Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Jul;27(7):825-30. doi: 10.1007/s11606-012-1984-x. Epub 2012 Jan 31.
Physicians may counsel patients who leave against medical advice (AMA) that insurance will not pay for their care. However, it is unclear whether insurers deny payment for hospitalization in these cases.
To review whether insurers denied payment for patients discharged AMA and assess physician beliefs and counseling practices when patients leave AMA.
Retrospective cohort of medical inpatients from 2001 to 2010; cross-sectional survey of physician beliefs and counseling practices for AMA patients in 2010.
Patients who left AMA from 2001 to 2010, internal medicine residents and attendings at a single academic institution, and a convenience sample of residents from 13 Illinois hospitals in June 2010.
Percent of AMA patients for which insurance denied payment, percent of physicians who agreed insurance denies payment for patients who leave AMA and who counsel patients leaving AMA they are financially responsible.
Of 46,319 patients admitted from 2001 to 2010, 526 (1.1%) patients left AMA. Among insured patients, payment was refused in 4.1% of cases. Reasons for refusal were largely administrative (wrong name, etc.). No cases of payment refusal were because patient left AMA. Nevertheless, most residents (68.6%) and nearly half of attendings (43.9%) believed insurance denies payment when a patient leaves AMA. Attendings who believed that insurance denied payment were more likely to report informing AMA patients they may be held financially responsible (mean 4.2 vs. 1.7 on a Likert 1-5 scale, in which 5 is "always" inform, p < 0.001). This relationship was not observed among residents. The most common reason for counseling patients was "so they will reconsider staying in the hospital" (84.8% residents, 66.7% attendings, p = 0.008)
Contrary to popular belief, we found no evidence that insurance denied payment for patients leaving AMA. Residency programs and hospitals should ensure that patients are not misinformed.
医生可能会劝告那些未经医嘱(AMA)擅自离院的患者,告知他们保险不会支付其医疗费用。然而,目前尚不清楚在这些情况下保险公司是否会拒绝支付住院费用。
审查保险公司是否拒绝支付 AMA 患者的住院费用,并评估 AMA 患者离院时医生的信念和咨询实践。
2001 年至 2010 年期间的医疗住院患者回顾性队列;2010 年对某一学术机构的内科住院医师和主治医生 AMA 患者的信念和咨询实践进行横断面调查。
2001 年至 2010 年期间 AMA 离院的患者、一名内科住院医师和主治医生,以及 2010 年 6 月来自伊利诺伊州 13 家医院的住院医师便利样本。
保险拒付 AMA 患者费用的比例、同意保险拒付 AMA 患者费用且告知 AMA 患者离院后其将承担经济责任的医生比例。
在 2001 年至 2010 年期间收治的 46319 名患者中,有 526 名(1.1%)患者 AMA 离院。在参保患者中,拒绝支付的比例为 4.1%。拒绝的原因主要是行政上的问题(如名字错误等)。没有因患者 AMA 离院而拒绝支付的案例。尽管如此,大多数住院医师(68.6%)和近一半的主治医生(43.9%)认为,如果患者 AMA 离院,保险会拒绝支付。认为保险拒付的主治医生更有可能告知 AMA 患者他们可能需要承担经济责任(平均 4.2 分 vs. 1.7 分,Likert 1-5 分制,5 分表示“总是”告知,p < 0.001)。这种关系在住院医师中并未观察到。医生告知 AMA 患者的最常见原因是“以便他们重新考虑住院”(84.8%的住院医师,66.7%的主治医生,p = 0.008)。
与普遍看法相反,我们没有发现保险因患者 AMA 离院而拒付费用的证据。住院医师培训项目和医院应确保患者不会被错误告知。