Young Richard A, Bayles Bryan, Hill Jason H, Kumar Kaparaboyna A
Family Medicine Residency Program, John Peter Smith, Fort Worth, TX.
Fam Med. 2014 May;46(5):378-84.
The study's aim was to deepen our understanding of family physicians' perceptions of the strengths and weaknesses of the widely used US documentation, coding, and billing rules for primary care evaluation and management (E/M) services.
This study used in-depth, qualitative interviews of 32 family physicians in urban and rural, academic, and private practices. Interviews were initiated with a series of grand tour questions asking participants to give examples and personal narratives demonstrating cost efficiencies and cost inefficiencies relating to the E/M rules in their own practices. Investigators independently used an immersion-crystallization approach to analyze transcripts to search for unifying themes and subthemes until consensus among investigators was achieved.
The majority of participants reported that the documentation rules, coding rules, and common fees for procedures and preventive services were reasonable. The E/M documentation rules for all other visit types, however, were perceived by the participants as unnecessarily complicated and unclear. The existing codes did not describe the actual work for common clinic visits, which led to documenting and coding by heuristics and patterns. Participants reported inadequate payment for complex patients, multiple patient concerns in a single office visit, services requiring extra time beyond a standard office visit, non-face-to-face time, and others. The E/M rules created unintended negative consequences such as family physicians not accepting Medicare or Medicaid patients, inaccurate documentation, poor-quality care, and system inefficiencies such as unnecessary tests and referrals.
Family physicians expressed many problems and frustrations with the existing E/M documentation, coding, and billing rules and felt the system undervalued and unappreciated them for the complex and comprehensive care they provide. Findings of this study could inform improved guidelines for primary care documentation, coding, and billing.
本研究旨在加深我们对家庭医生对广泛使用的美国初级保健评估与管理(E/M)服务的文档记录、编码和计费规则的优缺点的看法的理解。
本研究对32名城市和农村、学术及私人诊所的家庭医生进行了深入的定性访谈。访谈以一系列全景式问题开始,要求参与者举例并讲述个人经历,展示其自身实践中与E/M规则相关的成本效益和成本无效益情况。研究人员独立采用沉浸 - 结晶法分析访谈记录,以寻找统一的主题和子主题,直至研究人员达成共识。
大多数参与者报告称,文档记录规则、编码规则以及程序和预防服务的常见费用是合理的。然而,参与者认为所有其他就诊类型的E/M文档记录规则过于复杂且不明确。现有的编码并未描述常见门诊的实际工作,这导致通过启发式方法和模式进行记录和编码。参与者报告称,对于复杂患者、单次门诊中患者的多个问题、超出标准门诊所需额外时间的服务、非面对面时间等,支付不足。E/M规则产生了意想不到的负面后果,如家庭医生不接受医疗保险或医疗补助患者、记录不准确、护理质量差以及不必要的检查和转诊等系统效率低下问题。
家庭医生对现有的E/M文档记录、编码和计费规则表达了诸多问题和不满,并感到该系统因他们提供的复杂和全面的护理而低估和不重视他们。本研究结果可为改进初级保健文档记录、编码和计费指南提供参考。