Your patient, Mrs. Chen, is 68 years old. She has type 2 diabetes. She is three months past due for her A1C screening. Her care team knows this. The system flagged it weeks ago. So why hasn't she come in?
The answer is not that she doesn't care. The answer is simpler: the reminder never reached her. The portal message sat unread. The recall letter was buried under a pile of mail.
The phone call came from an unknown number, so she let it go to voicemail. The voicemail was deleted without a listen. She is not avoiding care. She just never got the nudge she needed through a channel she actually uses.
This is the quiet failure of population health outreach at enterprise eCW networks. Clinics have the data. They know which patients need flu shots, screenings, wellness visits, and follow-ups.
But the channels used to reach those patients – patient portals, mailed letters, robocalls – don't connect with the majority of real people in the real world. The care gap stays open. Not because patients are disengaged, but because the message never arrived.
SMS changes that equation. An eClinicalWorks patient text health campaign for preventive care reminders delivers a short, clear, personal message directly to a patient's text inbox.
The patient sees the text within minutes and can book an appointment with a single reply. It is the simplest, most direct path between a care need and a scheduled visit.
For the patients that portals, letters, and phone calls consistently miss, it is often the only path that works.
Enterprise eCW networks spend real time and money on population health programs. The problem is not the intent; it is the delivery.
The channels most practices rely on simply do not match how their patients communicate. Understanding where that gap lives is the first step toward closing it.
Email campaigns average a 20–25% open rate in healthcare. That means three out of four patients never see the message at all.
Patient portal notifications perform even worse among the general patient population, since most patients at enterprise eCW networks haven't set up healow or haven't logged in recently.
Phone calls from an unfamiliar number get answered roughly 30–40% of the time, and many of those answers still end with a deleted voicemail.
Mailed letters are slower still. A recall letter sent on Monday may not arrive until Thursday or Friday. If the clinical window is tight, the letter may arrive after the opportunity has passed. The network sent the message. The patient never received it. The care gap stays open.
Contrast that with SMS. Text messages carry open rates above 95%, and most are read within three minutes of delivery.
For a patient SMS health reminder in an eCW network, that speed matters. It means the message reaches the patient when the need is still active, not days later when they have already moved on.
Outreach Channel Comparison
|
Channel |
Avg. Open Rate |
Speed to Read |
Requires App/Login |
|---|---|---|---|
|
SMS Text |
95%+ |
Within 3 minutes |
No |
|
|
20–25% |
Hours to days |
No |
|
Patient Portal |
Low (inactive users) |
Only if logged in |
Yes |
|
Phone Call |
30–40% answer |
Varies |
No |
|
Mailed Letter |
Unknown |
Days |
No |
For every patient who falls through the outreach cracks, the reason is usually the same: the network is sending messages through channels the patient does not use.
Patients who did not download healow, who do not open emails from their provider, and who screen calls from unknown numbers are not non-compliant. They are simply invisible to the tools the practice is relying on.
This is not a fringe group. At many enterprise eCW networks, the majority of patients fit this description. They use their phones every day to text their family, their friends, and their favorite businesses.
They are highly reachable, just not through portals or letters. A preventive screening text campaign built on SMS reaches them through the one channel they never miss.
The health consequences of missing this group compound over time. A skipped A1C becomes a late-stage complication. A missed mammogram becomes a difficult diagnosis. A forgotten flu shot becomes a hospitalization.
The data to prevent these outcomes already lives in eCW. The gap is the last mile: getting the right reminder to the right patient through a channel that actually works.
SMS outreach sounds simple, and in practice, it is. But the reason it works so well in healthcare is not just the channel. It is the combination of timing, personalization, and ease of reply that makes patients act.
Here is how a well-built SMS health campaign functions from start to finish inside an eCW environment.
A message that says "Hi Margaret, this is Dr. Patel's office. It's time for your A1C check" does not feel like spam.
It feels like a reminder from someone who knows her. That feeling matters. It is what separates a helpful health nudge from an ignored mass blast.
Every eClinicalWorks wellness visit reminder text sent through Curogram includes the patient's name, their provider's name, and the specific care action they need.
Personalization is only possible because the campaign platform connects directly to eCW's patient data.
The flu shot reminder comes from the patient's actual PCP's office, not a generic network number. The chronic disease management text reminder references the patient's own specialist by name. The mammography recall directs the patient to their preferred imaging center.
This level of detail is what makes the message feel personal rather than promotional.
Patients also know the text is opt-out friendly. They can reply STOP at any time. In practice, opt-out rates for well-crafted health campaign texts stay very low.
Patients recognize value when they see it , especially when the message comes from their own doctor's office and tells them something they actually need to know.
The patient receives a short, clear text. They reply YES. Within seconds, they receive a follow-up message with available appointment times.
They tap a time. They get a confirmation. The entire exchange takes under a minute, with no phone call, no portal login, and no staff time involved.
Every reply is routed through Curogram's smart routing to the right team. If a patient asks a question instead of replying YES, a staff member sees it and can respond. If the patient confirms they already received care elsewhere, the record is updated.
