Title: Documentation and Coding: Understanding CMGs, RIWs and LOS
1Documentation and CodingUnderstanding CMGs,
RIWs and LOS
- What does It All Mean, and Why Should I Care?
2Two Reasons to Document Accurately and Completely
- To ensure high quality patient care
- To ensure that there are sufficient resources to
treat the patients that we need to care for
3Documentation Why Do It Accurately?
- Accurate Clinical Documentation
Fewer medication errors
Appropriate Medical care
Continuity of care
4A Guide to Better Physician Documentation
- Physician Documentation Expert Panel
- Chair Dr Ralph Kern (17 MDs Reps form CIHI,
OMA, CPSO, OHA, Health results Team for Primary
Care, Canadian and Ontario HIMA) - Patient Care and Outcomes
- 20 of patients experience adverse events during
first several weeks post discharge - most common adverse drug reactions
- 1/3 preventable
- 1/3 reduced severity if corrective measures
taken early
5A Guide to Better Physician Documentation
- Risk of re-hospitalization decreased when
patients were assessed for follow-up by
physicians who received a discharge summary - Van Walraven et al J Gen Intern Med 17 (3)
186-192, 2002 - Visits in ED of teaching hospital were 1.2 hr
longer on average for patients with an
information gap in their health records - Forster e al. J Gen Intern Med 20 (4) 317-323,
2005 - Discharge summary only effective if complete,
accurate and made available in a timely manner
family physician and patient disadvantaged if
discharge summary incomplete and/or arrives late
6Documentation Why Do It Accurately?
- Accurate Clinical Documentation
Fewer medication errors
Appropriate Medical care
Accurate data abstracted and submitted to CIHI
System errors detected
Continuity of care
Improved management
Appropriate funding
Equitable resource allocation
Improved regional planning
7The Context Hospital Accountability Agreements
- Hospital Accountability Agreement (HAA) is the
legal document that describes the obligations of
the hospital and the Ministry with respect to - Funding
- Deliverables (volumes, LOS)
-
8Under the HAA, the Hospital is expected to
- Maximize service levels and outcomes
- Meet agreed upon performance targets
- Manage within resources provided
9HAPS
- Hospital Annual Planning Submission (HAPS)
describes the services to be provided, and how
they will be measured and evaluated - HAPS assumes a balanced operating budget
- focus on expense management rather than service
reductions
10Selected HAPS Indicators
- Patient Access and Outcomes
- Relative Acute LOS
- Relative Risk of Readmission
- Conservable Days
- Financial Health
- Operational Efficiency
11Efficiency Measure - CPWC
- Cost per Weighted Case (CPWC)
- actual cost of care
- number of weighted cases
- Used to determine the approximate average cost of
hospital programs and services - MOHLTC wants CPWC to be as low as possible
- Achieved by reducing costs and/or increasing
weighted cases
12The Relationship Between Documentation and Funding
- Hospital funding is based on the expected cost to
deliver a certain volume of weighted cases - Physician documentation directly determines the
weight of the case and therefore the CPWC
13Efficiency Measure
- Resource Intensity Weight (RIW)
- a relative value based on case complexity and
case costing - For HHS an RIW of 1.00 means costs of
approximately 5,500 - Patient with an RIW of 2.3 would be expected to
cost 2.3 x 5,500 12,650 - This is not what the hospital receives in
funding but a measure used by MOHLTC to assess
hospital efficiency
14Definitions
- CMG Case Mix Groups
- A grouping of cases with a similar diagnosis
(e.g. pneumonia, heart failure), further broken
down by age and complexity to define resource
utilization. - Four levels of complexity for each diagnosis
- The more complex the case, the greater is the
resource utilization, which is expressed as RIW
(Resource Intensity Weight)
15Definitions
- Complexity methodology identifies cases for which
a prolonged LOS and/or more costly treatment
might reasonably be expected - 1. No complexity
- 2. Complexity related to chronic conditions
- 3. Complexity related to serious/important
conditions - 4. Complexity related to potentially
life-threatening conditions - Documentation of co-morbid conditions can add to
