What are the Costs and Benefits of Medicare Audits?

For most readers the results of this analysis will be amazing but true.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Longtime RACmonitor contributor and R1 Physician Advisory Services Vice President Dr. Ronald Hirsch recently pointed site Publisher Chuck Buck in the direction of something that, frankly, wowed him: a PhD thesis from a young Columbia University student on the topic of the costs of Medicare audits. The following article highlights some of her ideas.

Since 2011, hospitals around the country have been facing audits by the Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs). The onslaught of short-stay audits led to the development of the two-midnight rule by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), to clarify which patients are appropriate for inpatient admission and which should be treated as inpatients. While CMS has repeatedly stated that this is a complex medical decision to be made by the physician, they have allowed auditors to second-guess things and deny payment for inpatient admissions when the auditors do not agree.

While it is clear that hospitals have expended resources to ensure that patients are placed in the right status, the glaring question is: to what extent should the government monitor for wasteful expenditure through programs like RACs? Monitoring can save government programs money, but it can also be costly to implement and comply with, and in the context of healthcare spending, this could hurt patients’ health as well. In her recent economics PhD thesis, Maggie Shi, a student at Columbia University, studied this in the context of the RAC program. Combining novel administrative data with hospital claims, cost data, and IT adoption data, Shi isolated variation in monitoring across hospitals and across patients to understand its effect on hospital behavior and patient outcomes.

The RAC program was contracted to four firms operating in four separate regions, Shi noted. She analyzed audit intensity and found that it varied across these firms, as illustrated in the sharp contrasts in audit rates across the region borders (demarcated in red in Fig. 1).

Shi compared hospitals on the “low-audit” side of the border to their neighbors on the “high-audit” side, before and after the major expansion in auditing in 2011. Increased auditing deters hospital admissions – in particular, it deters short stays, which Medicare considers more likely to be medically unnecessary. The vast majority of savings comes from deterring future admissions, rather than reclaiming payments on prior ones. But these savings also come at a cost: increased auditing causes hospitals to incur higher administration costs, and to install IT specifically to address issues raised by audits.

Shi wondered if the savings from deterred admissions may also harm patient health, if these admissions were actually necessary. She studied this by using variation in audit likelihood across patients due to the two-midnight rule, which indicated that patients whose entire stay in the hospital crossed two midnights could not be audited by RACs for medical necessity. Because this rule counts midnights, audit likelihood increased discontinuously for patients who stepped foot in the hospital immediately after midnight, since they had just “missed” their first midnight. Comparing patients who arrived at a hospital’s emergency department before and after midnight, she found that once the two-midnight rule came into effect, hospitals were less likely to admit just-after-midnight patients. However, these patients were no more likely to revisit the hospital within 30 days (see Fig. 2). The null effect on revisits, even among patients facing a 25-percent reduction in admission likelihood, suggests that the admissions deterred by monitoring are unnecessary.

If there is no apparent effect on patient care, is there an effect on cost? Shi estimates that an audit rate increase of 1 percent (relative to a mean of 2.2 percent) for a hospital’s inpatient stays results in $2.08 million in government savings, $87,000 in government monitoring costs, and $451,000 in hospital costs (see Fig. 3).

When asked to comment on these findings, Dr. Ronald Hirsch, a RACmonitor editorial board member, stated that “the mathematical modeling used by Shi in this study are beyond the comprehension of most, but her conclusions are sound. Audits save money for Medicare, not only by recouping improper payments, but also by deterring admissions and care that may lead to a claim that has a higher potential of being audited. In other words, hospitals are spending a great deal of money to help save the Trust Fund, with no benefit to themselves.”

Hirsch also pointed to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Internal Medicine showing that the CMS Oncology Care Model program, designed to improve outcomes and lower the cost of caring for patients with cancer, led to a reduction in Medicare spending – but the “savings” accrued by the participants did not cover the costs of administering the program, and there was no net improvement in quality or patient experience. “Once again, providers are literally paying the cost of protecting the Trust Fund,” Hirsch said.

Maggie Shi will be a special guest during the Dec. 6 live edition of Monitor Mondays at 10 Eastern. Shi will discuss her thesis; be sure to tune in.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Chuck Buck

Chuck Buck is the publisher of RACmonitor and is the program host and executive producer of Monitor Monday.

Related Stories

SNFs Under Scrutiny

SNFs Under Scrutiny

Some of you may have noticed that I am not always very nice to some insurance companies. And deservedly so. But I also point out

Read More

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

Enhancing Outcomes with CDI-Coding-Quality Collaboration in Acute Care Hospitals

Enhancing Outcomes with CDI-Coding-Quality Collaboration in Acute Care Hospitals

Join Angela Comfort, DBA, MBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, as she presents effective strategies to strengthen collaboration between CDI, coding, and quality departments in acute care hospitals. Angela will also share guidance on implementing cross-departmental meetings, using shared KPIs, and engaging leadership to foster a culture of collaboration. Attendees will gain actionable tools to optimize documentation accuracy, elevate quality metrics, and drive a unified approach to healthcare goals, ultimately enhancing both patient outcomes and organizational performance.

