News & Analysis

June 1, 2016
HIM Briefings

The healthcare industry is focused on the triple aim: reducing healthcare costs, improving patient experience, and improving the health outcomes of populations. Healthcare organizations will no longer be paid based on the volume of services provided but rather on the value of care delivery. 

June 1, 2016
HIM Briefings

Those who regularly attend the annual AHIMA Convention and Exhibit no doubt have seen the exceptional quilt created each year by AHIMA member Katy Sheehy, MPA, RHIA, and sponsored by the Dames of Distinction to be bid at auction. The quilt is auctioned in support of the Linda Culp Memorial Scholarship fund, which was established in memory of the late Linda Culp, a former HIM professional, hospital chief executive officer, and AHIMA member. If you have seen the quilt, you have probably asked yourself, "Who are these people?"

June 1, 2016
HIM Briefings

Clinical documentation and coding has a significant impact on value-based quality outcome performance. Such outcomes include risk-adjusted mortality, readmission, patient safety, complication rates, and cost efficiency measures.

Value-based outcomes linked to payment represent the next wave of opportunity for CDI programs to support their health systems. Clinical documentation and coding across the continuum impact performance for claims-based measures contained within these standard data sets. Claims-based outcome measures use ICD-10 codes submitted on claims both to define the populations (or cohorts) included in the measure, as well as to risk-adjust performance.

Let's look at a few examples to illustrate how clinical documentation and code assignment can impact performance for one of the claims-based measures in the figure, the risk standardized complication rate?THA/TKA (RSCR THA/TKA):

  • Assignment of the discharge disposition as "AMA" also excludes the THA/TKA discharge from the measure.
  • Documentation and reporting of "morbid obesity" prior to the admission for the THA/TKA procedure strengthens risk adjustment. Note: "Obesity" does not impact risk adjustment.
  • Documentation and reporting of "chronic renal insufficiency" prior to the admission for the THA/TKA procedure will further strengthen risk adjustment. Note: "Renal insufficiency" will not count.
  • Documentation and reporting of "coronary artery disease" in the THA/TKA inpatient encounter will strengthen the risk adjustment even further.

 

The alignment of quality measures that will be linked to payment by public and private payers provides a framework upon which future efforts can be based. CMS will go through a public notice and comment rulemaking for implementation of these core sets and looks forward to public input on the measures included in these core measure sets.

June 1, 2016
Briefings on HIPAA

Tips from this month's issue

June 1, 2016
Briefings on APCs

As healthcare providers increasingly accept financial risk associated with patient management due to the transition from fee-for-service to risk-/value-based reimbursement, the traditional model of healthcare reimbursement has been flipped upside down.

June 1, 2016
Medicare Insider

This week Medicare Insider is featuring an excerpt from Billing for Ancillary Bedside Procedures by Denise Williams, RN, COC.

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