Sunday, December 11, 2011

Online Optical Ordering and Rx Tracking


RxWIZARD™ allows Eye Care Professionals to send orders via the WEB from your office to the lab.

Now, the information you enter in KIP can be fed right into RxWIZARD™ with a single click.

KIP will send the patient information, prescription information, and certain ordering information directly to RxWIZARD™ which then opens in a new window. Then, simply complete your order using RxWIZARD™ and send the order.

Later, you can come back to RxWIZARD™ and track the status of your order.

Although RxWIZARD™ is strictly a PC program, we have modified this program to run on a Mac, too.

RxWIZARD™ runs great on the Mac. Once installed, RxWIZARD™ acts just like it was a Mac program.

Or, you can install Parallels on your Mac (along with Windows) and have a virtual PC running KIP and RxWIZARD™ together.

Of course, PC users need just install RxWIZARD™ and you are ready to go.

Either way, you get the convenience of online ordering and the ease of use of KIP.

For more information on Digital Vision, Inc.'s RxWIZARD™ visit http://www.dvirx.com/.


Saturday, October 29, 2011

Hiding Other Insurance for Electronic Claims Submission

Sometimes electronic claims do not process properly if there is a secondary insurance submitted on the claim.

This does not happen with all clearinghouses and all claims, but if you find you an instance where you want to simply submit the selected insurance as the only carrier on the claim, check the HIDE OTHERS box on the invoice.



Checking this box submits the selected insurance carrier only, and hides all other insurance from the electronic claim.

In the example above, you want to send a claim to the secondary insurance carrier, Travelers, and not show the primary carrier, Medicare, anywhere on the claim. Select Travelers as the Bill To insurance, and check the HIDE OTHERS box next to the insurance carriers list on the invoice.

The claim will be submitted as if Travelers was the only insurance carrier.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Marketing Using Email with KIP

It is well known that marketing within your own patient database is effective.

Just look at Kohl's. They know that sending their credit card holders a flyer pays off, and if they include a coupon (especially a 30% off coupon), chances are their customers will be taking advantage of it.

Sending email is a free and easy way for you to do the same type of marketing, and takes only a few minutes.

You can use email to:

- send out a patient newsletter
- alert patients of a change in office hours
- notify patients of a sale or promotion
- notify patients of a drug recall alert

The possibilities are limitless.

To send an email, create a list of patients using the CUSTOM PATIENT SEARCH in the Patients menu. Then click the OUTPUT button and then SEND EMAIL.

You can use a pre-made template or type the email freehand and click SEND EMAIL.

Your email will now go to all patients with an email address. You do not need to eliminate patients who haven't had an email entered. KIP sorts them out for you.

Make sure you start requesting your patient's email addresses - and then use them. Your patients will appreciate it, and so will you.

For more information on formatting emails, go to Emails and Text Messages Made Easy.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Billing Provider and Treatment Location Preferences

KIP makes sure your correct billing provider and treatment location are on each claim.

Depending on the your office preferences, you may prefer the invoice billing provider and treatment provider to be associated with the patient or with the type of invoice you are entering.

Some practices might require the use of two billing providers for two different practice locations, while other practices may need two billing providers for different types of claims.

Each patient is automatically assigned a billing provider and treatment location based on the first invoice entered for the patient. This information is stored in the BILLING tab of the slide out window of the Personal Information screen. You can easily change these if necessary.



When you use Auto-Entry Invoices, if you would like to use the billing provider assigned to the patient on each invoice, select "Patient" in the Invoice Preferences where it says "Auto Invoice uses Billing Provider & Location from:"


If you want to always use the Billing Provider and Treatment Location used on the Auto Invoice, select "Auto Invoice."

This way, KIP helps to make sure the correct billing information is on each claim - and saves you steps in the process.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Attach a Photo to your Patient Record

To attach a photo to a patient record, simply drag a photo file to the patient photo area in the Alerts window to the right of the Personal Information screen.

Drag a Photo into the area in the Alerts window.
A Photo can be a JPG, TIFF, or PDF file.
You can take patient photos using Photo Booth on the Mac, and drag the images directly to the KIP patient window.

