Table 2.
Previsit | Visit | Postvisit | |||
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|
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Key Finding | Scheduling Appointments | Check-in | Rooming | Clinician Visit | Laboratory and Imaging |
Information flow | Reason for visit not always clearly communicated or understood, leading to patients getting visit scheduled for something that could have been dealt with over the telephone | Changes to addresses or insurance information need to be updated in multiple places | Problems identified by MAs during screening not always seen by physician | Medication lists frequently not reconciled appropriately because patients assume the computer is correct | Laboratory orders not entered correctly or did not print, which causes confusion or errors when patient goes to laboratory |
Alignment of goals and expectations | Open-access scheduling can conflict with patient’s need to be able to plan ahead | Patients frustrated with not being seen when late, even when public transportation issues were the cause | MAs caught between need to keep flow moving and increasing number of screening questions they are expected to ask | Patients have multiple concerns, and clinicians may be willing to address only 1 or 2 or prioritize chronic disease management | Prior authorization requirements of insurance companies conflict with patient and clinician desire for rapid access to needed tests |
Personal relationships | Knowing which patients will have trouble scheduling follow-up can help care coordinators decide whom to schedule in advance | Patients feel comfortable with front desk staff whom they have known for many years | Patients more likely to discuss true reason for visit with staff they know well | Trust between patients and clinicians develops with time | Walking patients to laboratory prevents them from leaving before having tests completed |
MA=medical assistant.