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3 rd Annual Association of Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialists Conference

3 rd Annual Association of Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialists Conference. Strategies for achieving medical staff compliance. Trey La Charité, MD CDI Program Physician Advisor, Hospitalist, Clinical Assistant Professor. Objectives:.

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3 rd Annual Association of Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialists Conference

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  1. 3rd AnnualAssociation of Clinical Documentation Improvement Specialists Conference

  2. Strategies for achieving medical staff compliance Trey La Charité, MD CDI Program Physician Advisor, Hospitalist, Clinical Assistant Professor

  3. Objectives: • Learn effective PA techniques for cultivating medical staff acceptance of and sustained participation with CDI goals • Review continuous educational efforts • “What’s wrong with the way I write in the chart?” • Promotion of CDI program as team effort • Generation of effective CDI compliance tools

  4. Physician CDI presentations • Make each presentation service-line specific • Orthopods don’t care about “chronic systolic CHF.” • Make sure they understand why it is important to learn the rules of “The Game” that CMS creates: • The pressures that each treating facility faces • The pressures that each physician will face • Introduce more accurate methods and terminology to appropriately document each patient’s severity of illness in the medical record • How to effectively play CMS’ game

  5. Physician CDI presentations • Ensure that each physician understands every reason why participation in CDI efforts is so crucial for them • Ensure that each physician understands that compliance with CDI goals is strictly their responsibility • CDI is not a coding issue! • Ensure that each physician understands how to be compliant with CDI goals

  6. Why implement CDI? • To make YOU and their facility look better in the public perception with quality data reporting • To make YOU look better to health insurance companies & CMS for coming P4P initiatives • To improve YOUR and their facility’s L.O.S. • To appropriately categorize and justify YOUR patients’ admission status within hospital system • To realize all GME educational goals • To realize all appropriate reimbursements

  7. Medical staff follow-up • Present CDI updates at quarterly medical staff meetings • Show changes in ICD-9 terminology • Give examples of cases where physicians either listened to or ignored CDI specialist queries with consequences of their actions • Give assurances that we are not asking them to lie, cheat, steal, mislead, commit fraud, etc. • Remind them why CDI is so important • Give CDI improvement tips

  8. Promote CDI as a team effort • Attend all weekly CDI core team meetings • Everyone in room has equal status • All on first name basis with no rank • All trying to reach same goal • Review problematic/denied queries with team • Provide needed clinical education to CDI team • Allows quick CDI response for acute issues • Allows for free generation of new ideas • CDI specialists much more in touch with what is happening on their floors than PA

  9. Promote CDI as a team effort • Give credit where and when credit is due • Search for ways to make CDS specialists’ work experience more efficient and effective • CDS specialists should be on wards, not in the office • Provide yearly membership in ACDIS • Send team members to annual ACDIS conference • All members should have opportunity to attend • Review insurance/RAC coding denials, assist in appeals, and provide medical staff education regarding changes • Participate in coder education • Keep CDI Program momentum going

  10. Compliance tools • PA must be creative in order to develop physician friendly CDI compliance methods that garner consistent, sustainable results • Physicians see themselves as overworked and extremely busy • Physicians willing to comply if . . . • Request does not impact their perceived time constraints • It’s believed to be more than just an additional hassle of dubious reward

  11. CDI pocket cards • Everybody has one and they all work great! • “Universal” or “service-line specific”? • Advantages of universal CDI card: • Everyone speaks the same language • Promote house-wide team building vs. additional individual physician or group responsibilities • Ease of implementing CMS/RAC updates • Can be facility specific • No two hospitals alike!

  12. Service-line ‘Blitzes’ • Identify service-line with opportunities for documentation improvement • Review every chart on that service in one day • Leave routine queries as needed • Sends message that they are being watched • Take CDI team to lunch in doctors’ lounge • Occupy prominent table at entrance of lounge • Display large CDI poster • Distribute CDI pocket cards as needed • Answer questions

  13. Inciting ‘SHAME!’ • Show data to medical staff that suggests to the public they are not good doctors • Show data to the medical staff that suggests their local competition is doing a better job of taking care of patients than they do • Physicians are competitive and defensive about their abilities and skills • Use physician egos to your advantage!