Photo Booth in Mac OS 10.6.8 (and newer) is able to select which camera you use to take photos, and it is also more stable in dragging directly from Photo Booth into KIP.

If you have difficulties dragging photos directly from Photo Booth into KIP, try dragging the photo to your desktop and then from the desktop into KIP.

After dragging the photo into the patient window, you may delete the photo file on your computer, if desired. The photo is stored within the KIP data file.

If you are using Photo Booth and find you cannot drag the photo into the patient record, chances are, you took two photos within the same 60 seconds. Photo Booth names the second file with a #2 at the end.


In this case, the name of the second photo is not compatible with dragging the photo into KIP. If you rename the second photo and remove the # sign from the name, the photo will be able to be dragged into the patient record.


Managing Patient Scans, Photos, and Files

You can have many types of files on your computer that are related to a specific patient. File types can be varied and can include:

- a scan of a driver's license, insurance card, or EOB
- an image of a patient's x-ray
- a scan of an exam form, letter, or lab results
- a photo of a wound
- a pre-operative photo or a photo of a post-operative result
- a video of a patient encounter
- an audio file of a patient conversation

A file can literally be anything that can exist on your computer.

Now, you have the ability to have KIP store these files and retrieve them as needed, anywhere - whether you are using the computer from within your local network, or remotely from a second office or from home.

The process is quite simple.

Open the Patient Information screen, and choose SAVE FILE TO THIS PATIENT from the More menu.

A dialog box will open for you to choose the desired file. Select the file you wish to relate to this patient and click the OPEN button.

You will now be shown an area to describe the file. You may write anything you wish here (For example: insurance card).

Click OK and you are done. The file will be copied to the server computer and stored for later retrieval.

To view files for a patient, choose the FILES tab in the Patient Information screen.

Double-click on a line to open it.
Double-click on a blank line to save a new file to this patient.

Double-click on the file you wish to open. The file will be moved to your local computer and opened with the default application set for that type of file.

If you need to change the name of the file in the list, Command-click on the line.

Files open in the default program installed on your computer associated with that kind of file - so, if you have scanned an insurance card as a JPG file, it will likely open with Preview on your Mac computer.

You can save any type of file. Large files can take time to be copied to the server. Please take that into account when you are associating files to a patient, especially when using KIP from a remote location.

It is important to note that if you are accessing patient information from a remote location, patient confidentiality should be a concern.

You should set up a VPN (virtual private network) connection between the server and the remote location to ensure data security. Although it is not difficult to set up a VPN connection, you may want to seek assistance from a local computer technician if you are not familiar with this technology.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Use KIP to Store Patient Files, Documents and Photos

Patient information can come in many forms. They can be images, text documents, or even movies.

KIP allows you to store these files and associate them with a patient.

For example, you scan the patient's driver's license and save it as an image file. Now, you can store this image in KIP and have it accessible anywhere on the network. The network can even be a remote site if you have remote access set up.

You can associate any type of file with a patient. If the file can be on your computer, you can associate that file with a specific patient. When you choose to view the file, the file opens using the program associated with that file.

So, for the example above, when you want to view the patient's driver's license, it will open in the program used on that computer to view image files (most likely Preview on a Mac).

There is no limit to the number of files you can associate with a patient.

When you associate a file with a patient, that file gets copied to the server computer and it becomes available to any other user anywhere on the network. On a single user version of KIP, the file gets copied to a special local folder.

If the original file is then deleted, the copy made by KIP stays safe. Once the file becomes associated with a patient, it becomes stored on the server, so even if you delete the original file, the copied files remain.

Most files are small - JPG, PDF, TXT - and are moved to the server in an instant. If you associate a large file with a patient, it can longer to be copied. A typical high resolution photo (800K) should take less than a second to be copied on a local network, where a small movie file (500MB) may take several minutes.

KIP allows you to name these files so you can easily recognize them.

So, for every form in your office (patient information forms, exam forms, faxes received, EOBs), you can scan the form, and associate the image file with that patient. You can then shred the original form. The stored file can be opened or printed when needed.

It now becomes even more important to do daily, weekly, and off-site backups. Don't let this lax. Backing up your data is more important than ever.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Can I Upgrade to Mac OS X Lion?

