Wednesday, 30 May 2018

Loyal and True


As I have said before, health care is its own animal when it comes to a free market economy. Health care does not operate like cars, groceries or other commodities. You can’t build loyalty among health care consumers only with incentives like points or cash back rewards. When it comes to health care consumers, there are more complex barriers you must overcome in order to transform them into repeat and loyal customers.

Like all providers of goods and services, as health care providers, we all strive to provide consumers (patients) with the highest quality service (care) that will hopefully result in a positive experience and predisposition to return if additional services are needed. However, unlike with other transactional experiences, a positive patient experience and satisfaction does not directly correlate to loyalty. It can certainly help to move the dial in the right direction, but in the case of health care, satisfaction alone does not drive loyalty. 

While a patient might have been highly satisfied with the treatment they received, there are still barriers that can prevent a patient from returning the next time they need care. These could include:

  • Uncertainty.Not knowing if he/she needs care and which level of care is the most appropriate.
  • Research. Relying on various sources to find the right provider. This includes searching online, talking to their primary care doctor or even getting recommendations from friends or family.
  • Access. Not being able to easily make an appointment. This could be as a result of technology or capacity issues at an office.
  • Location. The location of the provider is either difficult to find or too far away.

So, what can we do to overcome these barriers and ensure their loyalty?

Here are three key steps to help get the patient back through your door:

Communicate next steps in their treatment plan before the leave their initial visit. Let patients know what their follow up care should entail and when they should pursue it. You can do this through warm hand offs to a follow up provider in your service network or even co-locating services in the same building. Have your team make the follow up appointments to ensure a seamless experience for the patient. Ongoing communication with the patient after they leave can also help prompt them to take their next step in care.

Motivate patients to return by helping them understand the health benefits of ongoing care and the burdens (financial, emotional and or physical) of foregoing care. This will inspire them to reengage.

Stay top of mind by continuing to reach out and initiate contact once they have left your facility. Provide them with opportunities to engage in wellness and lifestyle offerings—yoga, meditation or exercise and fitness classes. Often providers can leverage community partnerships to help facilitate and cost share these opportunities. By expanding offerings from treatment for illness or injury to wellness services, providers move from being a one-time medical solution to an ongoing health partner.

At the end of the day, patients want to know there is one place they can go to meet all of their health and wellness needs. From a patient’s perspective, loyalty can not only offer convenience, it can also help cement a level of comfort knowing that they have a medical home to turn to. And from a provider perspective, by reducing barriers and providing opportunities for engagement, you will increase patient loyalty and grow your business and brand.

Tuesday, 29 May 2018

Final Friday: May Edition

Some Final Fridays are just a little better than others. And May's Final Friday falls into that category. Brent Lashley had some amazing acrylic graphics style art along with some mixed media pieces.
After that, we headed east on 12th to the Bunk Gallery. Turns out it has been there awhile but I've somehow just discovered it. I wanted to see what Jaclin Hastings had submitted as I'm a big fan of her art and she has tattooed me twice.
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
We got to Bunk gallery just in time for the fire drill!
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
As we were leaving Rosedale one of those modified golf carts pulled up so we jumped in. It was a blast and we laughed almost the whole way home. But it was also a little terrifying because we were eye level with bus tires as they rumbled past.
Final Friday May
Final Friday May
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Saturday, 26 May 2018

Sid Saturday

Sid
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Friday, 25 May 2018

Updates to my Privacy Policy and Terms of Use

These updates will take effect on May 25, 2018.
You are receiving this update in light of recent changes to data privacy laws.
As the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) comes into effect, I am taking this opportunity to better describe my practices and make it easier for you to understand what information I collect and why I collect it.
5chw4r7z's updated Privacy Policy gives you a clear explanation of how I treat Customer Personal Data.
I promise not to share, spread or gossip about any of your personal data.
As long as you're buying the beer and cigars.
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Thursday, 24 May 2018

3 Points Urban Brewery

3 Points Urban Brewery is set to open June 1st in Cincinnati's Pendleton neighborhood. Why 3 points? Pendleton is triangle shaped and in a nod to Pendleton's art based history 3 Points is focused on fine art and design as a backdrop to their beer.
The brewery is wide open with roll-up doors on two of its sides, it has an outdoor feel deep into the interior.
All the sudden Broadway St. between 12th and 13th is a happening place with six restaurants and 3 Points Urban Brewery open or about to open.

Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
Three Points Brewery
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Tuesday, 22 May 2018

Breakfast on the Bridge

I always look forward to Breakfast on the Bridge, seeing friends, drinking coffee and eating bacon and donuts and waffles. But the down side means that bike month is almost over. There are still a bunch of bikes rides left, don't miss out!
Thanks for breakfast Taste of Belgium, Reser, Trailhead Coffee, Tristate Trails, Queen City Bike, AAA, and Novi Care.

Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
Breakfast on the Bridge
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Saturday, 19 May 2018

Sid Saturday

Sid
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Friday, 18 May 2018

Bladerunner

Downtown Miami is the closest I've felt to the movie Bladerunner, being up in a skyscraper was amazing. All that was missing was the nonstop rain and the movie feel would have been complete.
And people playing soccer on a rooftop helped continue the other worldly feel.
Miami
Miami
Miami
Miami
Miami
Miami
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Thursday, 17 May 2018

New Roads Ahead


In the first two posts of my three-part series, I provided you with a foundation to better understand the role of consumerism in health care today. I offered some organizational prompts and tools to help you start to develop a consumer-facing plan for your organization. But now we must face the big question… how do we make consumerism a reality in your organization?

As I have said before, the health care industry, or really the delivery of care, is dramatically changing. The rise of consumerism represents a radical paradigm shift in the industry. As a result, there will be challenges along the way as you integrate consumerism into your organization -- the most significant of which is the right speed and the right moment for implementation. You need to understand that things are slow to change, so you have to time your approach accordingly. You also don’t want to get there too fast as you might leave everyone behind, including the patients. You need to map the adoption rate to the actual customer, which is the tricky part. 

While there will certainly be challenges, they are not insurmountable. By asking the right questions, understanding your audience, preparing for the tricky moments and maintaining focus, you will have the tools you need. Here are five tips that will help you be successful:

Tip #1: Understand your bandwidth to do this work.
  • What do you have?
  • What do you need?
  • If you are committed to this work, you need to fill this void with people who know what they are doing—who can hit the ground running.
  • Consider hiring people from outside the healthcare industry to implement this work.

Tip #2: Start off slow and be practical.
  • Get a couple of quick wins under your belt.
  • Don’t bite off more than you can chew.

Tip #3: Be willing to fail.
  • Failure does not mean you are bad. Failure means you are innovative.

Tip #4: Be able to track and trend.
  • What problem are you trying to solve?
  • Be able to quantify where you are before you deploy the new technology or program and measure where you are after it is in place. This shows the value in what you are doing.

Tip #5: Focus on how something can be done and not on how something cannot be done.
  • Set attainable goals. 


At the end of the day, in our industry, we can all choose to walk one of two paths. The first is the path most traveled. It is the one that continues to do things the way they have always been done when it comes to health care. The path less traveled is the one that recognizes health care delivery, as we know it, is changing.  It is a path of innovation, creativity and looking at the world through a new and different lens. I hope you will join me here.

Monday, 14 May 2018

Ride for Reading

Ride for Reading was established ten years ago in Nashville Tennessee. The non-profit's stated goal is to donate books to children in low-income areas and promote literacy. Combined with a big push in May during bike month, ride for reading takes place in dozens of cities across the country.
Closer to home, with Ride for Reading's goal of delivering books by bikes it only makes sense that Northside neighborsWordPlay Cincy and Spun Bikes would team up to make this happen right here in the Queen City. WordPlay Cincy nurtures young participants from all backgrounds through personal discovery and academic skill-building programs with reading, writing and connecting at their core.
Which brings us to the Sixth Annual Ride for Reading Cincinnati. This has been one of the most soul-filling things in which I've participated. Low-income schools have around 1 book for every 300 students. Ride for Reading's goal is to deliver 10 books to each child to keep as their own. It's amazing to see the joy these kids have when we show up, and the payoff for me is doing good in my city while doing an activity I enjoy. Not to mention the feels from high fiving 500 kids riding through a parking lot filled with books.
This year roughly 70 or so riders delivered over 5,000 books to The Academy of World Languages in Evanston.
If you love bikes, books, and kids join the ride next year.
You don't need anything special equipment to haul books, a rack, paniers, some people used backpacks. There were a couple interesting solutions to getting the books delivered however.
Ride for Reading
Ride for Reading
Ride for Reading
Ride for Reading
Libby Hunter of WordPlay Cincy and Judi LoPresti of Spun Bikes have literaly changed the lives of thousands of kids over the last six years.
Ride for Reading
Ride for Reading
High fiving 540 kids. Its more amazing, and louder, than you could ever imagine.
Ride for Reading
Judi and the kids checking out their new books.
Ride for Reading
image provided by Judi LoPresti
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Streetlife and foot traffic

The southwest corner of downtown is resident heavy but business thin. That could all be changing soon with 3CDC's purchase of a 1.7-acre...