July 16-18 | New Orleans

Element5  

San Jose,  CA 
United States
http://www.e5.ai
  • Booth: 302

Meet Element5 at the NAHC FMC 2023. Experience pre-built workflow automation for post-acute care.

Overview

Element5 is a Workflow Automation Solution purpose built for post-acute care. With Element5’s fully managed Automation Solution, you reap the benefits of automation without the ongoing hassle of designing, building, running, and then maintaining automations. Our automations are workflow specific, built for scale, have 40+ connections to PAC systems and include 24x7x365 proactive monitoring.  This allows us to support at scale and never build from scratch.

Brands:We automate labor intensive, logic driven high volume administrative workflows, so post-acute teams can eliminate those tasks from their daily work.


  Learning Labs

Pre-claim review submission automation (HCHB)

  Show Specials

  • This article is sponsored by Element5. In this Voices interview, Home Health Care News sits down with Eric Gordon, Co-Founder and Chief Revenue Officer of Element5, to learn why post-acute care organizations are turning increasingly to automation tools to make staff and patients happier. He shares the easiest workflows to automate, and offers why he believes 2022 in home-based care will be the year when the industry changes how business gets done.

    Home Health Care News: Eric, you’ve spent your career at the intersection of healthcare and technology, and you co-founded Element5 in 2019 with three others, including Joe Randesi. What experiences do you most draw from in your role today?

    Eric Gordon: You’ll probably hear it in my voice as we go through our talk today: I just have a real passion for this industry. All of my grandparents went through home care at one point or another, and a few of them had the good fortune of being in hospice as well. Operational bottlenecks are not a fault of the agencies — they’re just the system that we’re working in. But every dollar we’re spending on these bottlenecks is a dollar we can’t put towards care delivery and driving quality outcomes.

    So I’ve spent 16 years working with providers, and have a genuine appreciation for the challenges they face on a day-to-day basis. I know it takes an incredible amount of clicks to complete even some of the simplest tasks in home care, hospice, senior living and other allied post-acute care organizations. It was with that understanding that we created Element5, because we knew automation could have a huge impact on our industry.

    How is Element5 helping home-based care operators manage post-acute care?

    Gordon: Our mission is to enable staff to work at the top of their licenses. We do that by eliminating operational bottlenecks. The bottlenecks are these high-volume, highly repetitive, logic-driven workflows that our providers deal with every day. That simply means that home care and hospice agencies have very well-paid staff performing hours and hours of mind-numbing work, which prevents them from working at the top of their licenses.

    We are attacking these operational bottlenecks that span the patient journey inside of an organization. From intake to eligibility to billing, all the way through, there are opportunities for automation. And it’s working. We have, in a very short amount of time, contracted with over 50 post-acute providers. We have six of the top 10 home health providers in the country under contract with us. Collectively, those clients have contracted with Element5 to automate over 130 workflows.

    If we can drive efficiency in the back office, it means more dollars being spent at the bedside. I don’t know how you cannot get excited about that. That to me is where everything’s at. I literally just had a family member go through hospice, and you want that nurse at the bedside, there for those final hours. We want to drive efficiency and put more dollars at the bedside.

    Compared to other areas in the aging world — senior housing, skilled care, and so on — what makes home health ripe for automation?

    Gordon: Our clients are leveraging automation to support all kinds of workflows. So the potential for automation is ripe across all industries. Specifically thinking about home care, we’re dealing with severe staffing shortages and staff burnout. We have to find ways to drive greater efficiencies and leverage the staff we do have to focus on more meaningful work.

    The driver of this problem in home care is our use of fragmented systems. Every provider has multiple systems they’re dealing with, and in most cases, they don’t talk to one another. You’ve got an EHR, you’ve got a payroll system, you’re communicating with payers through payer portals and checking eligibility through clearinghouses and dropping claims. None of this is widely connected. It creates a lot of bottlenecks.

    On top of that, home care is a high-volume industry, which compounds all of these inefficiencies. A good example is the ever-changing regulatory and compliance landscape in which we operate. Far too often in order to comply, providers turn to simply adding staff.

    We have to think about these problems in new ways. In this environment where revenue is not keeping up with expenses, most post-acute care providers are looking for ways to elevate their staff through automation. We have to adapt in this environment and find greater opportunities for efficiency.

    For an operator looking to get started with automation, what are the easiest workflows to use?

    Gordon: The opportunities for automation inside the home care and hospice community truly span the patient journey. The patient comes to the provider in most cases through an eReferral system, and we can automate the flow of that demographic information from the eReferral system to create the patient profile in your EHR.

    As soon as you get the patient into the EHR, you run an eligibility check, and a lot of times that means you’re plugging patient information into a clearinghouse to check that patient’s insurance eligibility. That’s an integration automation. We can grab that insurance information from the clearinghouse or from a payer portal and bring it back to the patient chart, and even use coordination notes to communicate back to the human staff, anything that we found on that insurance profile that was important.

    Once you get the patient in the system and they’re eligible, you move from the commercial payer to authorizations. That process doesn’t end with the request — you have to continually check back in that payer portal until that request is addressed. You have to grab the pending authorization, load that back into your EHR, and then continually check back until you get an affirmed authorization. That’s mind-numbing work. Our aim is to help care-providing staff, especially those who are focused on clinical documentation.

    Element5 programs a software robot that can log into and interact with the system in order to manage the transcriptions between EHR and payer portal. This supports and facilitates the authorization process. These and others are all very discrete workflows that we have automated for the post-acute care community.

    Furthermore, there are a lot of workflows that I refer to as purely file transfer. We have human staff grabbing OASIS files and uploading them into the clearinghouse. All of these file transfer workflows are ripe for automation.

    There are several RPA providers in the market. What advantages do home health agencies gain by engaging directly with Element5, as opposed to building their own automated workflows?

    Gordon: The scale and the rapid adoption that this industry is showing toward automation is remarkable. As such, the high-end of the market already knows the need. The bigger you are, the easier it is to automate an individual workflow and show massive ROI. What operators should understand is that this scales, because we’re pricing based on transaction volume. If you have a smaller transaction volume, you have a smaller monthly fee, because you have less transaction volume running through the system.

    Yet everybody in our industry, from the top to the bottom, has the same requirements and needs to find a way to drive this level of efficiency. It’s incredible what I see on a day-to-day basis. It amazes me what people are being forced to do just to keep the doors open. The amount of manual work that we have baked into this industry today is surprising.

    If you Google “RPA” after reading this article, you’ll see there are many, many companies out there providing agnostic automation tools, but only one that is purpose-built for the post-acute space. What’s unique about Element5 is, we are a workflow-automation company that leverages RPA to satisfy very discrete post-acute-specific workflows. That’s a major difference.

    Element5 is bringing to this industry the easy button, where they can subscribe through an Automation-as-a-Service solution to a desired end-state workflow automation. This helps them realize the value of automation without all of the heavy lifting involved in designing, building, supporting and maintaining an automation themselves.

    You work with several post-acute care organizations that are already automating a significant portion of their administrative work. How has their reception to automation been and what have you learned from their journey so far?

    Gordon: Our experience with our existing clients and the feedback we’re receiving is overwhelmingly supportive. We’re finding that after clients have their first workflow live, they get excited seeing immediate impact and are eager to explore further possibilities. They’re coming back with a list of 10, or even 14 different workflows that they want to automate.

    Our real call to action to this industry is just: Get started with automation. You don’t need to boil the ocean on your first automation workflow. Everybody we’ve talked with is interested, and who wouldn’t be interested in wanting to automate every possible bottleneck we have inside our space with technology? It’s just a matter of getting started

    Finish this sentence: “The home-based care industry in 2022 will be the year of…”?

    Gordon: Rethinking the way work gets done. I think COVID has forced every company to reevaluate their operational models. In the simplest sense, we all used to work in an office, and now so many folks are working remotely. Their entire operation on a model has been under a microscope over the last two years. I think in 2022, we’re seeing providers put into action these changes that they’re starting to visualize, and automation is just one of those tools they have now in their toolbox to really drive greater efficiency and a smarter workforce as we move into the future.

  • This article is sponsored by Element5. In this Voices interview, Home Health Care News sits down with Joe Randesi, Co-Founder & CEO at Element5, to learn how his organization is helping home-based care organizations automate cumbersome administrative processes. He explains how automation can help providers operate more efficiently so they can focus on delivering quality care and improving outcomes.

    Home Health Care News: What career experiences do you most draw from in your role today?

    Joe Randesi: I co-founded a home care and hospice EHR startup in 2007, DeVero, and ran that business for 10 years as head of product, ending my tenure as CEO and taking them through an acquisition in 2017. That positioned me well for the next chapter in my life for a couple of reasons. One was just understanding the market. I’ve now been in this market for 15 years, and in building an EHR, I came to understand the clients and other pieces that make up the market.

    In this role, I also learned about the operations of home care and hospice providers, and understood what was required for them to deliver care and run the business. It positioned me well to bring automation to the market.

    Tell us the story of Element5. What did you see in the market that led you to launch the company?

    Randesi: In my tenure running DeVero, I saw the unbelievable amount of manual, cumbersome processes that exist within these operations — repetitive tasks that are required to get their work done. These inefficiencies are derived from many external factors such as the burden of complying with larger health systems, compliance, regulatory and payer entities. As a result, providers are forced to have manual processes within and between existing vendor solutions.

    I know and appreciate the value of the existing systems in place, like from the EHR companies. I was one of them. But there are automation opportunities outside their core domain that they will never solve. That sparked the idea to start Element5 and focus fully on automation as a service for post-acute care.

    You recently raised $15 million in Series A funding. What does that funding allow E5 to do, and how will it enable the company to grow?

    Randesi: The funding allows Element5 to dedicate more time and energy to this market. We are an intentional vertical play, focusing 100% on the post-acute market. It also allows us to go faster and offer more direct value to this community. We know this is a target-rich environment for automation opportunities. With more funding, we can proactively attack more pain points. We can build more robust automations for our clients.

    We know that the more workflow automation we have to offer, the more the market’s going to benefit. They’re going to elevate their staff because of automation, and their workforce will be able to spend more time focusing on the delivery of care and improving outcomes. Element5 can take care of all of those redundant administrative processes in between.

    What are the most important workflow areas home health organizations should automate?

    Randesi: Focus on anything administrative in nature that’s repetitive and has volume. It doesn’t make sense to automate something that’s highly subjective and doesn’t have a pattern. The word volume is there because our strategy and our goal is to price our workflow automations delivering direct ROI.

    We will come in and say, “Look, you’re doing process A to B right now and it’s costing you X. If you automate it with Element5 it will cost you something less than X, and we will deliver direct ROI back to you.” That’s where the volume comes into play. We try to target those larger pain points.

    A good example of this is authorizations. Typically, providers have numerous FTEs handling the administrative side of authorizations. It’s extremely labor-intensive and mostly repetitive. If you have a payer on one side and the EHR on the other, you probably have FTEs going into your EHR, extracting information, looking at it, going into the payer side, plugging in that same information, waiting for a response and moving the response from the payer side back to the EHR. That workflow is ripe for automation, and it will deliver direct ROI.

    Element5 has a workflow automation-as-a-service strategy. We will understand that workflow, we will deploy the product, and we will start to act as if we are an extension of their human workforce. Our workflow automation product will start processing the exact steps to deliver the same outcomes as your current staff and eliminate that repetitive workflow from your existing team. We sell our product on a workflow by workflow basis, and that workflow will automate a process and deliver direct ROI.

    Another strong example is compliance and audit checklists. Almost every single provider, regardless of the systems they use, uses external checklists before they send claims out. Typically, they might audit 10%, looking at maybe 10, 20, 30 data points within a chart or claim and checking the same 30 things every single time.

    There’s no reason why they can’t leverage automation to perform those checks. Instead of doing 10% of your charts, why not leverage the automation to do 100% of your charts?”

    Give me your top three areas of workflow automation for home health agencies.

    Randesi: Authorizations, compliance and audit checklists, and connecting systems: Those are the three big ones. There’s a flavor of connecting systems in the authorization world, but there’s a lot of examples where you have to connect your EHR to system A, B, or C to keep it up to date or process something. People are using Element5 for that connection when traditional connection methods like APIs don’t exist.

    What are some of the measurable outcomes that home health agencies can witness through automation?

    Randesi: Direct ROI is really important, but I think there’s almost more value in the indirect ROI. It’s harder to measure, but the automation is built to perform on par with your top-performing staff member 100% of the time. What you get from that is consistency. Our automations never take breaks and are always there when you need them.