Computers used in business are definitely different from computers used at home.

Business computers can't be down - not even for a second.

If your office computers stop, business stops - so upgrading to Mac OS X Lion has to be well thought out.

Here are some important things to know about Mac OS X Lion:

1. Rosetta is gone.

Rosetta allows your Mac to run older software, so software that runs fine on Snow Leopard may not run at all on Lion.

You may be running older versions of Quickbooks, Microsoft Word, or some other important program that you need every single day which might completely stop working with Lion.

KIP version 11 is a Mac OS X native application, so it should run without difficulty on Lion.

KIP version 10 will not run on Lion.

Before you upgrade to Lion, make sure all your software runs native in OS X.

2. Not all Macs work with Lion.

You’ll need a Mac with an Intel Core 2 Duo, Core i3, Core i5, Core i7, or Xeon processor to run Mac OS X Lion.

Macs made prior to 2006 do not have the right hardware to run Lion.

For example, if you are using a Mac with an Intel Core Duo processor, you won't be able to run Lion.

3. Installation of Lion is not guaranteed to be trouble-free.

Although we expect upgrading to Mac OS X Lion to proceed smoothly, sometimes it just doesn't and you may even have to wipe your entire hard drive to do the installation.

This means you'd better be prepared for things to go wrong, just in case.

And make sure you have a good back-up of everything, too.

Hey, you never know.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Patient Ledger ... Supercharged!

(KIP Deluxe Version 11.5.1)

Trying to look at the Patient Ledger and have it make sense can be daunting. Matching up payments and adjustments to invoices can be confusing. That's because the Patient Ledger is simply a transaction log showing invoices, payments, and adjustments in the order they are entered.

That's where you want to click on the Finance tab, so you can see a more common sense approach to these payments.

Click the TRACE OPEN button and it all starts to make perfect sense.

This opens an interactive window called the Ledger Register, where open invoices and their associated payments, and adjustments are all grouped together so you can see which credits were applied to which invoices. You also have a running Patient Balance, Insurance Balance, and Total Balance, so you can easily see the effect of each transaction on each invoice.

Ledger Register Screen

As you can see in this example above, an invoice was entered on July 23. From this screen, you can see that when the invoice was entered, the entire invoice was to be billed to insurance.

(Please note that when an amount is $0.00, it is blank).

Then, on July 24, an adjustment was entered, and the Patient Balance now became $27.53 and the Insurance Balance became $182.53.

Then, on July 24, another adjustment was entered bringing leaving the Patient Balance alone, and reducing the Insurance Balance to $127.47.

Then, finally, on July 24, a patient payment was entered, leaving only the insurance balance remaining for $127.47.

Since the Patient Balance, Insurance Balance, and Total Balance are running totals, the final line amounts reflect the current state of the invoice. 

In this example, by looking at just the last line, we see the Patient Balance for this particular invoice is blank ($0.00), the Insurance Balance is $127.47, and the Total Balance is $127.47.

Notice how convenient it is to have the invoice and the related credits all grouped together, and to be able to see the effect of each payment and adjustment on the invoice balance.

As you have more invoices entered, it becomes even more helpful.

How is the Ledger Register Interactive?

Simply double-click on a line in the Ledger Register, and that transaction appears in a new window, showing exactly how the item looked when it was entered.

If you are signed in as Practice Owner, you can modify or delete the payment right from there, then watch the effect on the Ledger Register once you save your changes.

And a Shortcut Makes It Even Better

Click anywhere on the Balance area on the bottom of the Personal Information Screen or the Ledger Screen and the Ledger Register opens automatically.

Click anywhere here to open the Ledger Register

What if I want to see the ALL invoices and not just the open invoices?

You have the option to see every invoice or only the invoices with a balance. The shortcut method shows only the open invoices.

To see every invoice, click the Finance tab and then click the TRACE ALL button.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Emails and Text Messages Made Easy

Our most recent version of KIP Deluxe 11.5 includes more ways to use email.

Now you can save templates of emails and send them to patients with a click.

