Abstract

BackgroundIn July 2014, the Institute of Medicine released a review of the governance of Graduate Medical Education (GME), concluding that changes to GME financing were needed to reward desired performance and to reshape the workforce to meet the nation’s needs. In light of the rapid emergence of alternative payment systems, we evaluated the financial value of resident participation in operative surgical care. MethodsThe Department of Surgery provided Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for procedures performed by the general surgical service at our institution for the 2011 academic year. For each code, the charge and total instances were provided. CPTs allowing an assistant fee were identified using the Searchable Medicare Physician Fee Schedule. This approach enabled calculation of the potential resident contribution to GME funding.ResultsA total of 515 unique CPTs were potentially billable for a total of 6,578 procedures, of which 2,552 (39%) were reimbursable. These CPTs would have generated $1,882,854 in assistant charges. The top 50 most frequent CPTs resulted in 4,247 procedures. Within the top 50, 1362 procedures (32% of the top 50, 21% of the total) were reimbursable. Of the total assistant charges, $963,227 (51%) occurred in the top 50 most frequent CPTs.ConclusionsCredit for resident participation in operative care as co-surgeon would average $67,244 per resident, compared to our current funding of $142,635 per resident. This type of alternative funding could provide 47% of current educational support. The skew in distribution of procedures also suggests that such a system could provide guidance to a more balanced operative experience. Such performance-based credentialing could be used to ensure appropriate housestaff for a given case; these reimbursements could also be adjusted based on quality metrics to provide for transformational change in patient outcomes.

Highlights

  • The Department of Surgery provided Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for procedures performed by the general surgical service at our institution for the 2011 academic year

  • A total of 515 unique CPTs were potentially billable for a total of 6,578 procedures, of which 2,552 (39%) were reimbursable

  • The top 50 most frequent CPTs resulted in 4,247 procedures

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Summary

Introduction

Graduate Medical Education (GME) and its method of funding have changed in many ways over the past century. It became evident that advanced training was important for the development of clinical expertise and physicians began entering such programs in greater numbers. The cost of this additional training to society and the government was marginal because these physicians were only provided room and board, which was typically covered by the hospital endorsing the program. Such a system was aligned with both parties’ interests because it provided a source of cheap, skilled labor for the hospital while allowing for supervised clinical experience for the trainees. In light of the rapid emergence of alternative payment systems, we evaluated the financial value of resident participation in operative surgical care

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