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  • Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

    new and improved sheeple shearing - right this way . . .

    By REED ABELSON, JULIE CRESWELL and GRIFFIN J. PALMER

    When the federal government began providing billions of dollars in incentives to push hospitals and physicians to use electronic medical and billing records, the goal was not only to improve efficiency and patient safety, but also to reduce health care costs.

    But, in reality, the move to electronic health records may be contributing to billions of dollars in higher costs for Medicare, private insurers and patients by making it easier for hospitals and physicians to bill more for their services, whether or not they provide additional care.

    Hospitals received $1 billion more in Medicare reimbursements in 2010 than they did five years earlier, at least in part by changing the billing codes they assign to patients in emergency rooms, according to a New York Times analysis of Medicare data from the American Hospital Directory. Regulators say physicians have changed the way they bill for office visits similarly, increasing their payments by billions of dollars as well.

    The most aggressive billing — by just 1,700 of the more than 440,000 doctors in the country — cost Medicare as much as $100 million in 2010 alone, federal regulators said in a recent report, noting that the largest share of those doctors specialized in family practice, internal medicine and emergency care.

    For instance, the portion of patients that the emergency department at Faxton St. Luke’s Healthcare in Utica, N.Y., claimed required the highest levels of treatment — and thus higher reimbursements — rose 43 percent in 2009. That was the same year the hospital began using electronic health records.

    The share of highest-paying claims at Baptist Hospital in Nashville climbed 82 percent in 2010, the year after it began using a software system for its emergency room records.

    In e-mailed statements, representatives for both hospitals said the increases reflected more accurate billing for services. Faxton also said its patients required more care than in past years.

    Over all, hospitals that received government incentives to adopt electronic records showed a 47 percent rise in Medicare payments at higher levels from 2006 to 2010, the latest year for which data are available, compared with a 32 percent rise in hospitals that have not received any government incentives, according to the analysis by The Times.

    The higher coding has captured the attention of federal and state regulators and private insurers like Aetna and Cigna. This spring, the Office of Inspector General for the federal Health and Human Services Department warned that the coding of evaluation services had been “vulnerable to fraud and abuse.”

    Some experts blame a substantial share of the higher payments on the increasingly widespread use of electronic health record systems. Some of these programs can automatically generate detailed patient histories, or allow doctors to cut and paste the same examination findings for multiple patients — a practice called cloning — with the click of a button or the swipe of a finger on an iPad, making it appear that the physicians conducted more thorough exams than, perhaps, they did.

    Critics say the abuses are widespread. “It’s like doping and bicycling,” said Dr. Donald W. Simborg, who was the chairman of federal panels examining the potential for fraud with electronic systems. “Everybody knows it’s going on.”

    When Methodist Medical Center of Illinois in Peoria rolled out an electronic records system in 2006, Dr. Alan Gravett, a former emergency room physician, quickly expressed alarm.

    He said the new system prompted doctors to click a box that indicated a thorough review of patients’ symptoms had taken place, even though the exams were rarely performed, while another function let doctors pull exam findings “from thin air” and include them in patients’ records.

    In a whistle-blower lawsuit filed in 2007, Dr. Gravett contended that these techniques drove up Medicare reimbursement levels substantially. According to the lawsuit, Dr. Gravett was eventually fired for ordering too many tests. He says he was retaliated against for complaining about the new system. The Justice Department is weighing whether to join an amended suit in Federal District Court in Central Illinois.

    An independent analysis by The Times showed that Methodist’s Medicare billings for the highest level of emergency care jumped from 50 percent of its emergency room Medicare claims in 2006 to more than 80 percent in 2010, making the 353-bed hospital one of the country’s most frequent users of high-paying evaluation codes.

    Methodist declined to comment on Dr. Gravett’s allegations. But in an e-mailed statement, a spokesman said that not all of the hospital’s billing was done electronically, that it followed professional coding guidelines and that its patients required more care than patients at other hospitals.

