Products & Technology
Eprescription for HME
Other healthcare industries have made incredible efficiency gains thanks to eprescription. Now this game-changing technology is making strides in postacute care, and that includes HME. How do providers leverage its benefits?
- By David Kopf
- Apr 01, 2022
SvetaZi/depositphotos.com
Say hello to eprescription, the
electronic healthcare handshake
that is rapidly gaining
momentum in HME. For
years, HME has sat on the
sidelines of healthcare’s adoption
of eprescription, but several factors are
changing that.
So, what is eprescription? It’s simple:
rather than a referral source sending a faxed
prescription to an HME provider, the referring
physician or other healthcare professional
can send the prescription electronically.
Eprescription acts as the secure, HIPAA-compliant
mechanism for sending prescription
and patient data from the referral source
to the HME provider. This leaves nothing up
to interpretation; the prescription is accurate,
error-free, and includes all the necessary
information for a clean claim.
While eprescription has been a regular
component of healthcare IT systems for
years, its adoption in the home medical
equipment industry has taken some time,
but recently that development has gained
traction. HME software companies such
as Brightree LLC (Brightree.com) have
been working to drive eprescription for the
industry, and eprescribe companies such
as Parachute Health (parachutehealth.com)
and GoScripts (goscripts.com) have been
offering eprescription solutions specifically
for HME providers and their referrals.
The biggest recent development in eprescription
for HME happened last September
when a collection of HME industry leaders
formed DMEScripts LLC, an eprescription
company for HME that was driven by
providers and industry groups. The alliance
of investors forming DMEScripts includes
the American Association for Homecare,
VGM & Associates, AdaptHealth LLC, Apria
Healthcare Group LLC, Lincare Inc. and
Rotech Healthcare Inc.
Suffice it to say, eprescribe for HME is
starting to make big strides. That’s due to
several factors.
MARKET MOMENTUM
“We’re starting to see a lot of the solutions out
in the space come of age, and we’re seeing a
greater uptake amongst referral sources and
HMEs alike for moving forward with technology-based solutions to enable eprescribe,”
says Nick Knowlton, vice president of business
development for Brightree.
Knowlton has been heavily involved in health data system interoperability and
eprescription for HME. In fact, Knowlton
chairs the CommonWell Health Alliance
board of directors and has been involved in
the Alliance since it was founded roughly
nine years ago. CommonWell is a group of
various healthcare technology stakeholders
that aim to create links between disparate
healthcare data systems to securely connect
patient records and data services across
those systems.
Also, the Covid-19 public health emergency
helped accelerate the adoption eprescribe
for HME.
“I’d say since we formed, we’re seeing an
uptick, and I think the rest of the eprescribe
platforms are as well,” says Dan Starck, CEO
of Apria and chair of DMEScripts’ board of
directors.
Starck adds that the number of platforms
out there and the expanding range of claims
they support is also helping drive adoption.
This helps providers continue to specialize.
“Not only DME but also medical supplies,
and diabetes supplies,” he says. “As those
product lines continue to be built out and are
facilitated through the eprescribe platforms,
the more advantageous it becomes or easier
to send the referrals to multiple providers or
suppliers.”
Another factor that is helping to drive the
uptake of eprescription for home medical
equipment is the fact that referral partners
are seeing eprescription spread across postacute
care in general, Knowlton says. That
creates an expectation on the part of referring
physicians.
“Once referrals experience the ease of electronic
referrals and electronic orders, they start
to expect it elsewhere,” he explains. “So we’ve
seen a great increase in other home-based care
settings, such as home health and hospice.
“And we are seeing very large upticks
now appearing in the HME and equipment
space,” he adds. “I think the progression
that we’ve seen in the past year has been
tremendous in terms of the number of physicians
enrolled in various networks. Be they
ordering from a standalone platform, such
as Parachute, GoScripts, or DMEScripts, or
leveraging specialty platforms or direct from
EHR integrations.
PROVIDER BENEFITS
Eprescription offers a lot to providers. For
starters, it’s a massive efficiency gain in the
way that providers work with referral and
their patients.
“There’s a huge opportunity that still exists out there around adoption and the ability for
the industry to move off of the old fax paperbased
system and adopt it at a much higher
level and a faster rate,” Starck says.
“Ultimately, it’s a shorter time allotment for
somebody sending a referral,” he continues.
“And it’s a shorter timeframe for the supplier
to process and qualify a patient. Both of those
things mean the patient gets their equipment
faster, and there’s less rework. So, all those
things align and begin, I think, to build that
business case.”
And that efficiency helps considerably in
terms of providing care. Increased care and
service make a big difference in an increasingly
outcomes-oriented reimbursement
environment.
“When we talk about eprescribe, we’re
talking about getting any type of order or
documentation over from the referral sources
that is going to help the HME take care of a
patient or obtain reimbursement,” Knowlton
explains. “And in our industry, a lot of times
taking care of the patient and being able to
obtain reimbursement go hand in hand.”
Since the data coming from the
referral source has to be entered properly,
eprescription helps on the claims processing
and audit mitigation fronts as well. There,
too, care is improved.
“All the eprescribe platforms basically have
edits around requirements for orders to be
processed, which largely meets all the compliance
needs,” Starck explains. “So, when a
DME supplier receives a complete and accurate
order, they can move as quickly as they
possibly can to make sure that the patient gets
what they need as soon as they can.”
“Being able to collect all the information,
being able to have rules-driven workflows,
and being able to get the right documentation
upfront is tremendously powerful for
HMEs dealing with reimbursement challenges,”
Knowlton says.
“And that has, I think, a direct impact also
on patient care,” he adds. “If an HME isn’t
sure whether they’re going to get reimbursed,
patients can very quickly fall through the
cracks. So, it’s the right thing to do on a lot of
different fronts for an HME.”