You can use email to:
  • remind patients of upcoming appointments
  • tell patients their orthotics or eyeglasses are in
  • you can even send birthday wishes using email
You are limited only by your imagination.

To set up email in KIP, you will need to go to Preferences, then Electronic Claims and Email Preferences.

Enter your Email Return Address such as me@aol.com  (This is the return address that will appear on your email.)

Once you have entered your Email Return Address, you are ready to go.

To send an email, use the email icon:

Email Icon on Patient Information Screen



When you click on the email icon, and the email window will appear.


Click on an email template in the Templates list to use a pre-formatted email, or just write an email and save it as a template for future use.

Use <First_Name> and <Last_Name> to automatically enter the patient's first and last names.

Then click the SEND EMAIL button, and away it goes.

Many practices are now requiring their patient's email address to allow for more efficient communication with their patients.



Sending Text Messages with KIP

You can also use this email functionality to send text messages to your patients. 

For example, if your patient's cell phone is on the Verizon network, use their phone number in the following format (entering the cell phone number instead of the xxxxxxxxxx):

xxxxxxxxxx@vtext.com

and the message will be received as a text message instead of an email.

Below, find text message formats for other cell phone providers.

3 River Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@sms.3rivers.net
Advantage Communicationsxxxxxxxxx@advantagepaging.com
AirVoicexxxxxxxxx@mmode.com
Airtouch Pagersxxxxxxxxx@airtouch.net
Airtouch Pagersxxxxxxxxx@airtouchpaging.com
Airtouch Pagersxxxxxxxxx@alphapage.airtouch.com
Airtouch Pagersxxxxxxxxx@myairmail.com
AllTelxxxxxxxxx@message.alltel.com
Alltel PCSxxxxxxxxx@message.alltel.com
Alltelxxxxxxxxx@alltelmessage.com
Ameritech Pagingxxxxxxxxx@pageapi.com
Arch Pagers (PageNet)xxxxxxxxx@archwireless.net
Arch Pagers (PageNet)xxxxxxxxx@epage.arch.com
AT&Txxxxxxxxx@txt.att.net
Bell South (Blackberry)xxxxxxxxx@bellsouthtips.com
Bell South Mobilityxxxxxxxxx@blsdcs.net
Bell Southxxxxxxxxx@blsdcs.net
Bell Southxxxxxxxxx@sms.bellsouth.com
Bell Southxxxxxxxxx@wireless.bellsouth.com
Bluegrass Cellularxxxxxxxxx@sms.bluecell.com
Boost Mobilexxxxxxxxx@myboostmobile.com
Boostxxxxxxxxx@myboostmobile.com
CallPlusxxxxxxxxx@mmode.com
Carolina Mobile Communicationsxxxxxxxxx@cmcpaging.com
Cellular One East Coastxxxxxxxxx@phone.cellone.net
Cellular One PCSxxxxxxxxx@paging.cellone-sf.com
Cellular One South Westxxxxxxxxx@swmsg.com
Cellular One Westxxxxxxxxx@mycellone.com
Cellular Onexxxxxxxxx@message.cellone-sf.com
Cellular Onexxxxxxxxx@mobile.celloneusa.com
Cellular Onexxxxxxxxx@sbcemail.com
Cellular Southxxxxxxxxx@csouth1.com
Central Vermont Communicationsxxxxxxxxx@cvcpaging.com
CenturyTelxxxxxxxxx@messaging.centurytel.net
Cingular (GSM)xxxxxxxxx@cingularme.com
Cingular (TDMA)xxxxxxxxx@mmode.com
Cingular Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@mobile.mycingular.net
Cingularxxxxxxxxx@cingularme.com
Communication Specialistsxxxxxxx@pageme.comspeco.net
