Daily Archives: October 12, 2011

A quick comparison of the 5010 Eligibility changes

October 12, 2011 in Healthcare Protocols and other Tech by andrew  |  Comments Off on A quick comparison of the 5010 Eligibility changes

There’s been much hype around the change to 5010 from the current 4010.  The 270 eligibility files are affected by this move.  A quick look of the changes with examples can be found on another bloggers site found here.

A good excell spreadsheet with some comparisons can be found here.

High Level Interoperability

October 12, 2011 in Healthcare Protocols and other Tech by andrew  |  Comments Off on High Level Interoperability

Alot of people see healthcare technology as being a magical land where information is shared seamlessly between applications.  In some cases this is true.  Where standards exist and are adhered to, exchange can be very beneficial to both patients and physicians.  Until all the physical connections are available however, seamless interoperability is still fiction.

Take a look at a post by a Microsoft employee explaining how Microsoft’s Health Vault can play a role in interoperability.

Programming Healthcare Silos

The Transcript is below

Programming Healthcare Silos – Presentation Transcript

  1. Vaibhav Bhandarivaibhavb@microsoft.com(Microsoft, Health Solutions Group)
    across
    Programming Healthcare Silos
    ^
    ?
    @vaibhavb#oscon #silostalk
  2. Agenda
    Challenges of Health IT
    Standards exist but..
    Open Solutions Exist
    Opportunities in Health IT
  3. Silos of Health Information
  4. Silos in the Enterprise – “On the Floor”
    Electronic Medical Record
    Nursing Workflow/ Documentation
    Clinical Notes
    Emergency Department
    Procedure Documentation
    ICU/Critical Care
    OR Management
    Dictation
    Pharmacy
    CPOE
    Advanced Analytics
    Cardiology
    Labs
    Medication Administration
    Hemodynamics
    Pathology
    Imaging
    Charting
    Medication Dispensing
    RIS
    Orders
    Image Distribution
    PACS
    Mobile Data
  5. Silos in the Enterprise – “Behind the Scenes”
    Contract Management
    Enterprise Scheduling
    Claims Management
    Financial/ERP
    Business Decision Support
    Inventory
    Medical Records Coding
    Purchasing
    Revenue Management
    Document Imaging
    Bed Management
    Registration
    Transcription
    Call Management
    Staff/Nurse Scheduling
    Outcomes Management
    Physician Practice
    Access Management
  6. Meaningful Use
    ICD-9 to ICD-10 Translation
    SNOMED-CT
    Master Patient Index
    EMR/EHR
    IHE
    HL7
  7. Meet Jim
  8. Jim’s ER visit..
  9. Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    HL7 Lab Order
    MSH|^~&|EMERGENCYEMR|RC90|INSIGHT.LAB|GUH.ER|20080114085834||ORU^R01|H20010816374944.7274|P|2.1|1
    PID|01||1430043|1572c552-f02b-49bf-b7e2-acc74765cb3e|SMITH^JIM||19790127|F||1||||||||cfd9ce6b-dc81-459d-9415-7913eb4635ec|804171277
    PV1|01|O|TPC||||331|||||||HIS|||331|O||||||||||||||||||||||||||20060721|19990921
    OBR|1||1234^LAB|88304
  10. Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Lab Result
    MSH|^~&|EMERGENCYEMR|RC90|INSIGHT.LAB|GUH.ER|20080114085834||ORU^R01|H20010816374944.7274|P|2.1|1
    PID|01||1430043|1572c552-f02b-49bf-b7e2-acc74765cb3e|SMITH^JIM||19790127|F||1||||||||cfd9ce6b-dc81-459d-9415-7913eb4635ec|804171277
    PV1|01|O|TPC||||331|||||||HIS|||331|O||||||||||||||||||||||||||20060721|19990921
    OBR|1||1234^LAB|88304
    OBX|1|CE|88304|1|T57000^GALLBLADDER^SNM OBX|2|TX|88304&MDT|1|MICROSCOPIC EXAM SHOWS HISTOLOGICALLY NORMAL GALLBLADDER TISSUE
  11. Creating & Processing Lab Order
    HAPI HL7 Parsing Library
    http://hl7api.sourceforge.net
  12. X12 Message for Eligibility Request
    ST*270*1234*005010X203~
    BHT*0022*13*10001234*20060501*1319~
    HL*1**20*1~
    NM1*PR*2*ABC COMPANY*****PI*842610001~
    HL*2*1*21*1~
    NM1*1P*2*EMERGENCY CLINIC*****SV*2000035~
    HL*3*2*22*0~
    TRN*1*93175-012547*9877281234~
    NM1*IL*1*SMITH*JIM****MI*11122333301~
    DMG*D8*19430519~
    DTP*291*D8*20060501~
    EQ*30~
    SE*13*1234~
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  13. X12 Response for Eligibility Request
    ST*271*1234*005010X203~
    BHT*0022*13*10001234*20060501*1319~
    HL*1**20*1~
    NM1*PR*2*ABC COMPANY*****PI*842610001~
    HL*2*1*21*1~
    NM1*1P*2*EMERGENCY CLINIC*****SV*2000035~
    HL*3*2*22*0~
    TRN*1*93175-012547*9877281234~
    NM1*IL*1*SMITH*JIM****MI*11122333301~
    DMG*D8*19430519~
    DTP*346*D8*20060101~
    EB*1**30**GOLD 123PLAN~