complexity level and increase the RIW for
individual cases
16How CMGs are Assigned
MCC Major Clinical Category
17Major Clinical Category 5A
18Coding
- Coding determines the Resource Intensity
Weighting (RIW), complexity, and expected length
of stay (ELOS) assigned to each patient
discharged - Values are derived from what the physician writes
as the Most Responsible Diagnosis, Secondary
Diagnosis and co-morbidities that add to length
of stay (LOS) - The MoHLTC uses these file codes to determine
hospital efficiency
19Chart Coding
- Done by a team of trained abstractors in health
records - All charts have to be submitted to CIHI within 60
days of discharge (virtually never go back to
redo a chart). - Can only code what the physician has indicated,
on front sheet, physician notes or MD orders
cant code from nursing notes, radiology or path
reports etc. - BIG risk of under reporting
20Definitions
- LOS length of stay in days
- ELOS the Expected Length of Stay for a
typical case in each diagnostic complexity
level. Derived from provincial data set. - Conservable Days the difference between the
Actual LOS and the Expected LOS when the actual
is greater than the expected
21Definitions
- Atypical Case cases are not used in the
calculation of RIW or ELOS - Deaths
- Transfers to or from other acute-care
institutions - Sign outs
- Outliers (cases with LOS beyond trim points)
22LOS Opportunity HAPs CMGs
23Hospital Accountability (HAPS) Clinical
Indicators (Conservable Days) for ALL CMGs
24Impact of Incomplete Documentation/ Coding
- Incomplete documentation/coding results in low
complexity rating which translates into a lesser
RIW, and therefore an increased CPWC - Hospital is faced with cutting costs because we
look inefficient - Low RIW implies shorter ELOS and may increase
conservable days - Conservable days result in Bed Opportunities
which in Adminspeak results in loss of beds.
25Case Example
- A 68 yr. female presents with NSTEMI. She has
Type II diabetes, hyperlipidemia, centripetal
obesity, a creatinine of 180 mmol/L, and a 40
pack/yr history of smoking. - On day 2 of admission she develops atrial
fibrillation with a rapid rate and a degree of
CHF, is treated appropriately, improves and on
day 4 undergoes cardiac cath with PCI of 2
vessels and discharged on day 6.
26Case Example
27Examples of Documentation
28Examples of Documentation
29Examples of Documentation
30New Codes for 2007-08Intervention Flags
- Pleurocentesis
- Dialysis
- Radiotherapy
- Mechanical Ventilation
- Cell Saver
- Parenteral Nutrition
- Feeding Tubes
- Vascular Access Device
- Tracheotomy
- Chemotherapy
- Paracentesis
- Heart Resuscitation
- Cardioversion
31Contribution by Physicians
- Document all primary and secondary clinical
diagnoses in notes or front sheet - Document all procedures
- State when ALC status begins, otherwise
considered as acute LOS
32Contribution by Physicians
- Sign off charts promptly, dictate a discharge
summary - Accurate coding will help hospital get the
appropriate level of funding to deliver care to
the patients we serve and reduce the risk of
closing beds inappropriately
33Legal Requirements and Hospital By-Laws
- The Ontario Public Hospitals Act
- Sets requirements on what health information must
be recorded by health facility - Within 24 hrs an admitting note, authenticated by
the physician is placed on the health record - Within 72 hs after a patient has been admitted,
the MRP must take a medical history of the
patient, give the patient a physical examination
and record, date and authenticate the history and
report findings of that examination and the
provisional diagnosis - Hospital By-Laws and Chart Completion Policies
- Given the authority to enact by-laws to govern
internal affairs develop their own policies on
chart completion
34Expert Panels Chart Completion Policy
- 3 Step Process recommended
- Hospital Health Records alerts MD when chart is
ready for completion - If not complete within 2 weeks of initial
notification, the department sends a written
warning that is copied to the Chief of Staff - If chart is not complete 2 weeks after issuing
the warning, then the hospitals Board of
Directors can suspend the physician
35Questions/Discussion