Your practice knows who's overdue for care. That's not the hard part.
The hard part is getting those patients back through the door.
Every year, ambulatory practices invest real time and money reaching out to patients who haven't been seen in 6, 12, or 18 months. Recall letters get mailed. Staff makes phone calls. Portal notifications go out. And for most of those patients, nothing happens.
The letter gets recycled. The call goes to voicemail. The portal message sits unread behind a login screen no one can remember.
This isn't a patient engagement problem. It's a channel problem.
Patients aren't ignoring your practice because they've stopped caring about their health. They're ignoring the outreach because the channels you're using ask too much of them.
Scheduling a wellness visit or flu shot shouldn't require finding a username and password from three years ago. It shouldn't require calling back a number they don't recognize.
And it definitely shouldn't depend on someone opening the right piece of mail.
For large NextGen Enterprise practices, this mismatch hits hard.
When thousands of patients are overdue for annual wellness visits, preventive screenings, and seasonal vaccinations β and your recall response rate is sitting in the single digits β you're leaving significant revenue and clinical quality on the table.
The solution doesn't require a new system, a new portal, or a new app. It requires a text message.
Curogram's one-tap recall sends patients a personalized text from their practice's known number when they're due for care. The patient taps a link, picks a time, and confirms β all in under 30 seconds.
No phone call. No portal. No friction.
One practice used this approach to recover 1,240 lapsed patients with a 35% reconversion rate. Here's exactly how it works.
The traditional patient recall starts with a stack of envelopes. A list of overdue patients gets pulled, letters get printed, stamps get applied, and the whole campaign disappears into the postal system.
Each letter costs between $0.80 and $1.50 to print and mail. For a campaign targeting 5,000 patients, that's up to $7,500 β before a single appointment is scheduled.
The response rate? Single digits.
A $7,500 campaign might bring back a few hundred patients on a good day.
And you'll never know which patients opened the letter, considered calling, or simply forgot. There's no tracking, no follow-up mechanism, and no way to measure whether the effort was worth it.
The mailed recall is an analog solution in a world that's moved on.
NextGen's patient portal β PxP or FollowMyHealth β can deliver recall notifications, but it has a critical blind spot. The patients most likely to be on a recall list are the same patients least likely to be active on the portal.
Someone overdue for their annual wellness visit by 12 months probably hasn't logged into FollowMyHealth in 12 months either.
Portal recall messages land in an email inbox the patient rarely checks, or sit inside an app they haven't opened in months.
For lapsed, disengaged patients β the exact population a NextGen patient recall text message targets β portal outreach is one of the least effective channels you can use.
It reaches the patients who need it least and misses the ones who need it most.
When letters and portal messages fail, front desk staff start dialing. And that's where things get expensive and discouraging fast.
Healthcare callers are rejected by unknown-number filters at a rate exceeding 80%. Staff makes the call, the patient doesn't answer, a voicemail gets left, and the practice waits. Even when a patient eventually listens to the voicemail, hours may pass before they hear it.
By then, the impulse to call back has usually faded.
The phone call recall is labor-intensive for your team and inconvenient for the patient. It persists because practices haven't had a better option β until now.
Every failed recall attempt doesn't just cost the practice a missed visit. It makes the next one harder.
A patient who is 6 months overdue for a preventive screening becomes 12 months overdue, then 18.
And the consequences don't stay contained to the schedule β they ripple outward:
The recall failure isn't just a scheduling problem β it compounds into a clinical quality problem. The practice loses revenue. The patient loses continuity of care.
And the gap keeps widening with each failed letter, portal notification, and unanswered call.
Curogram's patient recall for NextGen Enterprise works through text messaging β the channel patients already use every day. When a patient is due for care, they receive a personalized message from their practice's known number.
Not a generic marketing blast from an unfamiliar sender, but a text from the same number they've already used for appointment reminders, billing questions, and prescription follow-ups.
The message is short and clear:
"You're due for your annual wellness visit. Tap to schedule."
The patient taps the link, selects a time, and the appointment lands in NextGen PM. The entire interaction takes less than 30 seconds.
No phone call required, no portal login needed, no app to download.
98% of text messages are opened, and most are read within 3 minutes of delivery.
Compare that to a mailed letter sitting in a stack on someone's kitchen counter.
A single text message is powerful. But not every patient will respond to the first one β not because they're uninterested, but because life is busy and they got distracted.
Curogram's Smart Recall Sequencing handles that automatically.
The follow-up cadence is configurable and built around how patients actually behave:
Each message is progressively more personal, and patients can opt out at any time with a single reply.
Think about what this means for a campaign already achieving a 35% reconversion rate on the first message alone.
