Using an EHR for Care Management? It Will Cost You.
Repurposing an EHR for care management ultimately costs providers in various direct and indirect ways.
Repurposing an EHR for care management ultimately costs providers in various direct and indirect ways.
The False Economy of EHR-Based Care Management
When healthcare organizations consider implementing care management programs, many instinctively turn to their existing Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems. The reasoning seems sound: "We've already invested in this platform, so let's maximize its use." However, this approach often creates more problems than it solves, resulting in significant hidden costs.
The Fundamental Mismatch
EHRs were designed primarily for documentation, billing, and basic clinical data management—not for the dynamic, relationship-based work of care management. This fundamental mismatch manifests in several costly ways:
1. Workflow Inefficiencies
Care managers using EHRs typically report spending 60-70% of their time on documentation and administrative tasks, leaving only 30-40% for actual patient interaction. Purpose-built care management platforms flip this ratio, allowing care managers to spend the majority of their time on patient care.
A care manager at a mid-sized ACO shared: "With our EHR, I was spending 45 minutes documenting a 15-minute patient call. After switching to a dedicated care management platform, I document the same call in under 10 minutes."
2. Limited Patient Engagement Capabilities
Most EHRs lack robust patient engagement features essential for effective care management:
- Limited or no automated outreach capabilities
- Poor integration with remote monitoring devices
- Minimal support for patient-reported outcomes
- Clunky patient portal experiences
These limitations force organizations to either accept suboptimal engagement or purchase additional solutions, creating integration challenges and increasing costs.
3. Inadequate Analytics and Reporting
Care management success depends on identifying intervention opportunities and measuring outcomes. EHRs typically offer limited capabilities in:
- Risk stratification and predictive analytics
- Population health management
- Care gap identification
- Program ROI measurement
Without these insights, organizations struggle to demonstrate value and continuously improve their programs.
The Real Financial Impact
The true cost of using an EHR for care management extends far beyond the initial implementation:
Direct Costs
- Staff Inefficiency: Care managers handling fewer patients due to administrative burden
- Custom Development: Expensive customizations to make the EHR workable for care management
- Additional Solutions: Supplementary tools to fill EHR gaps
- Maintenance Fees: Ongoing costs for EHR customizations
Opportunity Costs
- Missed Reimbursement: Inability to efficiently capture all billable care management activities
- Staff Turnover: Higher burnout rates among care managers struggling with inefficient systems
- Suboptimal Outcomes: Fewer successful interventions due to limited capabilities
- Delayed Program Growth: Slower scaling of care management initiatives
Case Study: Community Health Network
Community Health Network initially attempted to run their Chronic Care Management program through their EHR. After 18 months, they had enrolled only 800 patients and were struggling with staff retention.
After implementing a purpose-built care management platform:
- Enrollment increased to 3,200 patients within 12 months
- Documentation time decreased by 62%
- Staff satisfaction scores improved by 47%
- Net revenue increased by $1.2M annually
The Right Tool for the Right Job
Healthcare organizations should recognize that EHRs and care management platforms serve different purposes:
EHRs excel at:
- Clinical documentation
- Order entry
- Billing
- Basic clinical decision support
Care management platforms excel at:
- Patient engagement and outreach
- Care plan management
- Population health analytics
- Workflow optimization for non-visit care
Making the Transition
Organizations considering a dedicated care management solution should:
- Assess Current State: Measure time spent on documentation vs. patient care
- Calculate True Costs: Include both direct and opportunity costs of the current approach
- Evaluate Integration Options: Look for platforms that integrate with your EHR
- Start Small: Begin with a focused pilot program
- Measure Results: Track efficiency, engagement, and financial outcomes
Conclusion
While using an existing EHR for care management may seem cost-effective initially, the long-term financial and clinical implications often prove otherwise. By investing in purpose-built tools that integrate with EHRs, healthcare organizations can optimize both systems for their intended purposes, ultimately improving care quality while reducing total costs.
Remember: The most expensive tool is often the wrong tool used for the right job.
Dr. Sarah Chen
Healthcare Systems Specialist
Healthcare technology expert and advocate for AI-powered patient care solutions. Passionate about improving clinical outcomes through innovative technology.
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