首页> 外文期刊>Journal of neurosurgery. >Potential financial impact of restriction in 'never event' and periprocedural hospital-acquired condition reimbursement at a tertiary neurosurgical center: a single-institution prospective study.
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Potential financial impact of restriction in 'never event' and periprocedural hospital-acquired condition reimbursement at a tertiary neurosurgical center: a single-institution prospective study.

机译:在三级神经外科中心进行“从不发生”限制和过程中医院获得性疾病报销的潜在财务影响:单机构前瞻性研究。

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OBJECT: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) have moved to limit hospital augmentation of diagnosis-related group billing for "never events" (adverse events that are serious, largely preventable, and of concern to the public and health care providers for the purpose of public accountability) and certain hospital-acquired conditions (HACs). Similar restrictions may be applied to physician billing. The financial impact of these restrictions may fall on academic medical centers, which commonly have populations of complex patients with a higher risk of HACs. The authors sought to quantify the potential financial impact of restrictions in never events and periprocedural HAC billing on a tertiary neurosurgery facility. METHODS: Operative cases treated between January 2008 and June 2008 were reviewed after searching a prospectively maintained database of perioperative complications. The authors assessed cases in which there was a 6-month lag time to allow for completion of hospital and physician billing. They speculated that other payers would soon adopt the present CMS restrictions and that procedure-related HACs would be expanded to cover common neurosurgery procedures. To evaluate the impact on physician billing and to directly contrast physician and hospital billing impact, the authors focused on periprocedural HACs, as opposed to entire admission HACs. Billing records were compiled and a comparison was made between individual event data and simultaneous cumulative net revenue and net receipts. The authors assessed the impact of the present regulations, expansion of CMS restrictions to other payers, and expansion to rehospitalization and entire hospitalization case billing due to HACs and never events. RESULTS: A total of 1289 procedures were completed during the examined period. Twenty-five procedures (2%) involved patients in whom HACs developed; all were wound infections. Twenty-nine secondary procedures were required for this cohort. Length of stay was significantly higher in patients with HACs than in those without (11.6 +/- 11.5 vs 5.9 +/- 7.0 days, respectively). Fifteen patients required readmission due to HACs. Following present never event and HAC restrictions, hospital and physician billing was minimally affected (never event billing as percent total receipts was 0.007% for hospitals and 0% for physicians). Nonpayment for rehospitalization and reoperation for HACs by CMS and private payers yielded greater financial impact (CMS only, percentage of total receipts: 0.14% hospital, 0.2% physician; all payers: 1.56% hospital, 3.0% physician). Eliminating reimbursement for index procedures yielded profound reductions (CMS only as percentage of total receipts: 0.62% hospital, 0.8% physician; all payers: 5.73% hospital, 8.9% physician). CONCLUSIONS: The authors found potentially significant reductions in physician and facility billing. The expansion of never event and HACs reimbursement nonpayment may have a substantial financial impact on tertiary care facilities. The elimination of never events and reduction in HACs in current medical practices are worthy goals. However, overzealous application of HACs restrictions may remove from tertiary centers the incentive to treat high-risk patients.
机译:对象:医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)已采取措施,限制医院增加“从未发生的事件”(严重,可预防且引起公众和医疗保健人员关注的不良事件)的诊断相关团体账单公共责任的目的)和某些医院获得的条件(HAC)。类似的限制可以应用于医师计费。这些限制的财务影响可能落在学术医疗中心上,这些医疗中心通常是一群复杂的患者,具有较高的HAC风险。作者试图量化从不发生事件的限制以及对三级神经外科手术设施进行围手术期HAC计费的潜在财务影响。方法:在前瞻性维护的围手术期并发症数据库中,回顾了2008年1月至2008年6月间收治的手术病例。作者评估了有6个月的滞后时间才能完成医院和医师计费的案例。他们推测,其他付款人将很快采用当前的CMS限制,与程序相关的HAC将会扩展到涵盖常见的神经外科程序。为了评估对医生帐单的影响并直接对比医生和医院帐单的影响,作者关注的是围手术期HAC,而不是整个住院HAC。编制了帐单记录,并在单个事件数据与同时累积的净收入和净收益之间进行了比较。作者评估了当前法规的影响,CMS限制扩展到其他付款人,以及由于HAC和从不发生事件而扩大到重新住院和整个住院病例计费的影响。结果:在检查期间共完成了1289道手术。有25例手术(2%)涉及发生HAC的患者;都是伤口感染。该队列需要二十九次辅助手术。有HAC的患者的住院时间显着高于无HAC的患者(分别为11.6 +/- 11.5天和5.9 +/- 7.0天)。由于HAC,有15名患者需要重新入院。遵循目前从未发生的事件和HAC限制之后,医院和医生的帐单受到的影响最小(因为从未发生的帐单占医院总收入的百分比为0.007%,医生为总收入的百分比为0%)。 CMS和私人付款人不支付HAC的重新安置和重新手术产生的财务影响更大(仅CMS,总收入的百分比:医院的0.14%,医生0.2%;所有付款人:医院的1.56%,医生3.0%)。消除索引程序的报销带来了大幅降低(CMS仅占总收入的百分比:0.62%医院,0.8%医师;所有付款人:5.73%医院,8.9%医师)。结论:作者发现医师和医疗机构的账单可能显着减少。永无止境事件的扩大和HAC的不偿还款项可能对三级医疗机构产生重大的财务影响。消除永不发生事件和减少当前医疗实践中的HAC是值得实现的目标。但是,过度使用HAC限制可能会使三级医疗中心失去治疗高危患者的动力。

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