Issue StoriesKeeping in Touch: The Patient Newsletterby Dennis Hampton, PhD Patient newsletters are an effective way to educate customers while building loyalty. Here are examples of what professionals in the field are doing to customize their newsletters. Patient newsletters have gotten considerable attention lately. A number of recent articles1-4 suggest that regular contact with hearing aid users can provide for more successful hearing aid use, greater hearing aid satisfaction, and increased patient loyalty. In addition, direct marketingwhich is only one aspect of the patient newsletteris by far the most cost-effective marketing a practice can do. Almost every person on the mailing list of a hearing care practice has hearing loss, knows the provider, and either uses or is considering the use of hearing aids. What other marketing approach can focus on such a highly-defined market segment? Is marketing to patients consistent with the recent HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) regulations? Yes. According to the HIPAA website5: At the same time, the (HIPAA) proposal would permit...covered entities to communicate freely with patients about treatment options and other health-related information.
And according to the Office of Civil Rights Guidelines released in December 2002, as summarized in the March/April issue of Audiology Today,6 hearing care professionals are permitted to:
At Hearing HealthCare News®, we have been helping audiologists and hearing aid dispensers communicate with their patients since 1986, with more than 20 million patient newsletters distributed to hearing aid users and their families. Regular communication provided by these newsletters has been valuable to both the patients and the practices that serve them, and 90% of the professional subscribers renew their subscriptions year after year. Although we do the writing, lay-out, and printing of the newsletter, each subscriber is able to customize their newsletter several ways before the finished copies are printed and shipped. Subscribers use photos, logos, coupons, and information theyve gleaned from their own practice or from the field to personalize their newsletters. Here are some of the ways our subscribers have customized their newsletters: Personal information. Patients love hearing about the birth of a child, a graduation, or anything that supports the personal relationship we develop with our patients. This type of information is particularly effective in a tight-knit community and serves both to inform and intimate that our business/practice is an integral part of that community. For example, William Helmholtz III, AuD, of First Choice Audiology in Colorado Springs, Col, received many congratulations from his patients after printing a photo of his new son, Josef. Professional information. Vangie Neeley-Marshall of Advanced Hearing Care in Valdosta, Ga, let her patients know when she received her AuD degree. Others write about the continuing education and professional conferences they attend, as they keep current with the latest developments in the field. Updates like these show patients that you are committed to providing the best technology and state-of-the-art care and take your professional credentials seriously. Office news. Patients are interested in office hours, staff changes, and information about the office and professional staff. When Kristen Bish, MS, joined her practice, Mary Ann Larkin, AuD, of Advanced Hearing Care in Mt. Pleasant, SC, introduced her to patients by telling them about Kristens educational background and experience. Jeff Worgul, MS, of County Hearing and Balance in Waterford, Conn, announced the relocation of an office. Additionally, many subscribers have used the newsletter as a vehicle to inform their patients about HIPAA privacy regulations. This can help prepare people in advance for the HIPAA-related forms that will need to be filled out at their next visit. Consumer seminars. The newsletter is an easy way to alert patients about seminars and open houses where new technology and instruments are presented. Rick Hetsko, MEd, of Oberlin Hearing Care in Oberlin, Ohio, encouraged his patients to share the news about an upcoming Hearing Awareness and Open House with friends, family members, or loved ones who have hearing problems, and dispensed 22 hearing aids as a result. Many subscribers use the newsletter to encourage referrals from their current patients.The West Texas Rehabilitation Center in Abilene, Tex, let their patients know about their other clinical services, including diagnostic and vestibular rehabilitation services for dizziness. Patient Survey Results. Do you survey your patients? Do you get good results? Patients and local physicians should know about those excellent patient satisfaction ratings. In my office, we received many comments when we wrote that although 96% are satisfied or very satisfied with their audiologist, Kathleen likes to point out that her ratings are higher than mine! Scott Frink of Salem Audiology Clinic in Salem, Ore, used the newsletter to conduct a patient satisfaction survey and to encourage patient testimonials. The office received several hundred responses and several patient testimonials were subsequently used in newspaper ads. New Products. Many subscribers provide information about new hearing aid models, related products such as drying appliances, battery sales, and assistive listening devices. Information about new technology and new hearing aid models allows patients to come to the office pre-informed and ready to seek additional information. Michael Marion, MS, of The Hearing Center in Camarillo, Calif, promotes battery sales twice a year. He says that net income from battery sales more than pays for the annual cost of the newsletter. Greg Lowe, PhD, AuD, of Fort Wayne, Ind, described the features of a new hearing aid to his current users (ie, multiple-channel signal processing system, automatic directional microphone) and dispensed several aids to current hearing aid users as a result. Summary Thus, a newsletter can be considered both a very effective marketing strategy and a form of ongoing treatment. Thats why a newsletter is good for patientsand great for a dispensing practice.
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