With access to convenient, high-quality healthcare, virtual care empowers employees to advocate for their health. But what does a good virtual care service look like?
It’s important for employers to be mindful of what benefit solutions work best for their employees. To help consultants and employers evaluate a top-tier virtual care provider, we’ve rounded up the 7 ways virtual care companies fall short in their services.
No Custom Employee Engagement CampaignsThe key to virtual care success is getting employees to utilize the service. Dynamic, hyper-personalized and comprehensive employee engagement campaigns drive utilization of virtual care. From onboarding and education to ongoing awareness and reinforcement, employee engagement campaigns are necessary for virtual care providers and should be continuous, year-long initiatives. Plus, they should be funded and managed by the provider to take the lift off HR (Human Resources) teams.
Tedious Registration ProcessWhen employees aren’t feeling well, they should be able to get the care they need quickly and conveniently. A tedious registration process deters workers from seeking care and it should take no longer than a few minutes to access their account with a virtual care provider. Employees should be pre-registered to remove barriers to care such as uploading insurance information, adding credit card details and lengthy questionnaires.
Hands-Off CareCare should be continuous, especially for the management of chronic diseases. Employees should have access to high-quality doctors with no predefined limits on the number of visits or conditions treated. Virtual care must offer value-based care and providers should be committed to practicing great clinical and compassionate care to employees.
Fees for CareVirtual care should be free for workers and their dependents to use. Consult fees should be available for employees on qualified HDHPs (High Deductible Health Plan).
Claims ImpactsVirtual care that runs independently from the group medical plan incurs no claims, ultimately saving employers and employees money in total healthcare costs. Virtual visits should not incur medical claims.
No Performance GuaranteesA virtual care provider should be willing to put their fees at risk with performance guarantees. Whether it’s meeting certain utilization or savings thresholds, virtual care providers should ensure that their services can enrich employee benefits programs.
Limited ReportingEmployers should have access to their average utilization, savings, deidentified population health data and more. Reporting should be robust and allow employers to see the success of virtual care in real-time.
First Stop Health Virtual Care
FSH digital-first care is comprised of Telemedicine, Virtual Primary Care and Virtual Mental Health. With our virtual care, employers and their employees experience: