The job of a medical receptionist is an important one; a job that, if performed effectively, will work to enhance your medical practice, increase your patient satisfaction and minimize the stress of unexpected occurrences that daily life at your medical practice can bring. Undoubtedly, the role of a medical receptionist is key to the long-term success of your medical practice, let alone the protection of your own sanity. A question that you should be asking yourself, then, is: how effective is your medical receptionist?
A medical receptionist is only human, so their abilities to perform their jobs effectively can only be based on and limited to the limits of a human being; in other words, physically performing one task at a time. Of course, and qualified medical receptionist must excel at multi-tasking, but in some cases, such as needing to speak with a patient at the front desk, with two lines on hold with a new incoming call and the need to cater to your needs; no medical receptionist can speak with five individuals at the same time.
Of course, this is an obvious observation. However, in order for your medical practice to operate smoothly on a daily basis, these situations where your medical receptionist is overloaded with more tasks than can physically be performed at one time must be kept to a minimum. While there are options to increase the effectiveness of your medical receptionist, there's one that stands out as a sure fire winner amongst all the rest.
1) You could hire an additional front desk receptionist. For some medical practices, this may be a viable option. However, with the significant costs involved not only in the additional monthly payroll, but in the training and the degraded performance of your primary medical receptionist during the training period, this option would have to be weighed out based on whether it would be a sound financial investment in the long run to acquire another front desk receptionist.
2) You could stop accepting new patients. This option is chosen by many medical practices that have enough of a regular client base where the financial bottom line will not be affected in the long run. While preventing new patients from obtaining services from you may increase the effectiveness of your medical receptionist, it may ultimately negatively affect your bottom line in the long run. Keeping pace with your current patient list while accepting new patients will help your medical practice to grow; though some doctors would simply prefer to work with a smaller number of regular patients for a variety of reasons.
3) You could hire a virtual receptionist. Hiring a virtual receptionist is a new idea to many doctors, but this method is proven to improve the overall performance of their medical practices. When hiring addition front desk staff is not an option for financial reasons and you really don't want to limit your ability to take on new patients; a virtual medical receptionist could help take some of the excess workload off from your primary front desk receptionist while being much more affordable, and dependable, than hiring another front desk receptionist for your medical practice.
The bottom line is this: a medical receptionist can only do so many things at the same time. If your medical practice is growing to the point where one front desk receptionist is not enough to handle the needs of your business, looking for the services of a virtual receptionist might just be the most affordable solution to help your current receptionist be more effective in their daily tasks.
Medical Receptionist Job Description
The role of a medical receptionist is an important one; one that requires a clear mind, split-second decision making and most important of all, the ability to handle multiple tasks simultaneously. To reiterate the importance of your office's medial receptionist, often times, the overall "mood" of a medical practice's office will be set by your front desk receptionist; if he or she is on top of things and has a pleasant demeanor, you will likely notice that the overall atmosphere of your practice is warm, friendly and efficient. On the other hand, having a cranky, tired or "scatterbrained" medical receptionist is an invitation for a stressful working environment.
If you have an overloaded medical practice where the number of patient requests regularly overwhelms your office staff, the demands placed on your front desk medical receptionist is intensive, and often times, it can be almost unrealistic. No matter how well organized and professional your medical receptionist is, no human being can literally perform more than one task at a time.
A medical receptionists job is much like that of a link cook in a busy restaurant; they may have 8 different orders cooking on the grill, in the deep fryer and the burner, but no cook can scramble eggs, pull the catfish out of the deep fryer, saut? mushrooms and put together a BLT at the exact same time, much like your front desk medical receptionist is unable to cater to 3 on-hold customers, the new incoming phone call, customers standing in line and checking out patients who have just finished their visit effectively. Simply put, no matter how efficient your front-desk receptionist is, they cannot perform more tasks than their human body allows them.
Now, this is only taking into consideration the workload on a "good day" when you are sufficiently staffed, but overwhelmed by your patients' demands. You already know the extremely stressful situations that can come about due to understaffed office conditions.
Because of the undeniable fact that people are only able to physically handle one task at a time, no matter how efficient a person is at multi-tasking, technology has afforded medical practices everywhere a new idea that has become more dependable, and affordable, than it was even 2 years ago.
Automated Medical Receptionists
Automated Medical Receptionists can be the god-send in an understaffed or exorbitantly busy medical practice. These "digital-age" medical receptionists can greet your incoming patients with a friendly voice, and help to alleviate some of the mundane, yet time consuming tasks that your front-desk receptionist performs on a daily basis; from handling appointment scheduling for existing patients to sending appointment reminder notifications for already established appointments.
These "digital secretaries", if you will, can help reduce the workload and the demand placed on your medical receptionist, which will allow them to be more efficient to meet your needs and the needs of your patients who are at your practices location.
Affordable and cost-effective
Not only can acquiring the services of a virtual office assistant be beneficial in reducing the demands on your current office staff, these services can be affordable. Thinking only in terms of the time and monetary investment to hire and train a new front-desk receptionist, the yearly investment for your own 24/7 medical secretary may very well be less than what it would cost you to in one month to acquire new personnel for your medical office.
No matter how talented your medical receptionist is, he or she is subject to the limitations of every other human being on the face of the planet; namely, they can only perform one task at a time. Checking out the options available for obtaining your own virtual office receptionist may very well be the key to increased profits tomorrow and a less stressful work environment today.
Andy Press has sinced written about articles on various topics from Pharmacy, Office Equipment and Outsourcing. This article is number two in a series By Andy Press about and. Andy Press's top article generates over 9900 views. to your Favourites.
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