PREPARING FOR EPRESCRIBE
Implementing eprescription starts with
thinking strategically. Brightree’s Knowlton
suggests providers think a little strategically
at the outset of the process to determine how
far they want to take the implementation.
Providers should start by assessing their
business lines, their geography, and what
their referral sources are already doing with
eprescription, Knowlton advises.
“A good first recommendation is always
talking with your referral sources, in terms of
where eprescribe for HME is on their radar,”
he says. “Do they understand the benefits?
Do they know that they have the ability to
move forward with eprescribe now?
“I’d also ask if they have the right technology
underpinnings to take advantage of
eprescribe,” he continues. “Depending on
business lines and geographies, you could be
dealing with many different referral sources
with different choices and technology. So,
making sure that you as an HME are first and
foremost, ready to deal with that, that would
be a quick checkbox for beginning the journey
of how to implement an eprescribe strategy.”
The next step in the process depends
on how deeply the HME provider wants to
implement eprescribe into their business and
their software systems. So, let’s look at that.
FLIPPING THE SWITCH
In the most basic terms, HME providers can
implement eprescription in essentially a day,
assuming they are using the eprescription
company’s web portal.
“Basically, they only need to contact the
eprescribe company, whether it’s DMEScripts
or any of the other eprescribe companies,
and get in their network,” Starck says. “And
as soon as [a provider] joins the network, it
is available on the menu for the prescriber.
“There’s an onboarding process we have
both for a supplier as well for a prescriber,
both of which are pretty easy and can be
done really in one day,” he adds.
Again, that’s for a basic implementation
using the eprescription company’s web portal.
If providers want a more systemic eprescription
integration where eprescriptions
are handled through their HME software
system, such as those from Brightree,
Universal Software Systems, or Computers
Unlimited, then there will need to be more
integration work on the back end.
“Based on the billing system the HME
provider is on, there may be some further
integration needed,” Starck says. “But at a
minimum, if a prescriber and a supplier
both enrolled in the same day, they could at
least send them an electronic order to start.
It might not be fully automated from beginning
to end, but they could send the electronic
order in one day.”
GOING DEEPER
Before talking about integration with software,
it’s important to understand that
interoperability between healthcare systems
uses a variety of technology approaches as
well as standards. Making all that interoperability
happen in a seamless way is why
organizations like the CommonWell Alliance
and eprescription companies such as
DMEScripts, GoScrips and Parachute exist.
“The physician ideally gets to do things
in their native workflow or as close to their
native workflow as possible, and the HME
providers receive orders in their electronic
systems as well,” Knowlton explains. “If
interoperability is done right, HME providers
and physicians don’t have to deal with any
of the complexity. The vendors that they
leverage can handle it for them.”
So, for a provider that might not have a lot
of on-staff IT muscle to do their own implementation
but wants to integrate eprescription
into their software systems, they want
to consult with their software company and
eprescription company.
“While there are some big HMEs out there that might be able to do
their own plumbing for this sort of thing, we at Brightree and I know
a whole bunch of other technology vendors in the HME space and
the eprescribe vendors themselves, want to support their customers
and have them lean on them for the technical journey,” Knowlton
explains. “So, we and others stand by, ready to talk to anybody that
wants to understand how to prepare for their journey.
“Once you’ve talked to your referral sources and taken stock of
your situation, talk to your technology vendors about how they can
support you on your journey,” he continues.
Then the provider wants to put a strategy in place that will keep the
business moving, Knowlton adds. For instance, it needs to map out how
it will continue working with referral sources. Does the provider want
to drive adoption of a particular eprescribe approach, or does it want to
work with referrals regardless of eprescribe system and hook into whatever
platforms or approaches they might already be using?
From an organizational standpoint, the provider needs to consider
how it implements eprescription with its staff during the integration.
They need to determine what they can do from a personnel standpoint
to be able to take advantage of these opportunities now.
“It’s getting easier and easier [to implement eprescription] every
day,” Knowlton explains. “However, depending on how aggressive
an HME wants to pursue driving eprescribe solutions upstream into
their referral networks, there can be an investment of time from sales
and marketing reps. And there can certainly be an investment of time
and internal operations folks and aligning workflows with new and
easier ways of doing business.”
MAINTAINING MOMENTUM
From Starck’s perspective, as both a national HME provider and
the chairman of an eprescribe industry backed by multiple large
providers, VGM and AAHomecare, eprescription is an industry
initiative; its adoption will benefit the industry.
“I think that the number one thing everyone can do from a
DME supplier community is to get involved,” he says. “The more
the DME community in total rallies around eprescribe and helps
move it with the referral partners, that will drive adoption. And it
will drive connections and connectivity across EHRs and backend
billing systems.”
Essentially, uptake increases uptake. The more providers make
referral sources aware and champion eprescribe as a “priority” within
the industry, the more referrals will want it, and that will help eprescribe
achieve ubiquity. The goal is to make what seems like a new
innovation at this moment seem commonplace in the future.
“The more providers that get involved and actively participate
and champion, the better,” Starck says. “We have a number of
providers that do that today, but you think about the fact that we
still have roughly 6,000 DME providers in the United States. We
don’t have 6,000 people actively moving eprescribe and adopting
and driving eprescribe.
“The capability is there,” he continues. “So, this is not a technology
issue; this is really an adoption issue. And there are multiple
platforms available, and the industry and the prescribers, and the
patients, really all benefit from much higher adoption of eprescribe.
And the way to make it happen is for the entire industry to engage in
it and really champion it.”
This article originally appeared in the Mar/Apr 2022 issue of HME Business.