Discovery Phase:
Findings & Recommendations
For the first time, a hospital-wide investigation into how patient access actually works on the ground, what is holding teams back, and what a realistic path forward looks like.
Why We Did This Work
For years, RRH has received consistent feedback from patients and staff about the same problem: calls go unanswered, voicemails pile up, and patients struggle to reach the right team. Until now, these complaints were addressed individually, a workflow tweak here, a staffing adjustment there, without a full picture of what was actually driving the problem across the organization.
This project was designed to change that. For the first time, we conducted a structured, hospital-wide investigation into how patient access actually works, what is holding teams back, what staff already know needs to change, and what a realistic path forward looks like.
"Strong people are compensating for weak systems. That is not a strategy, and it is not sustainable. The path forward is to build the system that matches the people we already have."
How We Went About It
Between April and May 2026, the project team conducted an in-depth discovery phase across 12 departments, combining staff interviews with direct workflow observation. Every team that touches patient access was included.
Departments and Teams Included
| Department / Area | Key Roles Included |
|---|---|
| PBX / Operator | Main-line operators, call routing and transfer workflows |
| Centralized Scheduling | Schedulers and authorization specialists across multiple service lines |
| South Plaza | Front desk, check-in, checkout, and voicemail workflows |
| North Plaza / Adult Medicine | Front office and scheduling, rural access challenges |
| North Plaza / Pediatrics | Front office and scheduling workflows |
| North Plaza / Cardiac Testing | Specialized scheduling and patient prep communication |
| North Plaza / Dental | Front office, Dentrix workflows, and dual-system complexity |
| Outpatient Plaza / Women's Health Clinic | Front desk, scheduling, and provider callout recovery |
| Outpatient Plaza / Surgery / GI | Surgical scheduling, prior authorization, fax intake |
| East Plaza / SSMC | Front office and scheduling workflows |
| Radiology Imaging | Front and back office, authorization and imaging scheduling |
| Medical Records / H.I.M | Records request intake and status communication to patients |
| Clinic Managers | Cross-clinic leadership, coverage, oversight, and visibility gaps |
What We Found
Findings were organized into four categories. Every department touched more than one, which makes these system-level problems, not clinic-by-clinic issues. Click a card to read more.
Staff are asked to do too many things at once: Phones, check-in, checkout, insurance verification, chart prep, voicemail review, and patient follow-up all compete for the same person's attention. Phone coverage is consistently the first casualty.
- Most clinics have no designated phone owner, meaning no one is accountable when calls are missed.
- There are no defined backup models, so small staffing changes create outsized access failures.
- Managers and leads are pulled into daily recovery work, answering phones and rescheduling, instead of designing systems.
- Leaders have no visibility into call demand, queue depth, or callback aging by team.
The phone is the only reliable way most patients reach RRH. When that experience breaks down, patients do not disappear, they call back, walk in, or give up entirely.
- Patients call for appointments, prep instructions, referral status, records, and refills, many of which could be handled through other channels if those channels existed and were promoted.
- Callback expectations are inconsistent, triggering repeat calling before the first callback is even made.
- Transferred calls lose context, patients repeat their name, issue, and reason for calling at every handoff.
- Staff absorb the pressure through constant task switching and workarounds that depend on individual skill rather than a reliable process.
Workflows supporting patient access, voicemail management, callbacks, transfers, provider callouts, reminders, and scheduling handoffs, are mostly manual, mostly undocumented, and mostly dependent on individual staff knowledge.
- No standard exists for voicemail review intervals, callback documentation, or callback ownership. Each team has developed its own local approach.
- Provider call-outs trigger an all-hands manual process, blocking schedules, calling patients, documenting, and rebooking, with no automation support.
- Routing relies on staff memory. When staff do not know where to send a call, they use experience, not a reliable system.
- Cross-department handoffs, referrals, fax intake, and authorization follow-up, are resolved through direct calls, emails, or physical walk-overs rather than shared systems.
- Training is uneven. New staff learn by watching experienced colleagues. When those colleagues are out, quality and consistency drop.
The current technology environment is fragmented. Teams work across Mitel, MightyCall Legacy, TeleVox, Paragon/Altera, Dentrix, and OneContent, tools that are not integrated, do not share data, and do not trigger workflows across each other, causing duplicate and manual work.
- Voicemail transcription is not deployed across all clinic lines. Most staff manually listen to each message with no shared queue view and no record of who has responded.
- There is no unified view of call logs, voicemail queues, missed calls, or callback status for any clinic or for leadership.
- MightyCall Legacy provides voicemail transcription and missed-number capture where deployed, a capability that must be preserved through the Mitel CX transition.
- TeleVox reminders require manual correction when confirmations or cancellations do not sync cleanly with scheduling data.
- Paragon requires too many steps before staff can view availability, and system freezes during live calls force manual workarounds.
- Mitel's current setup does not support caller context through transfers, real-time queue visibility for supervisors, or click-to-call from scheduling screens.
Issues Identified in the Field
Every issue was identified through interviews and shadowing sessions. Each has a reference code, the letter maps to its category color. Click any issue to expand the detail.
What Teams Are Asking For
Staff and managers were asked directly what would most improve the patient and employee experience. These are not wish-list items from one or two vocal voices, they are recurring themes across every team we interviewed. Click any item to expand.
What We Are Recommending
Recommendations are organized by category. Where scope or timeline is still being defined in partnership with IT, this is noted inline. Click any item to expand the rationale.
12-Month Roadmap
A visual overview of when each phase of work begins, peaks, and transitions. The six-month milestone marks the point where foundational changes should be visible in performance data.
What Success Looks Like
These six metrics define what a fixed access model looks like at RRH. They are grounded in healthcare call center benchmarks and tied directly to what patients and staff told us they need. Click a card to read the definition.
What We Are Asking For
This initiative requires organizational commitment, not just project permission. The problems identified are systemic and have persisted for years precisely because they were never addressed at scale.
- ✓Formally endorse the Zero Missed Call Initiative as a strategic priority, with visible executive sponsorship
- ✓Support resource allocation for the next phase, including Mitel CX configuration, training development, and SMS capability
- ✓Hold teams accountable to the KPIs as part of operational performance reviews, not just patient satisfaction scores
- ✓Recognize that this is a 12-month transformation, not a one-time fix. Sustained progress requires sustained attention.
The first wins depend on you. Technology will help, but the first 90 days are about people, ownership, and standards.
- ✓Name a daily phone and voicemail owner for every shift, and a named backup, starting now, before anything else changes
- ✓Stop taking voicemails after hours. While voicemail transcription will be rolled out with Mitel CX, we can help you implement it temporarily in the meantime.
- ✓Enforce the same-day callback standard. Track it. Report it. Make it a team expectation, not a suggestion.
- ✓Participate in the Mitel CX configuration process, your input on routing, queues, and workflows will determine how well it works for your team
- ✓Engage your teams in training rollout through Relias. Consistent standards only happen if managers prioritize them.
- ✓Share what is not working. This project depends on honest feedback from the people closest to the problem.