  14. 2006

  15. 2009

  16. Inciting ‘SHAME!’ • Save examples where physician(s) ignored or disagreed with query that would have resulted in substantial MS-DRG impact • Present those cases at general medical staff meeting with all pertinent ramifications . . . • What diagnoses they missed • Lack of meeting GM-LOS goal • Loss of reimbursement to hospital • Physician report card impact • Show them the error of their ways!

  17. Example #1 • 67 yo WM w/ HTN & hyperlipidemia goes to OSH w/ chest pain & diaphoresis. EKG shows ST-segment elevations in anterior leads. Patient transferred to UTMCK & immediately taken to cath lab. Patient arrests @ end of procedure and is intubated and revived during Code 99. IABP is placed & patient taken to ICU.

  18. Example #1 • What are the diagnoses in example #1? • HTN • Hyperlipidemia • Acute Myocardial Infarction • Cardiogenic Shock – (MCC) • IABP was placed • Acute Respiratory Failure – (MCC) • This patient was intubated when he arrested.

  19. Example #1 • Despite repeated queries and phone calls by CDS specialists, no documentation was ever made in the medical record that this patient had “cardiogenic shock” or “acute respiratory failure.”

  20. Example #1: $31,436.00 4.5950 15.6 If “Acute Respiratory Failure” or “Cardiogenic Shock” had been documented . . . (MCCs).

  21. Example #2 • 66 yo WM w/ HTN, DM, & PVD goes to ER w/ 3 days of LLE pain, erythema, fever, & chills. T=101.9F, HR=113, WBCs=17K, albumin=1.9, & HbA1c=8.3. BMI=18.6. A foul smell is noted from LLE. Patient diagnosed w/ cellulitis & gangrene and undergoes BKA. Four days later, the patient unexpectedly arrests and cannot be revived.

  22. Example #2 • What are the diagnoses in example #2? • HTN • PVD • Diabetes Mellitus – “Type 2” & “uncontrolled” • Cellulitis and gangrene (CC) • Sepsis – (MCC) • Elevated Temp, HR, & WBC’s @ admission met criteria for SIRS. Source was patient’s LLE cellulitis • Malnutrition – “severe” – (MCC) • Admission albumin = 1.9 & BMI < 19

  23. Example #2 • At the time of admission, the physician only documented “Cellulitis” and did not mention “Sepsis” or “Severe Malnutrition” in the medical record.

  24. Note: The physician paid attention to the query placed on the patient’s chart by CDS nurse & documented both “Sepsis” & “Severe Malnutrition.”

  25. Example #2: “Sepsis” as principal diagnosis with “Severe Malnutrition” as MCC Amputation for Circulatory Disorders w/o CC or MCC with RW = 2.99 GMLOS=7.3 $20,852.56

  26. What about quality ratings? • Predicted Mortality Rates for some disease processes in this case: • Cellulitis w/ gangrene = 15% • Sepsis = 30% • Septic shock = 80% • The patient expired which is never good for any physician’s report card: • However, by listening to the CDS nurse, this physician’s expected mortality bar is much higher than it would have been for “cellulitis” only.

  27. Problematic service-lines? • Concentrate CDI training efforts on consultants and residents to improve documentation • Both sources of documentation can be coded. • Treat unanswered queries as incomplete charts • May require change in medical staff by-laws • Insert CDI goals into data gathering IS tools • Do you have EHR or CPOE? • Insert CDI goals into pre-operative clinics • Pre-operative clinic H&P can be coded as long as done 30 days prior to surgery.

  28. Physician interventions? • Many programs use one-on-one PA interaction with medical staff to get needed results. • Physicians do not like “backseat drivers” • Potentially places PA in adversarial relationship with medical staff • If query is ignored while patient in hospital, convert to post-discharge query • Make medical record incomplete until answered • “Carrot Approach” as opposed to “Sticks.”

  29. Physician advisor results • Physician Advisor will not be “Silver Bullet” for your CDI Program • CDI program success is team effort: • Must have CDI chart review specialists to reinforce medical staff education with good, consistent queries • Must have strong administrative support • Must have strong coding department support • Results will not happen overnight!

  30. Questions?

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