Q&A: Improving documentation of medical necessity

CDI Blog - Volume 11, Issue 210


For more information, see the Hospital
Guide to Contemporary Utilization
Review, Second Edition

Q: How can we help our physicians improve their documentation of medical necessity?

A: Experts advise that the medical necessity documentation to justify acute care should demonstrate complex medical decision-making and should begin with the patient’s chief complaint, acuity of the patient’s condition, any comorbidities, why the nature of the patient’s condition warrants a hospital level of care, and the potential risks if the patient is not admitted. These four points—and their mnemonic, HOPE—may be helpful to the physician-coaching process.

  1.  History & physical or history of present illness if in emergency department and patient throughput is a priority
  2. Orders for a treatment plan with services and procedures that can only be safely provided at a hospital level of care
  3. Potential risk if patient is not treated in the hospital
  4. Expectation of 2-midnight stay in the hospital via a “because clause”

Editor’s note: This article originally appeared in Revenue Cycle Advisor. For more information, see the Hospital Guide to Contemporary Utilization Review, Second Edition.

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