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Medical
Economics® Archive
Dec. 17, 2001
COVER STORY
How the device in your hand
can put money in your pocket
Code diagnoses and services on a PDA,
and watch revenues soar.
By Ken Terry
Managed Care Editor
Thanks to an electronic charge-capture program, ob/gyn Vivian S.
Hernandez of Brookline, MA, is earning an extra 5 percent a
year—while seeing the same number of patients. Yes, the program has
created some additional work for her, but the tradeoff is that her
charges are now being accurately recorded.
It's not that her office at New England OBGYN Associates used to
lose many encounter forms. "But it was not uncommon for the
information to be vague, general, and incomplete," she recalls.
Consequently, she'd either not get paid or receive less than she
should have. "That happened a lot."
Now, using a Palm that she synchronizes into the office's
scheduling system each day, Hernandez enters codes for in-office
visits herself instead of having a clerk do it. Since she may have to
flip through several screens on the MDeverywhere program to get all of
the diagnosis codes she needs, she spends about 30 seconds per patient
on coding, as opposed to the five seconds it took when she used a
paper form. "But I'm inputting better information," she
says, "so I'm being compensated more appropriately."
For instance, for typical pregnancies, insurers pay a global fee
for up to 13 prenatal visits. They'll pay for extra visits by
high-risk patients, but the visits have to be coded correctly. When
Hernandez and her five partners were using encounter forms, they'd
check off "pregnancy," and not get compensated for the extra
sessions. Now the physicians can quickly locate the code for
"twins," for example, or "incompetent cervix," or
"preterm labor," and capture the bonus charges for those
visits.
The information entered by Hernandez each day is edited by the
software, which looks for mistakes such as incongruent diagnoses and
procedures. Then it's uploaded via the Internet to the MDeverywhere
server, where additional editing is done. Finally, it's sent to the
computer at New England OBGYN's billing service.
Because the practice laid off all but one of its billing people
when it hired the outside agency, the charge-capture program hasn't
saved the office any money on employee costs. But the doctors are
negotiating a reduction in the agency's fee, since it no longer has to
manually input charges submitted on paper. And, as a result of sending
in cleaner charges, with all the required fields filled out properly,
New England OBGYN is getting claims out in less than a week, instead
of the three weeks it used to take.
At Riverbend Physicians and Surgeons, a multispecialty group in
Alton, IL, all 20 doctors use an Allscripts charge-capture program on
their handhelds during inpatient rounds. Internist Richard J. O'Neill
says he's recording charges more accurately than he used to on 3 x 5
cards, without spending any more time on the task. Moreover, the lag
time for getting claims out has dropped from 48 hours to less than a
day.
But the real benefit, says O'Neill, is that the group should be
able to save major bucks on back-office staff, because they no longer
have to input charges manually. After the doctors enter the charges on
their PDAs, they're transmitted, via a wireless network, directly into
the group's billing system.
With the average physician losing an estimated 10 percent of gross
billings due to misplaced, forgotten, or incorrectly prepared charges,
using a charge-capture program on a PDA could have a significant and
immediate impact on your bottom line. So how can you take advantage of
this opportunity, and what pitfalls should you watch out for? Here's a
rundown of what's out there, how it's being used, and where it's
going.
Charge-capture software varies in scope and format
The simplest charge-capture programs just list the available codes,
and you click on the right one. Other, more advanced, programs help
you choose the appropriate code. Then there are high-end programs that
also allow you to interface your handheld with your practice
management system so that billing information can be entered
automatically. The box below details some of what's
available.
With the simplest database
programs, you enter the codes, synch your PDA with a computer, and
print out the codes for your staff. Several vendors offer this kind of
software. PocketMed, which claims about 1,000 physician users, sells
its downloadable PocketBilling program for about $50. Other vendors
offer databases of CPT and ICD codes at prices ranging from free (iScribe)
to $299 (E-MDs).
There are also stand-alone programs that help you code. One, from
Atlanta-based pMDsoft, is used by cardiologist Paul C. Moulinie of
Huntington, NY, and his two colleagues to capture inpatient charges.
Moulinie likes the program because it's easy to use. Instead of
selecting the actual service codes, "we see a description that's
friendly to us. For instance, the software asks whether an initial
hospital visit is high, medium, or low complexity."
After he returns to the office, Moulinie synchs his Palm with his
PC, uploading the data to the software maker's server via the
Internet. The vendor provides CPT codes and checks them against
doctor-supplied diagnosis codes. Moulinie eyeballs them and delivers
them to his staff, who enter them into his Medical Manager billing
system. (pMDsoft also offers electronic interfaces with the Medic,
Millbrook, and Remedy systems.)
