Verrilli D K, Bloch S M, Rousseau J, Crozier M E, Yecies S B
Department of Research and Development, Radiology Management Sciences, Los Altos, CA 94022, USA.
Radiology. 1998 Aug;208(2):385-92. doi: 10.1148/radiology.208.2.9680564.
To evaluate the results of a privileging program aimed to ensure that health care providers and facilities adhere to standards of care.
Technical and professional privileging applications were mailed to more than 1,800 diagnostic imaging facilities and more than 6,000 professional providers of services to members of a health care plan. Site inspections were used to determine whether facilities met standards of care. Specialty providers were assigned a range of current procedural terminology codes for which they had privileges to bill the payer.
Of 1,004 imaging sites inspected, 197 (20%) failed with the ability to remedy the violation, 106 (10%) failed with fundamental and serious deficiencies, and 701 (70%) passed. Site inspection pass rates varied substantially by specialty. Chiropractors and podiatrists were more likely to fail than medical and surgical specialists. A strong correlation was found between refusal to participate in the inspection and failure rate. Results suggest that reduction of the number of professional claims billed led to a 2% decline in total imaging expenditures, or a more than 10:1 return on the cost of implementing technical and professional privileging programs.
Health care plans can positively influence costs and quality by developing, monitoring, and enforcing their own quality standards for diagnostic imaging.