Abstract

Background: The law mandates careful record-keeping in the emergency department, and clinical imperatives also support the value of complete and legible reports. A common assumption is that extensive documentation increases the yield of relative value units (RVUs) and higher levels of care, thereby maximizing reimbursement. However, overdocumentation presents certain risks, possibly impacts physician efficiency, and does not ensure that records are more readable and clinically useful. We examined the effect of increased documentation on actual reimbursement.Methods: We conducted a 12-month productivity analysis of patients per hour (pt/h), RVUs per hour (RVU/h), amounts of monies billed, and amounts of monies collected for all full-time supervising physicians in a university emergency medicine training program.Results: RVU/h vs pt/h yielded a positive linear relationship (R2=0.7571) and a strong correlation coefficient of 0.87. RVU/h vs revenue collection (amount actually paid) yielded a moderately positive linear relationship (R2=0.1752), with a correlation coefficient of 0.42. The relationship between pt/h and collections was weak (R2=0.0815), with a correlation coefficient of 0.29. A quartile comparison showed an inflection point, suggesting that after the third quartile, RVU/h did not appear to help generate significantly higher collections.Conclusion: The data, while not definitive, suggest that overly extensive documentation may increase RVU totals but, after a point, does not reliably increase revenue generation.

Highlights

  • Every emergency patient encounter requires documentation, and charting is expected to be thorough and accurate

  • Some charting is often done after the scheduled end of shift, this study demonstrated that charting takes more clinical time than direct patient care

  • Among the 39 physicians, pt/h ranged from a low of 1.3 to a high of 3.97

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Summary

Introduction

Every emergency patient encounter requires documentation, and charting is expected to be thorough and accurate. Aside from being a legal document, the emergency department (ED) medical record has clinical and financial functions. The medical record communicates vital information to providers—whether the inpatient team, an office-based physician, or the emergency medicine physician at successive visits. A common assumption is that extensive documentation increases the yield of relative value units (RVUs) and higher levels of care, thereby maximizing reimbursement. Results: RVU/h vs pt/h yielded a positive linear relationship (R2=0.7571) and a strong correlation coefficient of 0.87. RVU/h vs revenue collection (amount paid) yielded a moderately positive linear relationship (R2=0.1752), with a correlation coefficient of 0.42. Conclusion: The data, while not definitive, suggest that overly extensive documentation may increase RVU totals but, after a point, does not reliably increase revenue generation

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