    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  14. Jim’s Ready to Go Home
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  15. CCR For Jim’s Visit
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  16. CCD or C32
  17. HealthVault Interaction
  18. Direct To Clinical
  19. Data In Jim’s Account
    Jim
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
    Jim
  20. NHIN-D
    @ HealthVault address
    Easy integration through SMTP S-MIME
    Exciting Future
  21. HealthVault Medical Imaging
    • Applications can upload large files to a users’ HealthVault record
    • http://bit.ly/hv-medical-imaging
  22. HealthVault Client & Mobile Applications
    Client Applications
    http://bit.ly/HV-client-app
  23. Leaving the Clinical Silo
    Clinical Silo
    While in enterprise your application need to comply with HIPAA 5010
    When Jim log’s in to HealthVault then the data is flowing in to consumer domain
    Lab
    Emergency
    EMR
    Health Plan
  24. HealthVault Open Source Resources
    Community Promise
    Open Source SDKs
    Java : CodePlex
    Ruby : RubyForge
    Python : Google Code
    PHP: SourceForge
    Reference License .NET SDK
    http://msdn.microsoft.com/healthvault
  25. Connected Health Platform Open Source Resources
    Microsoft Health Common User Interface (MSCUI)

    • Microsoft Public License (MS-PL): http://mscui.codeplex.com/license
    • Main site: http://www.mscui.net
    • Toolkit: http://mscui.codeplex.com

    IHE Cross-Enterprise Document Sharing XDS.b

    • Microsoft Public License (MS-PL): http://ihe.codeplex.com/license
    • Main site: http://www.microsoft.com/HealthICT
    • Toolkit: http://ihe.codeplex.com

    Clinical Documentation Solution Accelerator (CDSA)

    • Reference License for CDSA Toolkit: http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/cdsa/Project/License.aspx
    • Main site: http://www.mscui.net/CDSA.htm
    • Toolkit: http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/cdsa
  26. Takeaway
    Lots of opportunity to bridge the silos and empower the patient with open technologies and platforms!
  • Thank You
    Be Well. Be Protected.
  • Pediatric Office Revenue Cycle Management/Medical Billing – Today vs. Yesterday

    October 12, 2011 in Billing and Collections by support Team  |  1 Comments

    I am amazed at the number of Pediatric offices for which the partners use modern technology in their
    home life and have a dated revenue cycle for their office.  Their home activities are expenses while the
    office revenue cycle provides the revenue stream for their practice and their income.   Because the insurance companies routinely update systems and processes, the average Pediatric office is at a disadvantage to managing the revenue cycle.  Interesting that I have observed a practice owner drive to the nearest cell phone dealer and within an hour walk out with a new phone and abandon the old phone.  This same practice owner is unable to make a change that will increase their compensation.    Many pediatricians have systems in their office that were either designed prior to the 21st and still being sold today or are using a system that the practice purchased before the start of the 21st century.

    I have met ‘Sally the biller’ whom has done the billing for years but is years behind on optimal coding
    techniques for the office.  Also, we have picked up work from ‘Sally the biller’ for which thousands of
    dollars have been missed in charges not resubmitted or reprocessed correctly.  It is expensive and time
    consuming for a practice owner to continuously train and challenge their billing team.  Consultants have a solution – hire them to manage the billing team.   This could increase their billable hours – might be better approach to utilize the consultant a few times a year to audit account and measure versus national benchmark (if they are a high skilled consultant, they are probably busy and flexible on the arrangement).  Hiring a practice manager to manage the billing team as well as other functions might or might not be a good idea based on the size of the practice.  These challenges are especially difficult for a 1-3 physician Pediatric group where the extra headcount might only add cost and complexity to the practice and actually reduce the profit margins.

    Some of the items to manage for back office revenue cycle management include: insure qualified Pediatric billers are continuously managing the revenue cycle, monthly deep dive into the account to calculate benchmark performances and evaluate aged claims, auditing, training, change of codes, change of claim file standards, change of scrubbers and claim edits, evaluate distribution of sick coding.   The larger practices also require other factors like the evaluation by provider.  Most pediatric practices become more profitable by focusing on increasing patients and revenue versus spending significant amount of time on these management issues.

    Why are major corporations outsourcing?  Because the activity is being outsourced is not the core activity
    of their business.  Xerox has run an advertisement campaign that they announce Marriott, a hotel, and
    Ducati, an Italian motorcycle manufacturer, outsource their back office operations to Xerox so these
    companies can focus on serving their customers.  Shouldn’t a pediatric office focus on their patients and
    not back office management?  Optimizing profit margin and reducing administrative burden is always on the ‘grid’ for executives in companies.  Business owners of Pediatric Practices either become too busy to think strategically about this approach or might not have the proper advisers.  The links below show these videos:

    Xerox – Ducati http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6reT9Ux_gI

    Xerox – Marriott  http://www.youtube.com/XeroxCorp#p/c/7/wdi43UA2ofE

    Xerox – Virgin Airlines  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YFK54c2qYA

    It is confusing for a practice owner to know how to identify a company that performs consistently in
    Pediatric back office operations/medical billing.  There are many companies not meeting their growth
    objectives of their EHR software and/or consulting practice so they might add in Medical
    billing as a service.

    When evaluating a company/business to manage your revenue cycle some questions to ask include: what is your collection rate, what % of your customers/clients uses your billing service vs. only your EHR.  Since you have been in
    business, what % of the time have you been actively managing pediatric billing and the revenue cycle? If
    they have been in business for more than 5 years and started medical billing within the last 5 years, their
    processes and company systems were not built from the ground up around the revenue cycle
    management of clients.  How do you audit my account?  How do I audit your actions?

    Transitions from the old model means some changes for the practice:  new systems, processes and potentially a new
    billing team.   If done properly, at the end of the rainbow is additional revenue, higher profit margins, reduced work and more free time for the practice owners!