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By: Zzz Zzz
Published: 10/10/2007
Workers' Compensation Clampdown
Growing Number of States Capping Workers' Comp Facility Fees
The old saying that workers' comp pays slowly, but it pays well may no longer hold true for those surgical facilities in a growing number of states that have capped facility fees or are threatening to do so.
"When it comes to workers' compensation, there are two kinds of states: Those that have capped payments in relation to Medicare, and those that will," says FASA Executive Vice President Kathy Bryant.
South Carolina, Colorado, Louisiana, Georgia and New Mexico have imposed percent-of-charges policies for workers' compensation payments. Since 2002, when Washington and Oregon imposed laws to add Medicare-related caps to their workers' comp systems, three states have followed suit (California, Texas, North Dakota) and three more (Michigan, Tennessee, Vermont) are on the brink of doing so (see "States at a Glance").
In California and Texas, which have made the biggest headlines in recent months, the caps have been a mixed bag.
"Our workers' compensation reimbursement has gone down from an average of about $7,500 a case to about $3,500 a case," says Michael Sawyer, MBA, the administrator of Santa Barbara Surgery Center in Santa Barbara, Calif. "But our business model is multi-specialty, multi-payer, so it hasn't had a tremendous impact."
"For facilities built around the workers' comp system, the cap can be devastating."
The law doesn't address carveouts for implants, but Mr. Sawyer says he's not yet had a problem getting reimbursed for those. He's seen some payers decline to pay or refuse authorization on payment for workers' comp cases because of physicians' disclosure of financial involvement in their centers.
"It's really a misinterpretation of the law, because it doesn't say physician ownership is illegal, just that there must be disclosure," says Mr. Sawyer.
On the plus side, however, he's getting paid exponentially faster for the workers' comp cases his surgeons take on.
"We saw a lot of payers drag their feet before [the law was enacted]," says Mr. Sawyer. "We never knew when or how much we were going to get. Now the time is shortened and when we book a case, we know exactly what we'll be paid. That's taken some of the sting out of it."
According to FASA, hundreds of bills have been introduced to the California Legislature to revise the workers' comp law to include reimbursement for implants or to increase the cap. They can be tracked on the California Medical Society's Web site at www.calphys.org/ html/legislative_hot_list.asp.
In Texas, "the system is pretty much broken, and our workers' comp costs are high while our back-to-work numbers are low compared to other states," says John Pike, the executive director of the Texas Ambulatory Surgery Center Society. When only physician-fee caps were enacted in Sept. 2003, many providers continued to serve workers' comp patients because the facility fees let them be profitable. But once those were cut, "most ASCs didn't feel they could maintain profitability ... and more are dropping out," says Mr. Pike.
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According to a survey of its members conducted by the Texas Orthopedic Association last year, 28 percent dropped out of the system, and of those who stayed, more than 57 percent were restricting acceptance of new patients.
As implementation of the new payment system has been a problem, the workers' comp commission is looking at including implants, covering omitted codes and possibly adjusting the 213 percent of Medicare facility fee. However, the legislature recently recommended the abolition and reformation of the commission under the board of insurance, "and no one knows how that's going to wind up after the legislature, which convenes in January, is through with it."
Any state that is tying payments to Medicare is "way behind in the thinking on fair payment for three reasons," says Craig Jeffries, the executive director of AAASC.
First, he says, Medicare is changing the way it pays for ASC orthopedic procedures, and "that's a very active process for the next two or three years. They're throwing out the entire system states are thinking of using." Second, says Mr. Jeffries, Medicare's list of approved procedures for the ASC is restrictive and doesn't include many core workers' comp procedures for both pain management and orthopedics. Logically, this means more workers' comp cases will be sent to hospitals. The American Hospital Association didn't return requests for comment on the issue. Finally, "Medicare has never properly recognized and paid for the additional implant costs incurred in many ortho procedures," says Mr. Jeffries.
"The states tie payments to Medicare," says Ms. Bryant, "because while it might be a bad system, it's a bad system they don't have to spend time and energy developing."
- Stephanie Wasek
Anesthesia Providers and Drug Abuse
Could Exposure to Secondhand Opiates Lead to Drug Abuse and Addiction?
It's no secret that anesthesia providers are up to four times more likely to be treated for drug addiction than other doctors because, the popular theory goes, they have easy access to drugs, addictive personalities and stressful jobs.
A new study offers quite a different explanation: Anesthesia providers who sit near a patient's head during surgery are subject to secondhand exposure of IV-administered fentanyl and propofol that patients' exhale. So in much the way that children of smokers are more likely to smoke, anesthesiologists who inhale trace amounts of secondhand opiates are more likely to crave drugs.