Cook Pagingxxxxxxxxx@cookmail.com
Corr Wireless Communicationsxxxxxxxxx@corrwireless.net
Dobson Communications Corporationxxxxxxxxx@mobile.dobson.net
Dobson-Alex Wireless / Dobson-Cellular Onexxxxxxxxx@mobile.cellularone.com
Edge Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@sms.edgewireless.com
GCS Pagingxxxxxxxxx@webpager.us
GTExxxxxxxxx@gte.pagegate.net
GTExxxxxxxxx@messagealert.com
Galaxy Corporationxxxxxxxxx@sendabeep.net
GrayLink / Porta-Phonexxxxxxxxx@epage.porta-phone.com
Houston Cellularxxxxxxxxx@text.houstoncellular.net
Inland Cellular Telephonexxxxxxxxx@inlandlink.com
JSM Tele-Pagexxxxxxxxx@jsmtel.com
Lauttamus Communicationxxxxxxxxx@e-page.net
MCI Phonexxxxxxxxx@mci.com
MCIxxxxxxxxx@pagemci.com
Metro PCSxxxxxxxxx@metropcs.sms.us
Metro PCSxxxxxxxxx@mymetropcs.com
MetroPCSxxxxxxxxx@mymetropcs.com
Metrocall 2-wayxxxxxxxxx@my2way.com
Metrocallxxxxxxxxx@page.metrocall.com
Midwest Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@clearlydigital.com
Mobilecom PAxxxxxxxxx@page.mobilcom.net
Mobilfonexxxxxxxxx@page.mobilfone.com
Morris Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@beepone.net
NPI Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@npiwireless.com
Nextelxxxxxxxxx@messaging.nextel.com
Nextelxxxxxxxxx@page.nextel.com
Ntelosxxxxxxxxx@pcs.ntelos.com
Omnipointxxxxxxxxx@omnipoint.com
Omnipointxxxxxxxxx@omnipointpcs.com
OnlineBeepxxxxxxxxx@onlinebeep.net
PCS Onexxxxxxxxx@pcsone.net
Pacific Bellxxxxxxxxx@pacbellpcs.net
PageMartxxxxxxxxx@pagemart.net
PageOne NorthWestxxxxxxxxx@page1nw.com
Pioneer / Enid Cellularxxxxxxxxx@msg.pioneerenidcellular.com
Price Communicationsxxxxxxxxx@mobilecell1se.com
ProPagexxxxxxxxx@page.propage.net
Public Service Cellularxxxxxxxxx@sms.pscel.com
Qualcommname@pager.qualcomm.com
Qwestxxxxxxxxx@qwestmp.com
RAM Pagexxxxxxxxx@ram-page.com
ST Pagingpin@page.stpaging.com
Safaricomxxxxxxxxx@safaricomsms.com
Satelindo GSMxxxxxxxxx@satelindogsm.com
Satellinkxxxxxxxxx.pageme@satellink.net
Simple Freedomxxxxxxxxx@text.simplefreedom.net
Skytel Pagersxxxxxxxxx@email.skytel.com
Skytel Pagersxxxxxxxxx@skytel.com
Smart Telecomxxxxxxxxx@mysmart.mymobile.ph
Southern LINCxxxxxxxxx@page.southernlinc.com
Southwestern Bellxxxxxxxxx@email.swbw.com
Sprint PCSxxxxxxxxx@messaging.sprintpcs.com
Sprintxxxxxxxxx@sprintpaging.com
SunComxxxxxxxxx@tms.suncom.com
Surewest Communicationsxxxxxxxxx@mobile.surewest.com
T-Mobilexxxxxxxxx@tmomail.net
TIMxxxxxxxxx@timnet.com
TSR Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@alphame.com
TSR Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@beep.com
Teletouchxxxxxxxxx@pageme.teletouch.com
Telusxxxxxxxxx@msg.telus.com
The Indiana Paging Coxxxx@pager.tdspager.com
Tritonxxxxxxxxx@tms.suncom.com
US Cellularxxxxxxxxx@email.uscc.net
USA Mobilityxxxxxxxxx@mobilecomm.net
Unicelxxxxxxxxx@utext.com
Verizon PCSxxxxxxxxx@myvzw.com
Verizon Pagersxxxxxxxxx@myairmail.com
Verizonxxxxxxxxx@vtext.com
Virgin Mobilexxxxxxxxx@vmobl.com
Virgin Mobilexxxxxxxxx@vxtras.com
WebLink Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@pagemart.net
West Central Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@sms.wcc.net
Western Wirelessxxxxxxxxx@cellularonewest.com
Wyndtellxxxxxxxxx@wyndtell.com