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SMS Best Practices for Patient Communication

Text messaging is a powerful tool for quick, high-impact communication. Use it strategically.

Keep Messages Short and Clear

SMS works best for brief, focused communication such as:

  • Appointment reminders

  • Confirmations

  • Scheduling changes

  • Quick follow-ups

Standard SMS messages are limited to 160 characters per segment. Longer messages may be split into multiple texts, increasing cost and reducing clarity.


SMS vs. MMS

Second Door supports both SMS and MMS.

SMS
  • Text-only

  • Fast and reliable

  • Universally supported

  • Lower cost

MMS
  • Supports images, videos, and longer text

  • More visual

SMS is recommended as your primary method because it is more reliable, faster to deliver, and less expensive. Use MMS only when visuals add meaningful value.

Note: Not all phones support MMS, and some carriers may charge recipients for receiving MMS messages.


Balance SMS with Email

SMS has a cost. Email does not.

Use email for:

  • Longer messages

  • Informational updates

  • Non-urgent communication

Reserve SMS for time-sensitive or high-impact outreach.


Send Only to Opted-In Patients

Patients must opt in to receive text messages.

  • Consent is captured during appointment requests via the Digital Front Door.

  • Patients can unsubscribe at any time by replying STOP or Unsubscribe.

If a patient opts out, you will not be able to send them SMS messages.


Always Identify Your Practice

Messages are sent from a local, Campaign Registry–approved phone number.

Patients may not recognize the number, so include your practice name in every message.


Avoid Early or Late Messages

Do not send texts before 8:00 AM or after 9:00 PM in the patient’s local time zone.

Whenever possible, schedule messages during normal business hours.


Use SMS Strategically

SMS is most effective for:

  • Scheduling changes

  • Appointment confirmations

  • Post-visit check-ins

  • Short surveys

Used correctly, SMS improves response time and reduces scheduling friction.