Although this arrangement is more labor-intensive for staff than
some other approaches, Moulinie figures that charge capture adds
revenues of about $67,000 per doctor per year as a result of improved
coding ($55,000) and the elimination of lost charges ($12,000). It's
also freed one of the billing clerks to assist with stress testing.
The practice pays $399 per doctor per month for the service, but
Moulinie considers that a "minimal amount" compared to the
increased revenue and savings.
Other charge-capture programs have you check off what you've done;
then they generate codes for you, based on Medicare guidelines. The
main advantage of this kind of system is that physicians who use it
are less prone to undercode out of fear of audits. "With the help
of these tools, you're going to code more accurately and document the
real level of care you delivered, which translates into higher
reimbursement for some visits," says Jane Metzger, a vice
president and consultant with First Consulting Group in Boston.
Interfaces allow real automation
Stand-alone programs like the ones described below
can certainly be valuable on your rounds, says Cheryl Toth, a
consultant with Chicago-based Karen Zupko & Associates. But she's
leery about using these programs in the office, because they lack
audit controls. "You need an encounter form not only to capture
charges but to make sure that everything is posted, collected, and
balanced and that nobody is stealing from you," she says.
One way to get around this with a stand-alone charge-capture
program is to print out your charges and have someone enter them in
the computer and match them with your appointment schedule. But if
there were a way to input your charges directly into the billing
system, that would reduce data entry time. So would transferring the
patient's name, medical record number, and demographic information
from your scheduling system into your PDA. However, to do either of
these electronically, you need interfaces with your practice
management system.
Charge-capture interfaces with scheduling systems are much more
common and easy to program than are billing interfaces. But the latter
are available. Big players like Allscripts and MDeverywhere are
targeting their billing interface efforts at groups of 10 or more
doctors. For smaller practices, practice management software vendors
like Medical Manager and Medic Computer offer their own charge-capture
programs for handhelds.
What you'll save depends on your practice pattern
There's some real disagreement about whether charge capture on a
handheld is advantageous for both office and hospital use. Ob/gyn
Vivian Hernandez, for instance, is dubious about how much value she'll
get from using it in the hospital. Hernandez explains that she does a
limited number of inpatient procedures, and that it's easy for her
assistant to find out what she did by using the hospital's information
system.
In contrast, cardiologist Paul Moulinie doesn't see much point in
using charge capture in his office, because he does only a few
different procedures and tests there and knows all of the codes for
them. "Once we incorporate an electronic medical record and
dovetail that with charge capture, and we have a laptop in each
examining room, then it would be worthwhile," he says. "But
with paper charts and an encounter form that requires only a check
mark and a signature, it's not a real advantage."
Moulinie points out that ambulatory charge capture could be a real
boon for primary care physicians, though, since they see many kinds of
patients.
The Riverbend group plans to implement charge capture in the office
as soon as possible. Internist Richard O'Neill doesn't believe that it
will take him and his colleagues any longer to use charge capture in
the office than it does to fill out an encounter form, but he admits
it will be an ambitious undertaking to change their work habits.
The return on investment can be considerable
To do charge capture, you might have to spring for a handheld,
which will cost from $250 to $450, on average. Some vendors, like
Allscripts, will roll the hardware price into their fee. Others,
including MDeverywhere, give the PDAs to physicians for free; but you
can be sure they'll make back the cost of those devices in their
monthly fees.
If you're going to use a vendor that edits or codes the charges,
provides an interface with your practice management system, or offers
a more sophisticated type of software, you'll be facing a monthly
licensing or subscription fee. The fee can be based on the number of
transactions or the number of clinicians using the service. Practices
seem to prefer per-user fees; they don't increase with volume.
Vivian Hernandez's practice is paying its billing service for
MDeverywhere on a per-user basis, although the service pays the
software vendor for each transaction. According to Lisa Zajac, office
manager of New England OBGYN, the cost per month is "under
$1,000," which boils down to about $200 per doctor. The practice
expects to see a 200 percent return on its investment in
charge-capture technology.
Riverbend Physicians and Surgeons has been using charge-capture
software for only a few months, but the doctors have already seen
savings. O'Neill recalls that the first time he used it on call in the
hospital, he submitted about 40 charges. "In our previous system,
it might have taken up to two hours to have a person enter those
charges and get everything processed for electronic claims submission.
A billing clerk told me that morning that it had taken her six minutes
to do it all."
Nevertheless, Dave Hinkle, Riverbend's executive director, is still
not sure whether charge capture will cover Riverbend's total
investment in software and hardware. It's more likely that the group
will see a return on investment, he says, after it completes a planned
adoption of other handheld applications, such as prescribing and
dictation.
Additional PDA applications, including ones for scheduling, medical
and drug references, and formulary information, are increasingly
available from such vendors as Allscripts and iScribe. Some programs
also enable physicians to place lab orders and get results on their
handhelds.
