sorry for the late reply. totally forgot about this thread until today. . . 😳
first off, templates are key. if you can get 214's, get them. as far as i know we're not looked at to have the typical bell curve for visits like the civilian folks. i have dragonspeak templates for acutes that get me 214's on stuff i always do anyway. if you need to, talk to your coders and get the cheat sheet so you know how many bullets in how many systems, how many exam areas you must cover, etc for the different visit types.
add procedures like cerumen removal, wart freezing, developmental screens, etc.
use the ">50% of time spent" box only after you state "spent greater than X minutes talking about x, y, z." in your comment section.
learn about the -25 modifier for physicals that have those "by the way" complaints. physical + allergies or physical + URI = more RVU's.
as far as reporting hours, definitely don't do "crazy 8's". as much as a pain in the @ss as it is, you need to calculate each day by itself. you only want to claim clinic time for the time you saw patients (not for charting). so, if you had 15 patients, all 20 minute appts, you report 5 hours for your clinic, and 3 hours of admin time. only had 6 patients? report 2 hours. this works, and is how they want it, because it accurately reflects you time spent with patient care. they don't care about the "admin time" it takes to document your visits. nor do they care about T-cons (which is mind boggling to me since they take up so much time).
RVU's are not the end-all be-all for us, but they definitely are a leverage tool when we go to our commander or DCCS and ask for things. provider allocation is looked at (along with enrollment) and clinics are compard to each other when it comes to extra budget that may be available. no, it's not a slam dunk, but it certainly helps if youy are the most productive clinic or provider when you want equipment, staffing, or that CME trip.
--your friendly neighborhood RVU factory caveman