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"Hypothetical" question for the community that definitely isn't based on reality at all. Not at all.
So my place eased us out of flat rate payment and into RVU payment through multiple changes every few months over the last few years. What this lead to is the expected RVU system for our work, but also a system where we get full RVU credit for any midlevel chart that we sign as a level III attestation (that we full saw the patient, did our own independent evaluation, and a statement that we did more direct patient care than the midlevel did). We've been told to reserve this level of attestation just for admits, transfers, or patients we truly take over control of - which probably makes up around 15% (20% max) of our midlevels charts, since they self-select their patients to skew towards the dischargeable. We pool the RVUs from all of the other charts and divide them out evenly.
Anyway, in this situation every member of the group except 3 ends up with nearly identical amounts of level III attestations. The three exceptions are (1) two people who are adamantly against having to sign midlevel charts and only do so when they truly get actively involved in a case and they are sacrificing about $5-10 an hour because of it and (2) a single person who signs EVERY mid level chart with a canned statement that is as vague as can be but meets the criteria of technically saying he saw the patient, is choosing not to write any specifics because he agrees with everything the midlevel found on physical exam and history, and that he was more involved than they were in the patient care. He is (hypothetically) making $35-40 more per hour than everyone else (and about $50/hr more than the dudes not playing along at all) for it.
And lets say we hypothetically brought it up to him many times and he just plays dumb and says that he doesn't know why the billers feel thats a level III attestation and that he should 'get around to' changing that some time soon. And some people even went to the director who said "eh. not my job to tell him what to do" and so they went to the regional director who DID investigate and said that, as far as anyone from the company can tell, everything he is writing is true, he is seeing all his patients, and they commend him for going above and beyond by seeing 350-400 midlevel patients each month while everyone else can't prioritize the patients enough to see much more than 100ish per month. and they further commend him for doing it for the last 13 years so reliably (he has used this same attestation going back a loooong time) while the company has always struggled to get anyone else so motivated.
My question is: is my whole group just filled with stuck up do-gooders who don't realize everyone is okay with the grift? Like... should we all just get with the program and attest to the max? Also, for those who say 'oh he's taking such a legal risk.' IS HE? IS HE REALLY? I work in one of the most litigation happy locations in the US and I know two things 1) his only lawsuit ever was from a patient he saw himself 2) he's been doing this for 13 years and CMS hasn't come for him once or sent him any "practice deviance" letters in the mail and 3) if a patient my midlevel saw wants to sue it doesnt matter if my attestation says "this midlevel is nuts, told me nothing about this patient, and is practicing like a drunk mongoose with access to a medicine cabinet, I cannot endorse anything they just did" they're still going to name me in the suit and go after the person with the biggest malpractice coverage.
Obviously all hypothetically. But uh.... what should I hypothetically take from this?
So my place eased us out of flat rate payment and into RVU payment through multiple changes every few months over the last few years. What this lead to is the expected RVU system for our work, but also a system where we get full RVU credit for any midlevel chart that we sign as a level III attestation (that we full saw the patient, did our own independent evaluation, and a statement that we did more direct patient care than the midlevel did). We've been told to reserve this level of attestation just for admits, transfers, or patients we truly take over control of - which probably makes up around 15% (20% max) of our midlevels charts, since they self-select their patients to skew towards the dischargeable. We pool the RVUs from all of the other charts and divide them out evenly.
Anyway, in this situation every member of the group except 3 ends up with nearly identical amounts of level III attestations. The three exceptions are (1) two people who are adamantly against having to sign midlevel charts and only do so when they truly get actively involved in a case and they are sacrificing about $5-10 an hour because of it and (2) a single person who signs EVERY mid level chart with a canned statement that is as vague as can be but meets the criteria of technically saying he saw the patient, is choosing not to write any specifics because he agrees with everything the midlevel found on physical exam and history, and that he was more involved than they were in the patient care. He is (hypothetically) making $35-40 more per hour than everyone else (and about $50/hr more than the dudes not playing along at all) for it.
And lets say we hypothetically brought it up to him many times and he just plays dumb and says that he doesn't know why the billers feel thats a level III attestation and that he should 'get around to' changing that some time soon. And some people even went to the director who said "eh. not my job to tell him what to do" and so they went to the regional director who DID investigate and said that, as far as anyone from the company can tell, everything he is writing is true, he is seeing all his patients, and they commend him for going above and beyond by seeing 350-400 midlevel patients each month while everyone else can't prioritize the patients enough to see much more than 100ish per month. and they further commend him for doing it for the last 13 years so reliably (he has used this same attestation going back a loooong time) while the company has always struggled to get anyone else so motivated.
My question is: is my whole group just filled with stuck up do-gooders who don't realize everyone is okay with the grift? Like... should we all just get with the program and attest to the max? Also, for those who say 'oh he's taking such a legal risk.' IS HE? IS HE REALLY? I work in one of the most litigation happy locations in the US and I know two things 1) his only lawsuit ever was from a patient he saw himself 2) he's been doing this for 13 years and CMS hasn't come for him once or sent him any "practice deviance" letters in the mail and 3) if a patient my midlevel saw wants to sue it doesnt matter if my attestation says "this midlevel is nuts, told me nothing about this patient, and is practicing like a drunk mongoose with access to a medicine cabinet, I cannot endorse anything they just did" they're still going to name me in the suit and go after the person with the biggest malpractice coverage.
Obviously all hypothetically. But uh.... what should I hypothetically take from this?
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