"We're thinking that anesthesiologists' intermittent exposure to second-hand opiates presents an alternative hypothesis that's worth testing," says Mark Gold, MD, a distinguished professor with the University of Florida's McKnight Brain Institute and the chief of addiction medicine at UF College of Medicine.
Dr. Gold and colleagues used highly sensitive detection equipment to collect and analyze multiple operating room air samples. They found that anesthetic drugs were present in air throughout the operating room, with the highest concentrations over the patient's mouth. Dr. Gold presented the findings last month at the Society for Neuroscience annual meeting in San Diego.
"Most people thought that in the evolution of anesthetic practice from inhaled gases - nitrous oxide and ether, and so forth - to drugs that are administered intravenously, there wouldn't be secondhand exposure," says Dr. Gold.
"[Now we see] that those narcotics, which may be 1,000 times more potent than heroin, get into the air, may reach their brain, may change their brain and make it more likely that they'll crave and want drugs, [become] depressed and may be more likely that they'll have a host of behavioral problems," says Dr. Gold.
Among physician drug-abusers in Florida, anesthesiologists are over-represented by some 500 percent. While only 5.6 percent of licensed physicians in Florida are anesthesiologists, they represent more than 25 percent of the state's "impaired physicians," says Dr. Gold.
"Trace levels of fentanyl and propofol cogeners may well be in the air, but this fails to explain why the majority of anesthesiologists do not become addicted," says California anesthesiologist Barry Friedberg, MD, when asked to comment on the study. "The combination of an addiction-prone personality in the setting of the high levels of stress associated with the care of critically ill patients requiring emergency surgery is a more probable explanation for the minority of anesthesiologists who become addicted."
Dr. Gold says the unintentional exposure might one day be determined an occupational hazard for anesthesia providers. But first he is calling for further studies and blood sampling to test his OR-as-occupational-hazard theory. As he asks, "Are anesthesiologists the canary in the mineshaft?"
- Dan O'Connor
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Post-op Phone Calls
Patient's Death Two Days After Surgery Puts Focus on Follow-up Procedures
Does your staff make every effort to telephone every patient after surgery? As one hospital recently found out, failing to contact patients post-operatively could spell trouble for your facility.
Two days after he underwent gall bladder surgery at Rhode Island Hospital in Providence, Peter Sepe, 80, died July 17 due to complications, according to published reports. The hospital's nursing staff tried to reach Mr. Sepe via telephone following his procedure, but failed to do so, says hospital spokeswoman Nicole Gustin.
The Rhode Island Department of Health surveyor who examined a sample of nine outpatient cases discovered that the hospital failed to contact five of them post-op, says Bob Marshall, MD, the assistant director of the health department. The reasons hospital staff cited for failing to speak to patients included disconnected phones and answering machines, according to the health department report.
In the report, the health department proposes several changes to the hospital's policy for post-ambulatory surgery phone calls:
Based on the health department's recommendations, the hospital is now documenting post-op phone calls in patients' charts and considering the following changes, says Ms. Gustin:
Ms. Gustin also says the hospital is collecting data for quality improvement and that after one month's worth of staff re-education on post-op contact policies, staff reached 94 percent of the hospital's patients by phone within 24 hours of discharge.
Follow-up phone calls after outpatient surgery aren't required by JCAHO standards, which leave room for facilities to define what data and information they gather during assessment and reassessment, as well as timeframes for reassessment based on patient needs and services provided, according to 2004 accreditation manuals for hospitals and ambulatory care facilities. However, JCAHO requires you to be able to justify the effectiveness of the means you choose.
Facilities that choose post-op phone calls as their follow-up procedure must consider how they'll accomplish reassessment for patients they need to contact on weekends or at other times when staffing is an issue, according to the JCAHO manuals.
There is no evidence linking the death of Mr. Sepe to Rhode Island Hospital's inability to reach him by phone, says Dr. Marshall. Still, it's best to ensure your staff is adequately equipped to reach patients after surgery. "The post-op call is important to see if problems occurred with a surgery," says Dr. Marshall. "There's lots of good reasons to follow up with patients, and this case is a reminder of that."
- Daniel Cook
Inside The Numbers
Cosmetic Surgery
SOURCE: American Society of Plastic Surgeons 2004 Report of the 2003 Procedural Statistics
For the Record
The "2004 Manager's Guide to Surgical Supplies" contained the following errors:
The Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States advised Harloff on the correct equipment and drugs to include in its Malignant Hyperthermia Cart, but it didn't help design the product and is not promoting one cart over others. ("Product News," October 2004).
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