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Tort Reform: A Malpractice Award Grid

The fear of being sued and facing a "run away jury" that makes a large award based on sympathy for the plaintiff nags constantly at physicians and drives defensive medicine, the ordering of unnecessary tests and excessive referrals – both of which drive up the cost of health care and expose patients to the risks associated with chasing insignificant findings down the rabbit hole. I call this the WIGS (What If I Get Sued?) Syndrome, which consciously or subconsciously drives physicians to reach for their ordering pen (or mouse) so that “just in case something goes wrong” they have covered their posterior exposure.

Physicians don’t want to admit that they have the WIGS Syndrome, but anxiety about being sued is so pervasive that defensive medicine has become usual medicine, imbedded in physician culture and absorbed instinctively by newly graduated physicians. When approached with ideas to reduce unnecessary testing driven by defensive medicine, physicians often react in horror: Stop ordering CAT scans in the ED for simple syncope – even though there is no evidence of benefit from the test? The nervous ED physician pushes back: “But what if something bad happens and I get sued and I didn’t order one? You’re not the one who’ll be sued.” This is all too true, and since a jury can order huge amounts of compensation for reasons other than the degree of negligence, it is this uncertainty that drives the best of physicians to succumb to the WIGS Syndrome.

 

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My opinion: “Repeal and Replace Obamacare” Proposals Are Ill-conceived, Harmful, and Destined to Fail

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As an American and a physician, I am interested in the effect health care legislation has on both providers and patients. As such, I am very concerned about the potential adverse outcomes of the Better Care Reconciliation Act 2.0 (BCRA) currently under consideration by the Senate and supported by the president and the corresponding American Health Care Reform Act (AHCRA) previously passed by the House, and which President Trump called “mean”. Here is my assessment of the current versions of the “repeal and replace” proposals:

The Affordable Care Act, while not perfect and in need of improvement, has been a great success in many ways. It has resulted in the lowest number of uninsured Americans in history. It has brought access to health care to millions of hard working Americans through age and income-based subsidies on the federal and state exchanges, and, through Medicaid expansion, to millions of people who are employed but whose income is too high to qualify for Medicaid but too low to qualify for subsidies. These are the people who previously depended on hospital emergency rooms for crisis care and faced bankruptcy if unfortunate enough to develop a serious illness or have a damaging accident. 

I was pleased when President Trump promised health care reform that provided high quality universal coverage with lower premiums and lower deductibles – a plan with “heart.” Unfortunately, the Senate bill and House bills do none of this and will make the problems in health care worse.

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A Proposal to Clear the ALJ Log Jam

Posted on 6/26/2017

In FY 2015, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) processed 1.2 billion claims. The Administrative Contractors denied 10% of these claims, amounting to 123 million denials. According to CMS, 3% of denied claims were appealed, resulting in 3.7 million appeals. (This CMS data does not distinguish between Part A and Part B claims, nor does it distinguish complex reviews of medical records from computer-generated automated denials of simple outpatient claims.)

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The Physician Advisor’s Role in Reducing Health Care Waste

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The physician advisor can take on a wide variety of roles in the hospital. Whereas they have traditionally been seen as dedicated to ensuring compliance with Medicare regulations and other admission rules, physician advisors can also assume leadership in the critical area of reducing the waste of medical resources.

By waste I mean any service a hospitalized patient receives that doesn’t have to be provided in a hospital setting or that could be provided by utilizing a more cost-effective but equally safe and effective alternative. Any service the hospital provides that is not medically necessary would qualify as waste as would avoidable days in the hospital, i.e., days that are not required for the treatment of the patient’s condition.

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Hospice Admissions Can Be a Source of Confusion

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Patients often present to the hospital emergency room in the final phase of a terminal illness, at a time when the patient and/or family are considering the option of withdrawing life-prolonging measures. The issue of referral to hospice may arise, and when it does hospitals and physicians are sometimes confused about how to classify the patient’s status.  While the plan may be for the patient to be admitted to an inpatient hospice bed at the facility, the hospice admission is often not effectuated immediately. The patient requires hospital care, but what should the patient’s status be prior to the formal initiation of the inpatient hospice admission?

Under the 2-midnight rule, an inpatient admission with the intent to admit to hospice before the second midnight would not be a valid admission because there are two requirements for admission: the need for hospital care and the expectation that the care in the hospital will include 2 midnights. So when the admitting note indicates the intent to transfer to inpatient hospice, the proper status would be outpatient.

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JTCOP –JUST TAKE CARE OF PATIENTS

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Health care costs in this nation are much higher than any other developed nation. We are faced with this dilemma: How can we provide health care for more people and still pay less for it? On a microeconomic level, how do we provide beneficiaries with benefits that the current system does not entitle them to, but still achieve our overall macroeconomic goal of universal access to health care? The usual solution, unfortunately is to pay providers less. The less politically popular solution is to actually do something about healthcare bureaucracy, which consumes resources only modestly less than those used to actually pay hospitals and providers of care.