    We process records faster than anyone can with a human team, so your timeliness increases. We can also improve cash flow and accuracy. Again, we target logic-based workflows. We are not going in there to figure out how to care or document care for a patient; we are targeting administrative, logic-based workflows. Our accuracy is extremely high because we don’t make mistakes if we write that code right.

    This equates to a fully scalable digital workforce. There’s no onboarding, no offboarding and no tribal knowledge you can’t unlock. When a key employee leaves a company, the company is in a really difficult position because they have to extract all that knowledge. When you automate some of these processes using our technology, you eliminate that risk.

    How do you see work changing within home health agencies in the near future?

    Randesi: I think providers are going to become more reliant on technology. We see what’s happening in the space, and time and time again we hear that revenue is not keeping up with expenses. People cannot continue to throw bodies at new regulations and new requirements. I think providers absolutely have to become more technology-focused to survive, and Element5 is revolutionizing how work gets done within these operations.

    Our company mission is to have a direct impact on the staffing crisis in post-acute care, improve employee satisfaction and allow providers to focus more on their core mission: delivering quality care and improving outcomes. We want to partner with our clients and say, “We can take care of the administrative overhead. We can allow your current workforce to elevate and focus on why you’re in business.”

    Without technology like Element5, it’s going to be difficult to keep up with the demand that the market puts on these providers to get their work done or work processed.

    Coming into this year, no one knew fully what to expect in the home-based care industry. What is the biggest surprise this year, and what impact will that surprise have in 2022?

    Randesi: To me, this impact and these pain points are kind of the same year over year. The biggest surprise for me was the true burden of regulatory compliance. At Element5, I’ve had an opportunity to dive in with our clients, and the amount of pain that they go through with regulatory alone is unbelievable to me. It’s only getting worse.

    For example, Review Choice Demonstration continues to expand throughout the country. The states that have it today had a staff supporting their census. All of a sudden, a new, government-mandated requirement is introduced for them to satisfy Review Choice Demonstration. That’s just added work for that staff. It’s hard as a business to say, “You have to do more than you did yesterday.” And these are common scenarios we witness everyday that have tremendous potential to be automated.

    I was also surprised to see how much regulatory compliance overhead our clients have to deal with. It continues to grow, and we know it won’t stop. There are new rules every year and this burden is going to get larger and larger.

  • (Apr 24, 2023)

    Post-acute organizations across America are automating repetitive administrative tasks with the help of Element5.

    If you'd like to experience the simplicity of pre-built workflow automation, book a consultation with our team here


  Products

  • Pre-claim Review Submission Automation
    The pre-claim review submission automation manages the submission of PCR files from the EHR to Palmetto, and then updates the EHR with the DCN, UTN and Decision Letter from Palmetto. This reduces administrative burden and ensures timely reimbursements....

  • Pre-claim review submissions must be timely and accurate, else reimbursements get delayed. But the entire process takes nearly 17 minutes (per billing period) when performed manually, starting from collecting PCR documentation to updating the DCN, UTN and DL on the EHR. It also becomes tedious for staff to check Palmetto daily for responses. These administrative bottlenecks can severely impact the speed of submissions.

    Element5's Pre-Claim Review Automation enables timely and accurate PCR submissions, helping home health providers avoid reimbursement delays. It is designed to extract files from the EHR, perform PCR submissions on Palmetto, check (and re-check) Palmetto daily for responses and update the EHR with the responses. Providers achieve timely submissions, faster billing and reduced DSO, while also reducing the administrative burden on staff.
  • Document Faxing Automation (Home Health & Hospice)
    The document faxing automation ensures regulatory compliance for providers and eliminates manual work by keeping physicians and facilities notified at different events in the patient care journey. It also keeps the EHR updated with coordination notes....

  • Home health agencies and hospices must keep physicians and facilities notified of different events in the patient's care journey, to stay compliant with COPs. But keeping track of patient care journeys across the census can be cumbersome for staff.

    The document faxing automation eliminates this administrative burden, while enabling providers to stay compliant with regulations. It can access the EHR, identify which patients have reached events that require physicians and facilities to be notified, and accurately fax the corresponding documents. It then proceeds to add a coordination note for each patient record in the EHR. Teams no longer need to invest time in manual data entry and can instead focus on priority tasks.

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