Book Excerpt: Review all charts to maintain a compliant CDI program

CDI Blog - Volume 10, Issue 41

If at all possible, CDI programs should review all hospitalizations in a facility for documentation improvement opportunities. And all charts truly means every chart, including every insurance product, regardless of reimbursement mechanism (i.e., by MS-DRG or per diem), including the no-insurance and charity cases. The reason for this directive is multifaceted. First, reimbursement certainly is not the only purpose of a CDI program’s efforts. Even if a particular payer reimburses on a per-diem (per-day) basis or by a different DRG system (i.e., APR-DRGs), meaning there may not be any reimbursement benefits to improved documentation, CDI efforts still offer significant gains.

In particular, every payer employs some form of risk adjustment methodology to compare the outcomes of care between different providers. In other words, a facility’s providers look better to an insurer if they achieve the same results as a competing facility’s providers but do so caring for sicker patients.

Second, the need for a particular patient’s hospitalization must be justifiable. It doesn’t matter how many high-dollar diagnoses a CDI professional identified in the medical record if the payer – be it Medicare or private insurer – denies the claim. The sicker the patient is – both in fact and on paper – the harder it is for an auditor or a payer to justify that the patient should never have been admitted at all or that the patient should have been cared for in observation as opposed to being admitted as an inpatient.

If a CDI program is understaffed and simply does not have the resources to review all charts, program goals should evolve such that more than just the Medicare cases are reviewed. In other words, a CDI program should not be reviewing only Medicare patients.

If a CDI program reviews only Medicare cases, the government and the Office of Inspector General (OIG) believe that hospitals preferentially targets Uncle Sam’s coffers. Don’t increase your facility attractiveness to those who are looking for additional targets. By reviewing all payers, facilities set the precedent that increased reimbursement from CMS is not the only goal of a CDI program.

Editor’s note: This excerpt was taken from the CDI Field Guide to Denial Prevention and Audit Defenseby Trey La Charité, MD, FACP, SFHM, CCDS.