A big source of healthcare bureaucracy is the inpatient versus outpatient (including observation) level of care decision. Teams of hospital staff are employed to get it right. Teams of auditors are employed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to check their work and recoup overpayments. The One-Midnight Rule, proposed by ACPA Director Steven Meyerson MD, would relieve us of the need for a big chunk of that bureaucracy. What would providers need to know about the proposed One-Midnight Rule? JTCOP – Just Take Care Of Patients. If a beneficiary needs further care in the hospital after an ED visit, write an inpatient admission order. That’s all providers need to remember. It would be that simple.

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Putting the PA in Palliative Care

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“It removes the suffering of the sick, lessens the violence of their diseases, and it does not attempt to cure those who are mastered by their diseases, realizing that in such cases medicine is powerless.”

Does this sound familiar to your ears? Perhaps something you recently read or heard about the role of palliative care in managing chronic disease?

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Medicare Needs a Makeover

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On December 15, Michael Salvatore, MD, FACP, CHCQM posted this comment on the popular RAC-Relief message board:

“Today we have 166 patients in beds [at our hospital] and 25 of them have either a human or electronic sitter – this is 15% of our inpatients whose minds are not working. They are all minds ravaged by mental illness, Lewy bodies, alcohol, amyloid, narcotics, trauma, and other things that most of us cannot imagine. Some are permanently lost, others just for the moment. Almost everyone is very old and either living alone or with a spouse who may have more or less mind left than they have. 

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Bundled Payment for AMI Does Not Make AMI an Inpatient Diagnosis

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The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has released final rule CMS-5519-F "Advancing Care Coordination through Episode Payment Models (EPMs)". This rule establishes bundled payments for 90-day episodes of care for acute MI (AMI), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), and surgical hip/femur fracture treatment (SHFFT). 

Readers are aware that in recent years many AMIs have been treated as outpatient in observation, but the EPM program applies only to inpatient stays. This has lead to discussion of whether AMI has now become a diagnosis that justifies admission, though the rule is explicit that it does not do this.

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The “F” Word in the Electronic Medical Record: De-Frauding vs. Documenting

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The current epidemic of copy/paste in documenting patient encounters in the hospital results not only in vacuous and voluminous notes but also another underappreciated consequence: accusations of fraud. 

All insurers, including Medicare, pay for content, not volume in documentation: they pay for the physician’s clinical judgment, not their computer skills. Including copy/pasted material in the medical record that is not identified as such is called cloning. Billing for services based on cloned records is a type of fraud.

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Have You Tapped Your CDI Staff…For Quality Metrics Improvement?

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As Physician Advisors, we should work closely with the Clinical Documentation Improvement (CDI) staff in our facilities. CDI staff work is frequently overseen by finance, as the traditional goals of CDI programs have been financial, i.e., mid-cycle revenue optimization. While this is the “meat and potatoes” of their work, there are other aspects of the CDI job that are often overlooked.

CDI documentation frequently supports not only coding validation denials, but medical necessity audits and denials as well.  An appropriately answered query can go a long way in supporting the medical necessity or even an expectation of the duration of the hospital care.  While this seems obvious, I believe that this aspect of CDI is not widely understood.

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Lifting the Hood on Observation to Inpatient Conversions

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Hospitals often track their outpatient to inpatient conversion rate, but this metric cannot be looked at in isolation. 

The devil, as they say, is in the details – and there is no benchmark to follow.

As our readers know, under the two-midnight rule physicians are supposed to admit patients they anticipate will require medically necessary hospital care for two midnights or more and use observation for those who need care in the hospital, but for a shorter period of time. When additional clinical information becomes available on observation patients that changes the treatment plan so that two midnights or more of hospital care are then anticipated, or the patient’s condition does not improve sufficiently for discharge prior to the second midnight, inpatient admission (conversion) is appropriate. At least that’s the way it’s supposed to work.


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In Honor and Recognition of our Devoted Case Managers

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"When you need the answer to a medical question, ask the physician; when you need to know, what’s going on with your patient, ask a case manager!"

I sent this quote from an unknown source to my beloved case management team last week in recognition of National Case Management week. My role as a full time physician advisor is blessed by the fact that I get to interact in a supportive role with some of the most dedicated professionals in the healthcare world. Often a thankless, tiring, frustrating, and emotionally draining career, case managers across the country should be recognized as true caring and devoted professionals in every sense of the meaning.

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Use and Abuse of Screening Criteria

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Questions often arise about the use of screening criteria in utilization review (UR).