How charge capture fits with other tasks
There are several reasons for combining these functions. First,
doctors want useful medical information at the point of care, and they
can now transmit prescriptions, orders, and dictation on PDAs
wirelessly, over either wireless networks or the Internet. Second,
it's inconvenient to carry around multiple programs or devices that
don't communicate with each other. Third, being able to reuse the same
patient ID information in several programs saves time and money.
Fourth, some applications reinforce each other in the clinical
workflow.
Once you have charge capture, observers say, the next step is to
add digital dictation. By linking your dictation to the charges you've
just coded, you'll be able to support your charges with documentation
if you're ever audited. If you use charge-capture software that helps
you select the appropriate code by prompting you to check off boxes
describing the patient visit, you also have a guide for dictating.
The next level up, says Metzger, would be to have a full electronic
medical record. In that case, "the physician isn't worried about
billing, because structured templates or other tools are guiding the
creation of the electronic note, and out of that flows the
documentation and the codes for billing."
Although you'll first notice the impact of charge capture on your
own daily work, the ripple effects could profoundly transform your
office. Charge capture could be even more powerful, adds Cheryl Toth,
when it's combined with real-time claims processing, which allows
online claims to be approved instantly and paid within a day or two.
"Five years from now, smart practices won't have the
difficulties with accounts receivable follow-up that they have
today," she says. "You'll know immediately if the claim went
through, and if not, you'll fix it, and it's done. And when you can
also verify eligibility electronically, the number of people needed in
the back room should decrease."
Research assistance on this story was provided by Neil Chesanow, a
former Senior Editor of Medical Economics.
Selected charge-capture vendors
|
| Vendor |
Name of
program/platform |
Description
of program |
Contact information |
| Allscripts Healthcare Solutions |
TouchWorks
(Pocket PC) |
Charge capture with E&M
coder, medical necessity review. Practice management systems |
800-654-0889
www.allscripts.com |
| e-MDs |
TopsE&M
Coder (Palm), TopsSearch and TopsSuperbill (tablet and PC) |
Searches coding databases, checks
E&M codes, creates encounter forms with codes. TopsSearch
works as a stand alone program or can interface with e-MDs’
practice management system and EMR |
888-344-9836
www.e-mds.com |
| iScribe |
ECoder (Palm) |
Coding reference tool for use
with iScribe i500 prescriber |
877-771-4900
www.iscribe.com |
| MDeverywhere |
EveryCharge
(Palm, Pocket PC) |
Charge capture, E&M coding,
and digital dictation with medical necessity review.
Interfaces with IDX, SMS McKesson, Medical Manager Experior,
plus many scheduling applications |
919-484-9002
www.mdeverywhere.com |
| pMDsoft |
pMDsoft (Palm) |
User indicates diagnoses and
services performed. pMDsoft server selects codes. Aimed at
specialty practices of under 10 physicians, it works as a
stand alone program and also interfaces with some practice
management systems |
800-587-4989
www.pmdsoft.com |
| PocketMed |
PocketBilling
(Palm) |
This
stand-alone program requires users to pick codes and enter
patient identifying information |
434-825-0099
www.pocketmed.com |
A Medical Economics Web Exclusive!
|
|
Vendor
|
Name of
program/platform
|
Description
of program
|
Contact information
|
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e/MD2
|
Portable coding software (Pocket PC)
|
Picks codes based on check-box documentation, allows search
of coding databases. Stand-alone program.
|
877-973-EMD2
www.emd2.com
|
|
EPhysician
650-314-2000
|
ePhysician Practice (Palm and Pocket PC)
|
Charge capture is part of a software suite that includes
prescribing, scheduling, drug and formulary reference.
|
650-314-2000
www.ephysician.com
|
|
iMedica
|
Physician Suite (Pocket PC)
|
Charge capture accompanies charting and prescribing
applications. Documentation generates Medicare-compliant
codes.
|
650-960-6890
www.imedica.com
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PatientKeeper
|
ChargeKeeper
(Palm, Pocket PC)
|
Generates charges from documentation. Ties procedure codes
to diagnoses in electronic problem lists. Interfaces with
hospital systems, all Cerner applications.
|
617-987-0300
www.patientkeeper.com
|
|
ZapMed
530-583-3097
|
ZapBill, ZapCode (Palm)
|
ZapBill requires users to choose codes, while ZapCode
specifies codes based on documentation. Allows users to
generate pick lists and import patient ID data
|
530-583-3097
www.zapmed.com
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Ken Terry. How the device in
your hand can put more money in your pocket. Medical Economics
2001;24.
Copyright © 2001 and published by Medical Economics Company at
Montvale, NJ 07645-1742. All rights reserved.
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