The Solution to Risk Adjustment: A Coder’s Perspective
Kameron Gifford, CPC
Over the last twelve years, I have worked with physicians to
develop efficient billing practices, implement value added processes and
improve the entire experience of care for their patients. What can this
knowledge contribute to developing compliant, engaging and transparent risk
adjustment programs? What can health plans learn from expert practice managers?
Use a Whole System
Approach
In medicine, continuity of care can mean the difference
between a positive and a negative outcome. We know that fragmented systems don’t
work. So why has this become the standard for Medicare Advantage plans? Initial
Health Risk assessments are outsourced to midlevel providers that perform a “home
based” assessment or perhaps the patient is instructed to visit a website or to
call an 800 number. Then a few months
later another company is contracted to “retrieve” medical records from the PCP
who then forwards those records to a coder to code any “missing diagnoses”. This
does not add any value for the patient. What will?
When patients enroll in a managed Medicare plan they are
assigned (or pick) a PCP. This is who should be doing the initial health assessments.
CMS encourages FFS providers to perform this type of exam by reimbursing the “Welcome
to Medicare” exam with no cost share to the patient. If this is the “standard
of care” for some beneficiaries, why not all?
Coding comes from documentation and therefore it is
impossible to improve our coding without first improving our documentation.
Knowing this, retrospective audits should be used as a tool for identifying deficiencies
and a foundation from which specific educational programs can be built to
support individual needs and learning styles.
Educate Everyone
In 2011, I began educating medical professionals in
compliant HCC Coding and Documentation. My
mission was to teach the fundamental purpose and principles behind the methodology.
Doctors are trained to take an enormous amount of information and condense all
of this into a progress note. This abbreviated summary of events is then interpreted
into ICD-9 and CPT Codes (which may or may not risk adjust) which will
determine the amount of reimbursement for that particular service.
Currently plans are trying to interject change at the end of
a process. Instead, by educating physicians, nurses, coders, administrators,
medical assistants, and receptionists change can be implemented at the initial
point of contact. If the medical assistant and nurse understand quality
measures they will be able to accurately audit the chart before the physician
ever walks in. Flags can be raised for patients who have not had their
mammogram or who didn’t turn in their hemmoccult cards. Physicians who
understand the 10 guiding principles of HCC will document to a higher a degree
of specificity and use linking words. A coder with training in HCC Coding will
know that you must use a buddy code when coding manifestations. This knowledge
allows the coder to query the physician immediately when the case is still
fresh on their mind. The ability to
audit in “real time” expedites the process of changing one’s behavior and the
physician’s ability to adapt under these circumstances are amazing. The end
result is a complete an accurate medical record which does add value to the
patient.
Return on Investment
Education empowers. One of the
greatest dilemmas in managed care is how to get physician buy in? By providing
quality educational opportunities to not only physicians but to their office
staff as well you will position yourself as a blessing instead of a burden. In
the current environment of greater oversight, tighter regulations and changing
reimbursement patterns providing something as simple as education builds
relationships.
Empirical Risk Management tested
this philosophy and the return on investment was incredible. 300 to 1. But, the
greatest achievement of all was seeing the hunger for knowledge and the
positive impact on human life that was reflected in patient centered whole
system change.
For more information please visit
our website: www.ermconsultinginc.com
or by email: kgifford@ermconsultinginc.com
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