The Web-based Dentist
January 2015
Curve Dental Logo


For: 

Linda Drevenstedt
Linda Drevenstedt
Power Thought: Drevenstedt Consulting
12 Keys to Better Scheduling

1.  Use these Basic Guidelines:

  • Set up the computer with columns equal to the number of treatment rooms.
  • 5 operatories = 5 columns. Patients go into the rooms shown on the schedule. An extra column can be used for your treatment coordinator.
  • Use 10-minute units for the schedule.

2.  Schedule Patients to Meet Practice Goals.

Set daily or hourly goals for EACH provider. Once a goal is reached consistently, new goals should be set every 3 - 6 months. Base your goals on your past history over 6 months. Average your daily or hourly production and add to it to make the goal.

 

3. Track Production Daily and Compare to Your Goals.

Use a Production Tracking form and report progress toward goals each day at your Morning Huddle.

 

4.  Pre-block Your Schedule

Be sure to pre-block your schedule with productive procedures to meet your goals.  Pre-block enough time to meet at least 75% of your goal with Primary Care. You may call it rocks, green procedures--this includes all the procedures such as crowns for dentist and perio for hygienists--that are core to making your goal.

 

5.  Know Your REAL Time for Procedures.

Conduct a two week time audit to be sure you KNOW the correct chair time for all procedures. The time should include the real time for your room change-over including the OSHA regulated steps. Once the time audit is complete, post and use the correct times. If you are unhappy with the REAL times, begin to work toward more efficient delivery.

 

6.  Use Your Routing Slips.

This is the one piece of paper that still serves many purposes.  Mainly, it is the chief way the clinical staff communicates to the front office team about procedures completed today, the next procedure needed and the time needed for the procedure.

 

7.  Avoid these Ten Schedule Killers:

  1. Starting late at the beginning of the day or after lunch.
  2. Lab work not there.
  3. Operatory not set up with all instruments and materials and ready to go when the doctor enters.
  4. Unexpected procedures, changing procedures.
  5. Lack of a consistent "late patient" protocol.
  6. Non-patient interruptions: phone calls, doctor answering email, sales people, etc.
  7. Lack of expanded duties training/use.
  8. Materials or equipment crisis.
  9. Doctor unable to move from room to room efficiently, getting hyper-focused on one patient.
  10. Doctor over-communicating and not delegating communication.

8.  Know How to Schedule Emergency Patients.

Emergency patients have a right to receive treatment at the convenience of the practice. Emergency patients scheduled in a way that can delay the treatment of regular patients, cause an office to reschedule regular patients, and run behind are schedule killers. The following are the only emergencies which should interrupt your regular schedule:

  • There is trauma from a recent accident.
  • The patient is actively bleeding.
  • Acute, severe recent onset pain
  • You have a dentist and a chair pre-blocked for emergency care.

Otherwise, all emergency patients are given a specific time to come in.  Review the schedule each morning with the doctor or assistant to determine the best time to see an emergency patient.

 

9. Always Pre-block Time for Your New Patients.

Appoint the non-emergency new patients for the type of appointment they most want-either with the hygienist or with the dentist.  Give the patient what they request.  New patients need to be seen within 7 - 10 days of their call. If you do not pre-block time into the hygiene schedule for your new patients, the recall patients will fill the schedule and you will be putting the new patient on a call list which is poor marketing.

 

10.  Keep Broken Appointments Under Control.

Last minute cancellations and changes can kill your most productive schedule.  You must have a tactful, firm, professional yet compassionate stand about changes and cancellations. If you do not have people at your business office who can keep the cancellations under control, you may need to make a change. You cannot afford to pay your team when patients take advantage of you with short notice cancellations. Set expectations early with your patients. Be sure the DOCTOR and the clinical staff emphasize the importance of keeping appointments and your request for a minimum of 24 hours notice for any changes.

 

11.  Confirm Appointments with the Newest Electronic Methods.

Burger King™ says, "Have it your way." You want to communicate to your patients their way. Find out your patients' preferred method of receiving reminders and confirming their appointments. E-mail, text, call, card.  Use one, use all, yet be sure you get reminders out for hygiene two weeks ahead and then 48 hours ahead.  There are plenty of electronic contenders including: Find one that fits your practice.

 

12.  Have an Appointed "Hawk" for the Schedule.

Someone needs to take ultimate responsibility for a great and productive schedule.  This cannot be left to chance NOR "we all do it." Someone should review the schedule each day in the am and the pm and look one day and one week in advance to see if there are problems. With the advent of computer scheduling in the clinical area and more than one person making appointments, often scheduling is done myopically. The "hawk" takes a long view to see if we are scheduled to goal AND are we scheduled to run smoothly with no "train wrecks." Better to correct a problem in the schedule a week ahead than to merely confirm and live with a poor schedule.

 

More about Drevenstedt Consulting
 
Why the Web? Reason #236
You Don't Need to Purchase an Expensive Server

 

Doctors that manage their practice on the cloud can save on their IT bill. How? First, you don't need to purchase a hefty server to run the management software. Decent servers are expensive; expensive to purchase and expensive to install and configure. 

 

And when you don't have a server you don't have the maintenance costs that come with it. I'm not saying you can or should stick your nose up at your local IT pro--that's not a good idea. What I am saying is you'll not be paying more dollars for your IT guy to keep a beasty server up and running.

 

Another thought about servers is related to HIPAA. If you have a server in your practice you're responsible for 19 different security-related requirements. We've created a document that details those 19 requirements. When you get rid of the server you offload a bunch of bothersome HIPAA worries.

 

Simply put: Servers suck. They take up space. They need to be secure. Like all hardware they will fail. And they're out of favor with the times.

 

It's 2015. Why are you still using technology developed in the 90's?

 

You can learn more about the advantages and joys of living sans server on the cloud by chatting with one of our dental software consultants at 888-910-4376. Call today to learn more or visit our website

 
 

Informative Video Links
Reference Check: Dr. Huang
Reference Check: Dr. Williams


Classic Dental Jokes

While I was waiting to see my dentist a woman entered the reception room from the inner office with a big smile on her face. Nodding to me she said, "Thank goodness my work is completed. I'm so glad to have found a wonderful dentist, one who is so gentle and understanding, too."

 

Later, when ushered into the operatory, I related the incident to my doctor. She laughed and explained, "Oh, that's just my mother!"


Fun Dental Facts 

On a daily basis women smile 62 times. Men smile only 8 times per day.


Curve Dental Logo White

888-910-4376
STAY CONNECTED

Facebook   Twitter