The system handles the flow without creating more work for front desk staff. Health campaign patient engagement through SMS is fast for the patient and efficient for the practice.
For an eCW flu shot text reminder, this matters in the fall season when patient volume spikes and staff bandwidth is thin. The campaign can go out to hundreds or thousands of patients at once.
Responses come back in real time. Staff only need to step in when a patient has a question. The campaign scales without scaling the labor.
Older patients are among the highest-need groups in any preventive care campaign, and among the least likely to have downloaded a healthcare app. The "just download the app" instruction that works for a 30-year-old may be a real barrier for a 68-year-old who does not use a smartphone the same way.
Passwords get forgotten. App stores feel unfamiliar. Portal logins that expire create confusion.
SMS removes all of that friction. Basic text messaging works on any cell phone, including older devices that don't support apps at all.
A patient who has never logged into healow and has no intention of doing so can still receive a clear, helpful eCW patient SMS health reminder through their standard text inbox.
The reminder reaches them the same way a text from their grandchild would. No friction. No barrier. Just a message.
Based on our internal data, 35% of patients who received an SMS recall message scheduled an appointment within a month, with 1,240 patients seen from recall messages alone at one multi-location practice.
These were patients who had not returned for follow-up care through any other outreach method. SMS reached them when nothing else did.
Enterprise eCW networks often serve patient populations that span many languages and cultural backgrounds. A health campaign sent only in English will fail to reach patients who are more comfortable in Spanish, Vietnamese, Tagalog, or another language.
Mailed letters have the same limitation, and most robocall systems don't support multilingual outreach at scale.
Curogram supports multilingual SMS campaign templates. Health campaign messages can be created in multiple languages and sent based on each patient's language preference data in eCW.
For a preventive screening text campaign aimed at a diverse patient population, this means the message arrives in a language the patient can act on. Language barriers become care barriers only when outreach tools don't account for them.
This matters most for chronic disease management text reminders, where the clarity of the message directly affects whether a patient takes action. A patient who does not fully understand a letter about their A1C follow-up may set it aside.
A patient who receives a plain-language text in their preferred language – from their own provider's office – is far more likely to reply and book the visit.
The goal of any population health campaign is not just to send messages. It is to change patient behavior and improve health outcomes. SMS campaigns succeed at this because they close the gap between the care need and the patient action.
The reminder arrives. The patient responds. The appointment gets booked. Here is what that shift looks like in practice.
The old model puts the burden on the patient. To hear from their provider, they need to download an app, create an account, remember a password, and log in. Most patients, especially older ones, don't take those steps.
The reminder sits unseen. The care gap grows. The eClinicalWorks patient text health campaign model flips this dynamic. The practice reaches out. The patient receives the message in their existing text inbox. The burden shifts.
This shift is meaningful for patient experience. A patient who receives a warm, clear text from Dr. Patel's office on a Tuesday afternoon does not feel like they are being tracked or processed. They feel like their care team remembered them. That sense of being seen and valued is one of the strongest drivers of patient loyalty and long-term engagement with the practice.
It is also meaningful for health outcomes at the population level. When preventive care reminders reach more patients, more patients get the screenings, vaccinations, and check-ins they need, before small health issues become serious ones.
The flu shot that prevents hospitalization. The A1C check that catches an upward trend before it becomes a crisis.
These are the outcomes that SMS campaigns make more likely, simply by closing the delivery gap.
SMS health campaigns achieve open rates above 95% within minutes of delivery. Compare that to 20–25% for email and roughly 10–15% for portal notifications among patients who are actively logged in.
For patients who have never logged into the portal, the portal open rate is effectively zero.
Based on our internal research, practices using SMS-based recall campaigns have seen strong results. At one multi-location practice, 35% of patients who received an SMS recall scheduled an appointment within a month.
That reconversion rate held across both elderly patients and those who had not responded to prior phone or email outreach. The channel made the difference.
For an enterprise eCW network running a population health program, these numbers compound quickly. A campaign that reaches 5,000 patients with a 95% open rate and a 35% reconversion rate produces thousands of scheduled appointments.
The same campaign through email or portal notifications may produce a fraction of that result. The clinical impact – more screenings, more vaccinations, more chronic disease check-ins – is measurable and meaningful.
Your patients are reachable. Most of them are reachable right now, through the text inbox they check dozens of times a day. The challenge is not patient engagement; it is channel selection.
eClinicalWorks holds the data: who needs a flu shot, who is overdue for a screening, and who hasn't come in for an annual wellness visit. Curogram makes sure that data turns into a message the patient actually sees.
Not a portal notification for a portal they don't use. Not a letter that arrives after the window closes. A text. Plain language. From their own provider's office. Delivered in seconds.
Stop sending preventive care reminders through channels your patients don't use.
Book a demo today and send one SMS health campaign to a patient population that has been unreachable through phone, email, and portal outreach.
Frequently Asked Questions