Thursday, 5 December, 2024

31 Mar 2019 | Australasian Dental Practice

news > Spectrum > Page 56

Two sides of the coin

By Linda Miles

We've all heard the phrase, "what gets measured improves". "Why then does our doctor not want to share practice numbers with us as my last employer did?"


The team needs to know certain practice numbers in order to help control overhead, set goals, see those goals reached and share in the rewards if they improve. It's amazing to me how many dentists still keep the staff in the dark about numbers that they and the team need to be aware of each month. Numbers should be reported at the health of the practice team meeting week one of every month. Each member of the team (including the dentist) should take turns facilitating the team meeting. They should also give a three minute personal progress report on certain areas of the practice that they personally monitor.

Scheduling coordinator

  1. Number of new patients last month and where those new patients came from (patient referral, marketing project, doctor or team referral, etc.) It's also good to do a comparison study of how the NP number compares with the same month a year ago.
  2. Number of failed or last minute changed appointments in the doctor's schedule.
  3. Number of emergency patients worked into the schedule last month. How many were patients of record versus new patient emergencies. If a NP emergency, how many rescheduled for a complete oral health exam and radiographs? How does this compare with the same month a year ago?

Financial coordinator

  1. Number of past due collection calls.
  2. Number of dollars collected last month through patient financing. How does that compare to a year ago?
  3. Total A/R balance and the % of dollars past 60 and 90 days old. Comparison of same month a year ago.

Assistants

  1. Number of units of crowns/veneers/implants etc and a comparison of the same month a year ago.
  2. Number of dollars spent last month on dental supplies, the % of last month's collections and how close it is to budget.
  3. Number of infection control violations given last month and number of dollars collected (We recommend that one assistant be the "infection control cop" giving $5 tickets to those who they see breaking the rules of good infection control. The money is used to take the office team to lunch).

Hygienists

  1. Number of daily dollars produced in their treatment room last month with a comparison study of the same month a year ago (Total $ divided by # of days).
  2. Number of procedures in the 4000 code (initial perio procedures) and how this compares to the same month a year ago.
  3. Number of units of open chair time in their schedule last month and how that compares with the same month a year ago (Goal is zero defects in hygiene schedule).

Doctor or administrator

  1. Last month's gross and adjusted (net) production. How that compares with the same month a year ago.
  2. Last month's collected amount with a comparison of same month a year ago.
  3. Was the practice bonus goal reached and if so, it is a time for celebration and bonus checks to be distributed.

One doctor's viewpoint

Almost from the very beginning (1994), I worked with a consultant who encouraged me to share practice numbers with the team. It was most empowering to have the team members "own" certain areas of the practice by keeping me in the know about how things were going in their departments. One point that dentists must make very clear when sharing the figures: All team members know that confidentiality about practice business, patients and each other stays within the walls of the office and is not shared with others. Being a confidant is part of being a professional. Reminding the team of this at the beginning of each team meeting is important.

The point of having health of the practice team meetings is threefold:

  1. To create "owner attitude" versus "unionised thinking", which is, "give me my paycheck and let me out of here". The team loves to have good reports!
  2. To create accountability within each position of the practice.
  3. To promote teamwork. When they hear each other's report they know they are not the only dedicated, hard-working team member and that each of them are important to the success of the practice.

And as a final benefit, they all work harder as they love seeing the dentist pleased with reports that focus on their contributions each month. They also love knowing they reached their bonus goals and are now rewarded for their extra effort. This equals happy dentist and happy team. And patients notice!

If these principles are ones that brought you to where you are in dentistry or are principles that you and your team need to be reminded of often, come spend the day with me along with Dr David Moffet and Jayne Bandy in either Melbourne (August 3) or Sydney (August 10). Not one or two management pearls and growth strategies will be shared... but instead, the whole string of pearls!

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