November 21, 2024
Comprehensive Inpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: From Foundations to Advanced Strategies

Comprehensive Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: From Foundations to Advanced Strategies

Optimize your outpatient clinical documentation and gain comprehensive knowledge from foundational practices to advanced technologies, ensuring improved patient care and organizational and financial success. This webcast bundle provides a holistic approach to outpatient CDI, empowering you to implement best practices from the ground up and leverage advanced strategies for superior results. You will gain actionable insights to improve documentation quality, patient care, compliance, and financial outcomes.

September 5, 2024
Advanced Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: Mastering Complex Narratives and Compliance

Advanced Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: Mastering Complex Narratives and Compliance

Enhancing outpatient clinical documentation is crucial for maintaining accuracy, compliance, and proper reimbursement in today’s complex healthcare environment. This webcast, presented by industry expert Angela Comfort, DBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, will provide you with actionable strategies to tackle complex challenges in outpatient documentation. You’ll learn how to craft detailed clinical narratives, utilize advanced EHR features, and implement accurate risk adjustment and HCC coding. The session also covers essential regulatory updates to keep your documentation practices compliant. Join us to gain the tools you need to improve documentation quality, support better patient care, and ensure financial integrity.

September 12, 2024

Foundations of Outpatient Clinical Documentation Integrity: Best Practices for Accurate Coding and Compliance

This webcast, presented by Angela Comfort, DBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, a recognized expert with over 30 years of experience, offers essential strategies to improve outpatient clinical documentation integrity. You will learn how to enhance the accuracy and completeness of patient records by adopting best practices in coding and incorporating Social Determinants of Health (SDOH). The session also highlights the role of technology, such as EHRs and CDI software, in improving documentation quality. By attending, you will gain practical insights into ensuring precise and compliant documentation, supporting patient care, and optimizing reimbursement. This webcast is crucial for those looking to address documentation gaps and elevate their coding practices.

September 5, 2024

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

Patient Notifications and Rights: What You Need to Know

Patient Notifications and Rights: What You Need to Know

Dr. Ronald Hirsch provides critical details on the new Medicare Appeal Process for Status Changes for patients whose status changes during their hospital stay. He also delves into other scenarios of hospital patients receiving custodial care or medically unnecessary services where patient notifications may be needed along with the processes necessary to ensure compliance with state and federal guidance.

December 5, 2024
Navigating the No Surprises Act & Price Transparency: Essential Insights for Compliance

Navigating the No Surprises Act & Price Transparency: Essential Insights for Compliance

Healthcare organizations face complex regulatory requirements under the No Surprises Act and Price Transparency rules. These policies mandate extensive fee disclosures across settings, and confusion is widespread—many hospitals remain unaware they must post every contracted rate. Non-compliance could lead to costly penalties, financial loss, and legal risks.  Join David M. Glaser Esq. as he shows you how to navigate these regulations effectively.

November 19, 2024
Post Operative Pain Blocks: Guidelines, Documentation, and Billing to Protect Your Facility

Post Operative Pain Blocks: Guidelines, Documentation, and Billing to Protect Your Facility

Protect your facility from unwanted audits! Join Becky Jacobsen, BSN, RN, MBS, CCS-P, CPC, CPEDC, CBCS, CEMC, and take a deep dive into both the CMS and AMA guidelines for reporting post operative pain blocks. You’ll learn how to determine if the nerve block is separately codable with real life examples for better understanding. Becky will also cover how to evaluate whether documentation supports medical necessity, offer recommendations for stronger documentation practices, and provide guidance on educating providers about documentation requirements. She’ll include a discussion of appropriate modifier and diagnosis coding assignment so that you can be confident that your billing of post operative pain blocks is fully supported and compliant.

October 24, 2024
The OIG Update: Targets and Tools to Stay in Compliance

The OIG Update: Targets and Tools to Stay in Compliance

During this RACmonitor webcast Dr. Ronald Hirsch spotlights the areas of the OIG’s Work Plan and the findings of their most recent audits that impact utilization review, case management, and audit staff. He also provides his common-sense interpretation of the prevailing regulations related to those target issues. You’ll walk away better equipped with strategies to put in place immediately to reduce your risk of paybacks, increased scrutiny, and criminal penalties.

September 19, 2024

Trending News

Happy National Doctor’s Day! Learn how to get a complimentary webcast on ‘Decoding Social Admissions’ as a token of our heartfelt appreciation! Click here to learn more →

👻Spooky Sale is Back!👻 Get 31% off all three Medlearn brands, using code SPOOKY24.