Adding a second and third touch pushes total reconversion meaningfully higher β without printing more letters, spending more on postage, or pulling staff away from other work.
From the patient's perspective, the recall text feels like a personal nudge from their doctor's office β not a mass outreach campaign. It arrives from a number they recognize. It references the specific type of visit they're due for, whether that's a flu shot, an annual wellness visit, a chronic care follow-up, or a preventive screening.
And it gives them one simple action: tap a link.
The scheduling page that opens is mobile-optimized and requires nothing from the patient.
No account creation. No login credentials. No password reset.
They see available times at their preferred location, pick one, and confirm. It's the lowest-friction scheduling experience you can offer a lapsed patient.
SMS is the channel patients already prefer for healthcare communication. Meeting them there removes every barrier between your recall message and their scheduled appointment.
For NextGen Enterprise networks that include pediatrics, family medicine, and women's health, text-based recall can target household members through the parent or guardian's mobile number.
Pediatric immunization recalls, adolescent wellness visits, and family preventive care campaigns reach the parent directly β the person who actually makes scheduling decisions β rather than depending on a child to check a portal or open a letter.
For multi-specialty practices managing families across multiple locations, household-level reach extends the impact of every campaign without adding a single step for your team.
One multi-location Curogram client ran a text-based recall campaign and recovered 1,240 patients who had not been seen in 6 or more months.
Of all the patients who received the recall text, 35% converted to a scheduled appointment β without a phone call, without a portal login, and without a mailed letter.
Put that in perspective with a direct comparison:
| Recall Channel | Campaign Size | Response Rate | Patients Recovered | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mailed letters | 5,000 patients | ~5% | ~250 patients | ~$5,000 |
| Phone calls (staff time) | 5,000 patients | ~3β7% | ~150β350 patients | High labor cost |
| Text-based recall (Curogram) | 5,000 patients | ~35% | ~1,750 patients | Fraction of mailing cost |
That's not a marginal improvement. That's a fundamentally different outcome β more patients recovered, at lower cost, with zero additional staff time spent on outreach calls.
For a practice where an annual wellness visit generates $150β$250 in revenue, recovering 1,750 patients instead of 250 represents roughly $225,000 to $375,000 in additional appointments.
The channel decision isn't just an operational one. It's a financial one.
Here's what shifts when you move to text-based outreach: the dynamic changes completely.
Instead of staff leaving voicemails that go unreturned, your practice sends a text and patients respond. Instead of patients feeling chased, they feel cared for.
The message arrives, the appointment gets booked, and nobody had to fight the friction of a phone tree or a forgotten portal password.
That gap isn't a rounding error β single-digit response rates from letters and phone calls versus 35%+ reconversion from text-based recall is the difference between a campaign that barely moves the needle and one that meaningfully improves panel utilization, care gap closure, and quality metrics.
A patient who schedules through the one-tap recall doesn't just come back for one visit. They re-enter the Curogram communication pipeline automatically, and that re-entry matters.
Here's what the post-recall experience looks like for that patient:
The recall doesn't just generate a one-time visit β it re-establishes the texting relationship that keeps patients engaged for future care. The lapsed patient becomes a re-engaged patient.
The re-engaged patient stays on schedule. And the practice retains the long-term value of someone who could have quietly drifted away from the panel entirely
Your patients haven't stopped caring about their health. They've stopped responding to channels that ask too much of them.
That's the core insight behind Curogram's one-tap recall for NextGen Enterprise. The patients on your overdue list β the ones due for annual wellness visits, flu shots, preventive screenings, or chronic care follow-ups β are reachable. You just need to reach them the right way.
Text messaging is where they already are. 98% of texts get opened. Most are read within 3 minutes.
When a patient receives a personalized message from their practice's known number with a single tap to schedule, they act on it. A 35% reconversion rate isn't magic. It's what happens when you remove the friction between the patient and the appointment.
Practices that adopt this approach early don't just win on recall metrics.
They improve clinical quality, close care gaps, and retain patients who would have otherwise quietly drifted away. They also free up staff who were previously spending hours on outreach calls that went nowhere.
NextGen Enterprise manages your patient records with precision. Curogram extends that precision to the moment patients need to hear from you β with a text that gets read, a scheduling experience that takes 30 seconds, and a follow-up sequence that doesn't require anyone to pick up the phone.
If your recall campaigns are producing single-digit response rates, the channel is the problem. Not the patient.
Switching to text-based recall is not a major operational overhaul. It integrates directly with NextGen PM.
Your team doesn't need to change how they work. You just need to stop depending on outreach channels patients have moved on from.
Schedule a demo today and see how Curogram's text-based recall can reactivate lapsed patients across your NextGen Enterprise network. One tap for the patient. One conversation to get started.