InterQual and MCG are nationally recognized commercial products consisting of specific clinical criteria used to assist in determining whether a patient qualifies for release from the hospital or Emergency Department, admission to the hospital, or placement in an outpatient bed with observation services. The proper use of screening criteria requires knowledge of which set a payer uses and an understanding of their limitations.

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Help Your Patients Get Over the MOON

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The deep gulf between part A and part B billing has been creating confusion in the minds of hospitalized Medicare beneficiaries when they believed they had been admitted as inpatient (paid by part A) but were actually in observation, an outpatient status paid by part B. Their financial liability for inpatient care is limited to the Part A deductible of $1,288, which covers up to 60 days of inpatient care, but as observation patients their out of pocket costs have included the annual part B deductible (currently $166), a 20% copayment for each part B service, and the billed charge for "self administered drugs"(those that the patient could take at home). Since January 1, the new comprehensive APC for observation services (C-APC 8011) has bundled all part B services associated with observation into a single bundled payment, limiting beneficiary copayment to 20% of the $2,275 hospital reimbursement plus the cost of the medications. The Office of Inspector General (OIG) has granted hospitals the option of discounting or giving away the self-administered drugs.

But most importantly for the many beneficiaries who may someday need skilled nursing facility (SNF) care, qualifying for the Medicare SNF benefit requires three nights of inpatient care but a night in observation doesn’t count toward that requirement.



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CDI Programs, Reaching Their Potential

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Let's take a look at the operations of a typical clinical documentation improvement (CDI) program and examine how these programs may paradoxically and unexpectedly contribute to increased medical necessity and clinical validation denials.

Clinical documentation improvement programs strive to ensure that all relevant diagnoses that reflect patient acuity and severity of illness are documented in the chart. This process involves clinical documentation improvement specialists (CDISs) regularly reviewing charts and identifying potential opportunities for increased clinical specificity or for documenting additional diagnoses that are being managed, evaluated, and/or treated but are not documented. The CDIS sends a written non-leading query to the physician with a focus on the clarification of specificity or the documentation of additional diagnoses. If the physician agrees with inclusion of the diagnosis through his/her documentation, the results are tracked for outcome reporting for the CDI program.

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Medical Errors Haven’t Gone Away

Posted on 5/24/2016


A study from Johns Hopkins published in the British Medical Journal on May 3 (BMJ,2016;353:i2139) claimed that medical errors have caused some 250,000 deaths per year and are the third leading cause of death in the United States. According to an article in USA Today, this follows a 2010 study by the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services reporting 180,000 deaths per year from medical errors. And in 2013 a study by a NASA toxicologist who believes his son died in a hospital as a result of medical errors estimated this number at 210,000 to 400,000. 

This information should shock the public and healthcare professionals alike. But why are there so many errors?  

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Thinking Outside the Hospital

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Community doctors have traditionally done three things in the hospital for their patients and for those they acquired when on-call: admissions, daily care, and discharges. Admitting and caring have been seamlessly taken over by hospitalists but discharging patients back to their primary care doctor remains problematic. Primary care doctors complain that they get insufficient follow up information and hospitalists complain there is insufficient access to practitioner’s offices for timely follow up visits. 

While hospitalists have freed up the community practitioner from hospital duties, there has been no reciprocal freeing up of openings in the community practice’s busy office schedule to see hospital discharges. I think this is due to several developments: 

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Stop the Cloning: Just Turn It Off

Posted on 5/3/2016


Back in the day when I was in clinical practice – in the days of the paper chart (yes, charts were once on paper, like news was once in newspapers) during what we of a certain age now (egotistically) call "The Days of the Giants", I used a pen and paper to record daily progress notes in the hospital chart. After checking lab and X-ray reports, having a quick discussion with the patient’s nurse, and talking to and examining my patient, I sat down with a blank page in the chart, wrote the date (no one recorded the time back then) and after reviewing the notes and orders my consultants had written since the previous visit, started my SOAP note.

The SOAP note was the brilliant creation of Dr. Larry Weed, the guru of medical documentation, who in a now famous 1971 video (Don’t try to adjust your computer monitor; it’s black and white.) held up a massive paper chart and showed how it failed to provide a coherent record of the care or communicate critical clinical information. In emphasizing how the quality of the medical record reflected the quality of the care, Dr. Reed said, "the medical record is the care".

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Um-Dedicated Finance Analyst- From an Idea to a Necessity?

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All of us realize that the field we work in, utilization management (UM) is driven by numbers - dashboards, length of stay (LOS), case mix index (CMI), observed over expected ratio (O/E), and many kinds of other numerical derivations.  But where do these numbers come from? Are they accurate? Are they current? Do they make sense or are we suffering from data overload?

To address this challenge, my hospital has decided to create a position of  “UM-dedicated Finance Analyst”. This idea was to create a new position for a data analyst who would have a finance background and report to the finance director, but would have at least 50 per cent of their duties centered in the UM Department.

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