    Many hospitals and doctors say that the new systems allow them to better document the care they provide, justifying the higher payments they are receiving. Many doctors and hospitals were actually underbilling before they began keeping electronic records, said Dr. David J. Brailer, an early federal proponent of digitizing records and an official in the George W. Bush administration. But Dr. Brailer, who invests in health care companies, acknowledged that the use of electronic records “makes it faster and easier to be fraudulent.”

    Both the Bush and Obama administrations have encouraged electronic records, arguing that they help doctors track patient care. When used properly, the records can help avoid duplicate tests and remind doctors about a possible diagnosis or treatment they had not considered. As part of the economic stimulus program in 2009, the Obama administration put into effect a Bush-era incentive program that provides tens of billions of dollars for physicians and hospitals that make the switch.

    But some critics say an unintended consequence is the ease with which doctors and hospitals can upcode — industry parlance for seeking a higher rate of reimbursement than is justified. They say there is too little federal oversight of electronic records.

    A spokesman for the Health and Human Services Department, however, said electronic health records “can improve the quality of care, save lives and save money.” Medicare, he added in an e-mailed statement, “has strong protections in place to prevent fraud and abuse of this technology that we’re improving all the time.”

    He also said Medicare had reduced improper payments in the last two years.

    In emergency rooms, which use special billing codes to indicate how much care a patient needs, hospitals have increased their claims for the two highest-paying categories to 54 percent of Medicare claims in 2010, from 40 percent in 2006, according to The Times’s analysis of Medicare data. The Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit investigative journalism group, recently released a similar analysis.

    Some contractors handling Medicare claims have already alerted doctors to their concerns about billing practices. One contractor, National Government Services, recently warned doctors that it would refuse to pay them if they submitted “cloned documentation,” while another, TrailBlazer Health Enterprises, found that 45 out of 100 claims from Texas and Oklahoma emergency-department doctors were paid in error. “Patterns of overcoding E.D. services were found with template-generated records,” it said.

    The Office of Inspector General is studying the link between electronic records and billing.

    One sophisticated patient witnessed the overbilling firsthand. In early 2010, Robert Burleigh, a health care consultant, came to the emergency room of a Virginia hospital with a kidney stone. When he received the bill from the emergency room doctor, his medical record, produced electronically, reflected a complete physical exam that never happened, allowing the visit to be billed at the highest level, Mr. Burleigh said.

    The doctor indicated that he had examined Mr. Burleigh’s lower extremities, but Mr. Burleigh said that he was wrapped in a blanket and that the doctor never even saw his legs.

    “No one would admit it,” Mr. Burleigh said, “but the most logical explanation was he went to a menu and clicked standard exam,”
    and the software filled in an examination of all of his systems. After he complained, the doctor’s group reduced his bill.

    As software vendors race to sell their systems to physician groups and hospitals, many are straightforward in extolling the benefits of those systems in helping doctors increase their revenue. In an online demonstration, one vendor, Praxis EMR, promises that it “plays the level-of-service game on your behalf and beats them at their own game using their own rules.”

    The system helps doctors remember what they did when they successfully billed for similar patients, and ensures that they do not forget to ask important questions or to perform necessary tests, said Dr. Richard Low, chief executive of Infor-Med Corporation, which developed Praxis. “The doctor can use a chart the way the pilot uses a checklist,” he said.

    But others place much of the blame on the federal government for not providing more guidance. Dr. Simborg, for one, said he helped draft regulations in 2007 that would have prevented much of the abuse that now appears to be occurring. But because the government was eager to encourage doctors and hospitals to enter the electronic era, he said, those proposals have largely been ignored.

    “What’s happening is just the problem we feared,” he said.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/22/bu...ecords.html?hp

  • #2
    Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

    Originally posted by don View Post
    When the federal government began providing billions of dollars in incentives to push hospitals and physicians to use electronic medical and billing records, the goal was not only to improve efficiency and patient safety, but also to reduce health care costs. But, in reality, the move to electronic health records may be contributing to billions of dollars in higher costs for Medicare, private insurers and patients by making it easier for hospitals and physicians to bill more for their services, whether or not they provide additional care.
    Great example of the NYT employing frame to limit the public's understanding of the goals of societal change. Rationalizing & digitizing "healthcare" has one primary purpose, and that is to micro manage system health via control feedback algorithms.... the ultimate in control.
    The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge ~D Boorstin

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

      Originally posted by reggie View Post
      digitizing "healthcare" has one primary purpose, and that is to micro manage system health via control feedback algorithms

      Asian countries, being somewhere between first and third world, have leap-frogged in so many way. An obvious way is medical records. Fully 15 years ago, when my wife was checking out of a hospital, the woman handed her a wrong prescription. My wife said, “It’s supposed to be 5 milligrams, not 10,” The pharmacist rotated the computer screen and let my wife inspect the doctor’s handwritten notes. My wife said, “That’s a 5, believe it or not.” The pharmacist called the doctor upstairs and he confirmed that what looked like a 10 to the pharmacist was really a 5.

      Ten years ago when I went to see a doctor asking for a PSA test, he asked when was the last time I had had one. I was guessing 5 years. He was easily able to bring up the results from another hospital and use the results as a bench mark. Basically, the same thing happened when I needed a series of tetanus shots. After having two at one hospital, then moving and needing the 3rd shot in another city, my records were easily accessible.

      I could go on and on and on with stories from folks who have been blown away by the amount of money, time, and hassle the digitalization of medical records has saved them, but until you live it, you don’t really get it.

      “I’m done? That’s it? You’re kidding me? Only 17 dollars?”
      Last edited by Thailandnotes; September 23, 2012, 07:16 AM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

        Originally posted by ThailandNotes
        I could go on and on and on with stories from folks who have been blown away by the amount of money, time, and hassle the digitalization of medical records has saved them, but until you live it, you don’t really get it.
        Digitization of medical records can definitely be a potential improvement, but you're neglecting the for-profit nature of US health care.

        Is it really to any medical provider's financial interest to make it easier for patients to switch?

        Are the capital costs for digitization worth the hit to the corporate profitability?

        If forced to digitize, is there a way to lobby the law to specific advantage?

        What digitization format should be used?

        I'm sure you can think of more ways by which the US health care system is disincentivised to digitize.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

          Like a gun, how digitization of data is used is in the hands of the user . . .

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

            "Only 17 dollars?"

            even after things are electronic, you won't get any of that cost savings benefit in the US.

            my wife was born in the Philippines & a number of years back when she went there to get treated, the whole treatment cost less than a quarter of what it cost to get diagnosed & not treated in the US.

            earlier this year I somehow landed weird on a knee playing basketball. pop, crunch, etc. by the next day I couldn't straighten that leg (must have had some sort of blockage). I saw a doctor for about 4 minutes & they jerked on my knee a bunch of different ways & said it looked ok. I think they didn't realize how hosed it was when they were jerking it around & how there was that blockage (as they were pretty hard with pulling on it in different directions), but in jerking it around I think the blockage was somehow cleared & I was able to straighten it again. big, big win. I was pretty stoked.

            I paid for that procedure the same day & verified it was fully paid. Just yesterday I got an envelope in the mail about how my account is "seriously past due" ... the first such notice of any sort for them & 100% counter to the alleged claim that I was all paid up a few months back.

            when I was younger I was still under my mom's health insurance & on a hospital visit from getting sick they sent most the bills to me...and I kept paying them. each month there would be more bills & the amounts kept going up. It sort of felt near the end like they were making shit up & would keep increasing the charges until I stopped paying them and they bankrupted me. They made a mistake when they also sent one of the bills to my mom's address, because she then sent it to her insurance. The hospital was indeed double charging for some services, fraudulently adding on services that were never administered, etc.

            the for-profit nature of US health care
            my favorite bit is the whole "pre-existing condition" deal ... where they will suck down your thousand Dollar per month health premium & then the first time ANYTHING happens to you they claim you are ineligible for coverage (while keeping the 10s of thousands of Dollars of premiums you paid in).

            The WSJ runs a series called What They Know that highlights how some companies piece together browsing habits to discriminate with pricing or the products they offer
            http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...109190198.html

            in one article they mention
            http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...411135766.html
            some car companies are starting to offer insurers access to their onboard-telematics systems to harvest driving information to tailor insurance premiums to an individual's behavior.
            in another article they state
            http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...512989404.html
            The Journal found tracking files that collect sensitive health and financial data. On Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc.'s dictionary website Merriam-Webster.com, one tracking file from Healthline Networks Inc., an ad network, scans the page a user is viewing and targets ads related to what it sees there. So, for example, a person looking up depression-related words could see Healthline ads for depression treatments on that page—and on subsequent pages viewed on other sites.


            Healthline says it doesn't let advertisers track users around the Internet who have viewed sensitive topics such as HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases, eating disorders and impotence. The company does let advertisers track people with bipolar disorder, overactive bladder and anxiety, according to its marketing materials.
            and there is an article specifically about insurers
            http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...998072986.html
            data-gathering companies have such extensive files on most U.S. consumers—online shopping details, catalog purchases, magazine subscriptions, leisure activities and information from social-networking sites—that some insurers are exploring whether data can reveal nearly as much about a person as a lab analysis of their bodily fluids.

            Google was slow to enter the game, but then has in a big way
            http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...851854026.html
            Tensions erupted during a meeting with about a dozen executives at Google's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters about 18 months ago when Messrs. Page and Brin shouted at each other over how aggressively Google should move into targeting, according to a person who had knowledge of the meeting. "It was awkward," this person said. "It was like watching your parents fight."


            Mr. Brin was more reluctant than Mr. Page, this person said. Eventually, he acquiesced and plans for Google to sell ads targeted to people's interests went ahead.
            Google is ahead of the other big players like Yahoo! & Facebook in display (oh, and Facebook lets advertisers target ads to users by email address or phone number).

            Google recently launched an insurance paid inclusion vertical in the UK & even has a patent on price discrimination, though they suggest using it for media sales in their patent
            http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/09...nation_patent/

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

              Originally posted by don
              Like a gun, how digitization of data is used is in the hands of the user . . .
              I've actually seen first hand some of the ridiculous crap that goes on behind the scenes in the medical data digitization space.

              The problem is that first of all, the data isn't in the actual patient's hands. So long as this is the case, then the idea of easily communicating patient records across different companies/organizations is impossible unless a standard is agreed upon and enforced for all digital records. And how do you get such a standard to enable patient ownership of data when there is such a wide range of organizations in terms of size, wealth, service scope, national reach, etc etc?

              Given this chaotic situation, a second barrier would be the purveyors of patient data digitization as well. Company A wants format 1, Company B wants format 2, Company C wants format 3 - and they all fight it out via marketing reps, lobbying, celebrity doctor endorsements etc etc.

              Then there's the third barrier: intellectual property. No small number of practitioners - particularly in the more leading edge areas - want the means and results of their work easily accessible to competitors. A practitioner level record would very much be a threat, and this is part of the 2nd barrier above.

              There are many more.

              The good news: large organizations are to some extent doing this anyway - for internal benefit.

              The bad news: the result is almost certainly going to be the lowest common denominator. Perhaps an improvement over nothing, but a far cry from what even ThailandNotes is referring to.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

                Originally posted by Thailandnotes View Post
                Asian countries, being somewhere between first and third world, have leap-frogged in so many way. An obvious way is medical records. Fully 15 years ago, when my wife was checking out of a hospital, the woman handed her a wrong prescription. My wife said, “It’s supposed to be 5 milligrams, not 10,” The pharmacist rotated the computer screen and let my wife inspect the doctor’s handwritten notes. My wife said, “That’s a 5, believe it or not.” The pharmacist called the doctor upstairs and he confirmed that what looked like a 10 to the pharmacist was really a 5.
                I'm lost. So even with EMR the record was handwritten and illegible and they gave your wife the wrong prescription and were only saved by her diligence? What does this prove?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

                  Originally posted by DSpencer View Post
                  I'm lost. So even with EMR the record was handwritten and illegible and they gave your wife the wrong prescription and were only saved by her diligence? What does this prove?

                  I’m over simplifying the situations. It’s just that when the doctor, doctor’s receptionist, patient, pharmacist, and other doctors you visit a few weeks or months later have instant access, you can cut quick to the chase and save HUGE amounts of time/money. You can eliminate trips, medical appointments, wrong prescriptions. Clue’s comments are astute, but shit this is where it is going.

                  This show covers most of the angles including “Increased use of medical records leads to more medical fraud.”

                  http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/20...rds/transcript

                  Doctor Levin…

                  So it starts just with the simple idea that the basic clinical information is available to the care team and to the patient and their love ones as well. So simply having that information readily available, regardless of location, has been a big improvement to begin with. In our system, as patients move around from different hospitals, from the physician's offices and like, that information follows them. That's been incredibly powerful. But that's really just the prelude.

                  The opportunity to begin to build some intelligence into these systems in the form of clinical decision support and the idea there is to help ensure that we do the right things and that we avoid doing the wrong things. So as a simple example, if a physician goes to prescribe a medication that a patient is allergic to or may have some other contraindication to, in a paper world, it's really totally reliant on that individual to be sure that they make that connection.

                  In the electronic world, we can provide reminders about that. And in the end, it’s still important for the clinician to make that decision. But these sorts of reminders can be extremely helpful. The other thing that we are seeing is, as was mentioned, this is going far beyond the sort of basics that we did in the past. It's creating a very rich source of clinical information. And that is powering our research, our ability to learn more about how to render the best care.

                  And my feeling is we're really just at the beginning of that, that we're going to see a vast increase in the amount of data that's available, and then the research opportunities will grow exponentially as well…

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

                    And my feeling is we're really just at the beginning of that, that we're going to see a vast increase in the amount of data that's available, and then the research opportunities will grow exponentially as well…
                    point well taken but it would take a fundamental change in our healthcare environment to truly reap the benefits - like a rational approach to peak cheap oil . . . .





                    By STEPHEN HOLDEN

                    The crowded emergency room of Highland Hospital in Oakland, Calif., is the setting of Peter Nicks’s wrenching documentary “The Waiting Room.” Shot in 2010 over five months, the film, which has no narrator, titles, statistical analysis or overt editorializing, observes a composite day there during which nearly 250 patients — most of them uninsured — pour in.

                    Many find themselves stalled for hours at this public hospital, where patients are told to take numbers and wait to be called. Their waiting time increases if there is an influx of trauma patients, who are given priority. If the system seems heartless, it is the best that can be done with limited resources by a caring staff that does an impressive job of holding chaos at bay.

                    The film augments a dispassionate, cinéma vérité style with occasional voice-overs of patients and hospital staff members, most of them unidentified until the final credits. One doctor describes Highland Hospital as “an institution of last resort for so many people.”

                    The movie focuses on about 10 patients as they navigate the intimidating bureaucracy of a health care system that seems stretched to the breaking point. You have to admire the unflappable calm of a staff confronting the anger, fear and desperation of an unending stream of people in dire need of medical attention. Brief time-lapse segments, shot from above, give a sense of the tide of humanity rolling in and out as the hours pass.

                    A student with testicular cancer seeks help after being rejected by a private hospital, which at the last minute canceled his scheduled operation because he lacked insurance. An older recurrent visitor, who abuses multiple substances, faces homelessness if the exasperated pastor who has looked after him refuses to take responsibility for his release. Occupying another badly needed bed, he will remain in the hospital until he has a place to go.

                    Another fragile patient, who has just been discharged and appears to be in no condition to fend for herself, is helped to a bus. But what will happen to her? The film doesn’t say.

                    A carpenter with bone spurs in his lower back that cause him excruciating pain describes how after working for his company for 30 years, he is being threatened with replacement by cheap, illegal laborers unless he takes a major pay cut; he is already broke and facing foreclosure.

                    The angriest patient, returning to the hospital for dialysis, threatens to have his chest catheter removed because dying would be preferable to facing bureaucratic obstacles each time he shows up. In the worst emergency, a trauma team unsuccessfully attempts to revive a teenage boy with a gunshot wound, and his body is wheeled into the morgue. There is no high drama surrounding this death; it is all in a day’s work.

                    Scrupulously apolitical, “The Waiting Room” is the opposite of a polemic like Michael Moore’s “Sicko.” But by removing any editorial screen, it confronts you head-on with human suffering that a more humane and equitable system might help alleviate.

                    The Waiting Room

                    Opens on Wednesday in Manhattan.

                    Directed by Peter Nicks; director of photography, Mr. Nicks; edited by Lawrence Lerew; music by William Ryan Fritch; produced by Mr. Nicks, Linda Davis and William B. Hirsch; released by International Film Circuit, Open’hood and ITVS. At the IFC Center, 323 Avenue of the Americas, at Third Street, Greenwich Village. Running time: 1 hour 21 minutes. This film is not rated.

                    http://movies.nytimes.com/2012/09/26...gewanted=print



                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

                      Originally posted by Thailandnotes View Post
                      Asian countries, being somewhere between first and third world, have leap-frogged in so many way. An obvious way is medical records. Fully 15 years ago, when my wife was checking out of a hospital, the woman handed her a wrong prescription. My wife said, “It’s supposed to be 5 milligrams, not 10,” The pharmacist rotated the computer screen and let my wife inspect the doctor’s handwritten notes. My wife said, “That’s a 5, believe it or not.” The pharmacist called the doctor upstairs and he confirmed that what looked like a 10 to the pharmacist was really a 5.

                      Ten years ago when I went to see a doctor asking for a PSA test, he asked when was the last time I had had one. I was guessing 5 years. He was easily able to bring up the results from another hospital and use the results as a bench mark. Basically, the same thing happened when I needed a series of tetanus shots. After having two at one hospital, then moving and needing the 3rd shot in another city, my records were easily accessible.

                      I could go on and on and on with stories from folks who have been blown away by the amount of money, time, and hassle the digitalization of medical records has saved them, but until you live it, you don’t really get it.

                      “I’m done? That’s it? You’re kidding me? Only 17 dollars?”
                      I'm intimitely familiar with the potential benefits of digitized data in the medical field, having been part of military trial where the hospitals were fully wifi enabled and the doctors carried Apple Newtons... this was in the mid-80's. So yes, I get that digitized data can be extremely helpful. But when the data is stored in a medical cloud, outside the patient's control, then there are enormous benefits to those who design, maintain and operate the system. And my bigger point here is that those benefits, the benefits to the system controllers, or not mentioned, discussed or debated as part of the bigger discussion. Further, it is these benefits that are currently driving the investment and the system design. The benefits to the user/patient, are merely a nice add-on quite frankly.

                      Originally posted by don View Post
                      Like a gun, how digitization of data is used is in the hands of the user . . .
                      Well, in this case the digitized data is NOT in the hands of the users. The user has virtually not control over the use of the data, and never will.

                      If you want the benefits of the digitization without centralized control, then let the patients carry an encrypted storage device on their person, one that can only be read and written to when the patient inputs their own private key. It is the cloud-portion of data storage that I have a problem with, as without this element, centralized omipotent feedback & control mechanisms are extremely difficult, if not impossible, to implement.
                      The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge ~D Boorstin

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Healthcare: Billions for Efficiency

                        Originally Posted by don Like a gun, how digitization of data is used is in the hands of the user . . .
                        Reggie: Well, in this case the digitized data is NOT in the hands of the users. The user has virtually not control over the use of the data, and never will.
                        by user I was referring to the healthcare industry, not the patient . . .

                        Comment

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