Gunderman R B, Phillips M D, Cohen M D
Department of Radiology, Indiana University, Indianapolis 46202, USA.
Acad Radiol. 2001 Apr;8(4):299-303. doi: 10.1016/S1076-6332(03)80498-1.
The Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) regards billing for radiologic examinations without an appropriate indication as unlawful, and both the referring physician and the radiologist are liable. HCFA regulations are interpreted as requiring that all requisitions for radiologic examinations include a current diagnosis and appropriate indication for the study. The purpose of this investigation was to determine the rates at which requisitions currently meet these criteria and to assess the effectiveness of a simple intervention designed to improve them.
One hundred fifty consecutive chest radiography requisitions were examined to determine the rate at which current diagnoses and appropriate indications were present. An intervention was then implemented that included a month-long effort to inform referring physicians and radiologists of HCFA regulations, followed by a 1-week period during which requested examinations were not performed unless accompanied by a clinical diagnosis and appropriate indication. Another 150 consecutive chest radiography requisitions were then assessed to determine the effect of the intervention. A 3-month follow-up sample of a third set of 150 consecutive requisitions was then obtained.
The intervention produced a 69% decrease in the rate at which current diagnoses were missing from requisitions, and a 61% decrease in the corresponding rate for appropriate indications. Both results are significant with chi2 analysis at the P = .001 level. After 3 months with no additional intervention, rates decayed back toward baseline, with only a 35% remaining decrease for current diagnosis and an 18% decrease for appropriate indication.
The intervention performed in this study significantly reduces the rate of noncompliance with HCFA regulations. However, this improvement decays over time if it is not reinforced.
医疗保健财务管理局(HCFA)认为,在没有适当指征的情况下为放射学检查计费是非法的,转诊医生和放射科医生均需承担责任。HCFA的规定被解释为要求所有放射学检查申请单都应包含当前诊断和该检查的适当指征。本研究的目的是确定当前申请单符合这些标准的比例,并评估一项旨在改善这些情况的简单干预措施的效果。
对150份连续的胸部X线检查申请单进行检查,以确定当前诊断和适当指征的存在比例。随后实施了一项干预措施,包括为期一个月的努力,向转诊医生和放射科医生通报HCFA的规定,随后为期1周,在此期间,除非附有临床诊断和适当指征,否则所申请的检查不予执行。然后对另外150份连续的胸部X线检查申请单进行评估,以确定干预措施的效果。接着获取了第三组150份连续申请单的3个月随访样本。
干预措施使申请单中缺少当前诊断的比例下降了69%,适当指征的相应比例下降了61%。经卡方分析,这两个结果在P = .001水平均具有显著性。在没有额外干预的3个月后,比例又回到了基线水平,当前诊断的下降比例仅剩下35%,适当指征的下降比例为18%。
本研究中实施的干预措施显著降低了不符合HCFA规定的比例。然而,如果不加以强化,这种改善会随着时间推移而衰减。