- Joined
- May 30, 2005
- Messages
- 22,852
- Reaction score
- 14,394
Negotiated with Centeno about a lower percentage franchise fee.drusso has gleaned this based off of his years of negotiating the best possible $/RVU contract with his local hospital.
Negotiated with Centeno about a lower percentage franchise fee.drusso has gleaned this based off of his years of negotiating the best possible $/RVU contract with his local hospital.
How many patients per day and procedures per week?Suburban. My numbers are boosted because I have an NP and I get credit for all their wrvus. Plus it’s a mature full practice with a two month wait so busy
But you are correct. I see a lot of patients. In the wrvu system it’s all about volume not necessarily complex procedures
35-40 encounters 3 days a week of which 10-12 are fluro guided spine procedures. Another 1/2 day of office when I see about 20.How many patients per day and procedures per week?
drusso has gleaned this based off of his years of negotiating the best possible $/RVU contract with his local hospital.
very similar practice set up to mine. I don't get any rvu credit generated by my NP tho other than set supervision credit each year. How much RVU credit do you get from midlevel? maybe percentage?35-40 encounters 3 days a week of which 10-12 are fluro guided spine procedures. Another 1/2 day of office when I see about 20.
Probably 15% overall. I do put in all the procedures and send all the meds so really they act as a super scribevery similar practice set up to mine. I don't get any rvu credit generated by my NP tho other than set supervision credit each year. How much RVU credit do you get from midlevel? maybe percentage?
How are you cranking out that many patients in a day. Teach me your ways35-40 encounters 3 days a week of which 10-12 are fluro guided spine procedures. Another 1/2 day of office when I see about 20.
Agreed, need to learn this.How are you cranking out that many patients in a day. Teach me your ways
It’s no magic. Lots of staff who I treat well. My nurses do most of the documentation. I mainly do the PE and A/P. Procedure wise I just try to be efficient. Good staff to handle all phone calls etc. you personally have to be the motor though. My partner sees maybe half of my volume in the same time
Agreed, need to learn this.
I find one big thing that takes time is thoroughly reading through the MRI and notifying patients of the incidental findings which I am not sure why radiologists cant just put in one line in their report.
I have 15 minute slots. With double booking all the time as well. During procedure times I also have follow up slots booked as well. Start @8 out the door by 430 most days. Patients get roomed by ma for vitals. Nurse does hpi/ros/meds. I preview scans then eval patient make plan and the document the note after the patient is seen. I don’t like charting in the room. I put in all orders etc. templates in a good emr makes all this easy.How long are your clinic visits? Start/stop times in the morning and afternoon? Do you chart as you go or catch up at the end of the day? Do you pre-chart ahead of time? Do you put in orders, or tell your staff to order?
I think having a nurse document history and ROS would be a game changer. Unfortunately here they and the admin say it’s beyond their scope and won’t let us use them. I spend so much damn time documenting. I’d get a scribe but I’m against paying for one on just principleI have 15 minute slots. With double booking all the time as well. During procedure times I also have follow up slots booked as well. Start @8 out the door by 430 most days. Patients get roomed by ma for vitals. Nurse does hpi/ros/meds. I preview scans then eval patient make plan and the document the note after the patient is seen. I don’t like charting in the room. I put in all orders etc. templates in a good emr makes all this easy.
I don’t call patients. They follow up for imaging, MBB fu, etc. lots of easy quick visits out there.
It isnt a component of the note thats required to be considered complete for billing? Have those people who say 10-14 point ROS been BSing us all along?Ros doesn’t have to be done.
Used to be but E&M rules changedIt isnt a component of the note thats required to be considered complete for billing? Have those people who say 10-14 point ROS been BSing us all along?
35-40 encounters 3 days a week of which 10-12 are fluro guided spine procedures. Another 1/2 day of office when I see about 20.
What percentage are opioid refills? Average MME? In my saturated part of the country it seems nearly impossible to reach 10k+ RVU without at least 35-40% med management. Must have a really nice referral network without much competition, too.For me the cap is irrelevant. I’m at about 12000 wrvu annual using the old numbers. This will go to approximately 14000(the cap) this year with the new values supposedly. I’m going to
Drop another 1/2 day a week so down to 3 1/2 days. Good income to work ratio.
That's not right at all. I do minimal opioids (50 pts., mostly low dose q90 day visits handled by PA), bread and butter procedures, work 4 days a week, am relatively slow and chatty in the office, but do q15minute procedures 2-3 half days a week 30-35/week. This is right about 10k RVUs.What percentage are opioid refills? Average MME? In my saturated part of the country it seems nearly impossible to reach 10k+ RVU without at least 35-40% med management. Must have a really nice referral network without much competition, too.
Are you in a saturated market? Your last point is on point. I'd say the majority of mine are junk PCP types. Fortunately I'm fairly burnout proof coming from the hellscape that is emergency medicine.That's not right at all. I do minimal opioids (50 pts., mostly low dose q90 day visits handled by PA), bread and butter procedures, work 4 days a week, am relatively slow and chatty in the office, but do q15minute procedures 2-3 half days a week 30-35/week. This is right about 10k RVUs.
Getting good referrals and training your referral sources is key. My "hit" rate for procedures/referral is really high. It sure helps when half come from neurosurgery/ortho. Accepting a ton of junk from PCPs is a receipe for burnout.
I'd say I'm in a relatively underserved market. I'm sure that helps a ton. I appreciate that makes a big difference, as well as the "need" to take on opioid patients to get referrals is probably a necessary evil, particularly in highly saturated markets.Are you in a saturated market? Your last point is on point. I'd say the majority of mine are junk PCP types. Fortunately I'm fairly burnout proof coming from the hellscape that is emergency medicine.