Actual and potential effects of medical resident coverage on reimbursement for inpatient visits by attending physicians

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Actual and potential effects of medical resident coverage on reimbursement for inpatient visits by attending physicians
المؤلفون: Dorothy Pencak, Richard S. Panush, Laurie Jessen, Daniel Shine, Jasmeet Bajaj
المصدر: Journal of General Internal Medicine. 17:428-434
بيانات النشر: Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2002.
سنة النشر: 2002
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, medicine.medical_specialty, media_common.quotation_subject, Insurance Coverage, Cohort Studies, Documentation, Medical Staff, Hospital, Internal Medicine, medicine, Humans, Hospitals, Teaching, health care economics and organizations, Reimbursement, Aged, Retrospective Studies, media_common, business.industry, Public health, Potential effect, Internship and Residency, Original Articles, Length of Stay, Payment, Community hospital, Hospitalization, Resident Note, Family medicine, Insurance, Health, Reimbursement, Emergency medicine, Female, Hospital reimbursement, Forms and Records Control, business
الوصف: The impact of residents on hospital finance has been studied; there are no data describing the economic effect of residents on attending physicians.In a community teaching hospital, we compared allowable inpatient visit codes and payments (based on documentation in the daily progress notes) between a general medicine teaching unit and nonteaching general medicine units.Retrospective chart review, matched cohort study.Six hundred fifty-bed community teaching hospital.Patients were discharged July 1998 through February 1999 from Saint Barnabas Medical Center. We randomly selected 200 patients in quartets. Each quartet consisted of a pair of patients cared for by residents and a pair cared for only by an attending physician. In each pair, 1 of the patients was under the care of an attending physician who usually admitted to the teaching service, and 1 was under the care of a usually nonteaching attending. Within each quartet, patients were matched for diagnosis-related group, length of stay, and discharge date.We assigned the highest daily visit code justifiable by resident and attending chart documentation, determining relative value units (RVUs) and reimbursements allowed by each patient's insurance company.Although more seriously ill, teaching-unit patients generated a mean 1.75 RVUs daily, compared with 1.84 among patients discharged from nonteaching units (P =.3). Median reimbursement, daily and per hospitalization, was similar on teaching and nonteaching units. Nonteaching attendings documented higher mean daily RVUs than teaching attendings (1.83 vs 1.76, P =.2). Median allowable reimbursements were $267 per case ($53 daily) among teaching attendings compared with $294 per case ($58 daily) among nonteaching attendings (Z = 1.54, P =.1). When only the resident note was considered, mean daily RVUs increased 39% and median allowable dollars per day 27% (Z = 4.21, P.001).Nonteaching attendings appear to document their visits more carefully from a billing perspective than do teaching attendings. Properly counter-documented, resident notes could substantially increase payments to attending physicians.
تدمد: 1525-1497
0884-8734
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::43ee4e75fa6d2ec2e3d315e43e7dda6d
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1525-1497.2002.10923.x
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....43ee4e75fa6d2ec2e3d315e43e7dda6d
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE