Title: Law and Ethics for Medical Careers 3rd Edition
1Law and Ethics for Medical Careers 3rd Edition
- Insurance Fraud (1, 3)
- Coding and Reimbursement (1, 3,11)
2The Case
- A Boston physician has a patient who has
presented with changes in her fibrocystic breast
condition. The patients insurance covers some
examinations for this condition, but the patient
fears an early-stage cancer would be easy to miss
if she were examined at the frequency allowed by
her insurer.
3The Case, continued
- The patient states she cannot afford to pay out
of pocket for the extra examinations that the
physician agrees are desirable. - The physician successfully got the insurer to pay
for the most recent visit by coding it as an
evaluation for breast mass rather than as a
routine monitoring.
4What Do You Think?
- The physician now wonders if this was a correct
way to handle this situation and if it is wise to
continue this practice. - Do you think the physician handled the situation
correctly? Why or why not? - What recommendations would you give this
physician?
5Legal Issues
- In general, physicians should avoid chronic
upcoding. - A physician who knowingly states an incorrect
diagnosis or billing code on an insurance form to
obtain an unauthorized level or kind of
reimbursement commits fraud.
6Legal Issues, continued
- Major initiatives against fraud are under way
from both federal and private health plans.
What penalties can be imposed on physicians found
guilty of fraudulent billing?
7Legal Issues, continued
- Loss of participation in insurance plans
8Legal Issues, continued
- There may also be other negative outcomes of
miscoding. - In a malpractice suit, a physicians dishonesty
in coding can undermine his credibility. This
can occur even if the upcoding does not directly
relate to the claim being litigated.
9Ethical Issues
- Deliberate miscoding is dishonest and potentially
harmful in several ways. - Mistrust between physicians and health plans
- Mistrust between physicians and patients
- Harm to patients
10Ethical Issues, continued
- Mistrust between physicians and health plans
fuels a mutual gamesmanship that ultimately makes
it more difficult, not easier, to secure the care
a patient needs.
11Ethical Issues, continued
- Patients may develop the fear that a physician
who would openly lie for a patient might also
sometimes lie to them.
12Ethical Issues, continued
- Insurance dishonesty can also harm patients, as
in the following case of Stafford v. Neurological
Medicine, Inc.
13Stafford v. Neurological Medicine, Inc.
- Physicians performed a CT scan prior to
chemotherapy to determine if a patients lung
cancer had metastasized to her brain. Believing
the insurance company would not pay for a
screening CT scan, the physician entered a
diagnosis of brain tumor on the claim form.
14Stafford v. Neurological Medicine, Inc.
- The patient was told the exam was negative, but
when she received a statement from her insurance
company explaining the benefits paid, she saw
brain tumor under diagnosis and became
acutely distressed.
The patient committed suicide.
15What Should a Physician Do?
- Chronic upcoding is unwise, unethical and
illegal. - What options do physicians have?
16What the Expert Says
- Linda Emanual, MD, PhD, director of the AMA
Ethics Institute suggests further investigation,
combined with some creative problem-solving. - She outlines three areas for problem-solving in
this case...
17What the Expert Says, continued
- First,
- Establish a reasonable frequency for screening
for this patient. - If anxiety is what prompts the patient to request
more frequent visits, then more education and
reassurance may be in order. This could prevent
excessive screening.
18What the Expert Says, continued
- Second,
- Determine if there actually is a reimbursement
problem. - Dont assume you must upcode to receive payment.
Contact the insurer and talk to someone who knows
the reimbursement system. More documentation may
be required, but there may be reimbursement.
19What the Expert Says, continued
- Third,
- Find out what the patient means by cant
afford. - Today patients are accustomed to first-dollar
coverage and may believe they should never have
to pay for medical care.
20What the Expert Says, continued
- If a physicians charges are comparable to other
costs of everyday living, then a decision not to
purchase extra medical services may be just that
-- a spending decision.
21What the Expert Says, continued
- If this is the case, the patient should be
informed by the physician why the exams are
important and the consequences of not having the
exams. - Payment plans may then be offered.
22What the Expert Says, continued
- When costs present a true obstacle,
- A physician may discount her own fees.
- A physician may wish to negotiate discounted fees
from other required services, such as mammography.
23Summary
- Physicians must recognize dilemmas such as this
cannot be avoided. Patients needs are diverse
and payers must limit what they will cover. - The challenge is not to bypass the problem, but
to live with it in morally credible ways. - Ethics Forum, American Medical News, February 23,
1998.