Lookup: Infectious & Parasitic Diseases
This information has been retrieved from the CDC’s 2019 ICD-10-CM. For the full list of 2019 ICD-10 codes, please view the CDC's comprehensive PDF.
Topics: Operations, Coding, ICD-10
What You Can Do to Increase Patient Volume in Your Private Practice
How do you get more patients into your practice? The answer certainly isn’t “by spending most of your time handling medical records and billing.”
A study from the Annals of Internal Medicine found that some physicians spend as little as 27% of their time with patients during the day.
Topics: Business Growth, Operations, Practice Management, Patient Volumes
Private Practice Physician Contractor vs Employee: How to Classify
Topics: Operations, Compliance, Liability, HR, Practice Management
14 Pre-Employment Background Check Tips for Private Practice Owners
Topics: Operations, Compliance, Liability, HR
What Does At-Will Employment Really Mean for Your Private Practice?
Topics: Business Growth, Compliance, Liability, HR
How to Get More Patients: Make Your Private Practice Stand Out
In 2016, a full 12% of all U.S. physicians practiced in Texas.
The majority of U.S. physicians practice primary care, and are a small private practice owner, partner, or associate.
As you're probably well aware, the physician market is highly saturated. Patients have their pick of private practices. How do you make yours stand out to get more patients and increase revenue? Here are 5 tips.
Topics: Marketing, Business Growth