the impact of health care reform on physician liability exposure ericka l. adler, esq. kamensky...
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The Impact of Health Care Reform on Physician Liability Exposure
Ericka L. Adler, Esq. Kamensky Rubinstein Hochman & Delott, LLP7250 N. Cicero Avenue, Suite 200Lincolnwood, Illinois 60712(847) [email protected]
April 24, 2014Veronica BrattstromSenior Risk Management ConsultantPSICProfsolutions.com
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The Goal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) on Health Care Delivery Contribute to a reduction in the rate of medical inflation
Intended to improve patient care while containing costs
Coordination of health care services
Apply a team approach to disciplinary care
Conversion of paper record to electronic health records
Development of ACO style health care delivery models
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Impact of ACA on Medical Professional Liability Exposure Potential conflicts between delivering quality care and reducing
costs
Liability due to increased use of nurse practitioners
Heightened patient expectations
Potential new standards of care
New types of information that can be used against a health care provider in court
Conflict between cost containment and providing highest standards of medical care
Privacy and data security issues
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What are some of the negative results of the ACA?
Failure to comply could result in severe sanctions
Increased funding for health care fraud and abuse enforcement
Expansion of civil monetary penalties
Lower triggers for application of False Claims Act
No need to prove actual knowledge of Anti-Kickback Statute nor specific intent
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What are some of the negative results of the ACA?
CMS can suspend provider pending investigation of “credible allegation of fraud”
Increased scrutiny of Medicare enrollment
Overpayment must be refunded within 60 days or face False Claims Act Liability
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How can Physicians deal with the liability implications of the ACA?
COMPLIANCE
Physicians and practices must dedicate staff time and focus on issues
Proper credentialing, snapshot audits, risk self-assessments
PRACTICES MUST BE PROSPECTIVELY COMPLIANT BEFORE AN INVESTIGATION OR ACTION COMMENCES
Practices must be assured that there’s no question billing is compliant
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Issue: Refusal of Care Patient with infected toe told to go to hospital
for admission and IV antibiotic treatment;
Patient told scope needed for potential stomach cancer based on testing;
What if patient does not follow through?
Common issues: high deductible, fear, religion, do not understand importance/believe doctor
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Refusal of Treatment
Liability Issue:
Patients will claim they were not informed about how potentially detrimental it would be to refuse treatment/not follow up with test
Patients do not fully understand risk
Patients did not appreciate time frame for having test or treatment
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Preventive Measures: Refusal of Treatments Potential risks of declining recommended course of
treatment should routinely be discussed with patients, along with the risks and potential complications of the procedure/treatment itself
Patient should be given opportunity to raise any questions or concerns about proceeding or not proceeding
If patient decides to refuse the treatment, physician should not assume the patient understands consequences of refusal. Physician should verbally confirm the patient understands and has no questions
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Preventive Measures:Refusal of treatment1. Try to understand patient reasons and address
2. If cost is issue: provide other sources of procedure or testing and document it
3. Complete, detailed documentation is best. At minimum, notation “Full RBAQ,” indicating a complete discussion of Risks, Benefits, and Alternatives with the patient and the answering of all Questions may be sufficient for a defense.
4. Follow–up with patient to see if test done.
5. Free Services?
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Follow Up Guidelines Log recommendation into an electronic or paper tracking or reminder
system.
Schedule follow-up appointment and discuss with the patient the importance of keeping the follow-up appointment.
If a patient does not appear for a scheduled appointment, the fact should be noted in the chart. Attempts should be made to contact the patient and reschedule the appointment, and those attempts should be documented.
If referring for test / procedure / visit with another healthcare professional, the referral should be tracked in a tracking or reminder system. It should also be noted in the patient’s records whether the patient visited with the healthcare provider to whom the referral was made. If the consulting doctor provided a report, its receipt should be noted, and a system should be in place that ensures the report has been reviewed by a physician prior to being filed in the patient’s chart. All these components of a consultation or referral should be addressed by the practice’s tracking system.
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Follow Up Guidelines
If a healthcare provider has a patient referred to him or her by another healthcare provider, the physician/consultant has an obligation to notify the referring healthcare provider once the patient has been seen and send a consultation report that includes the consultant’s findings and recommendations.
When contacting patients via a practice reminder or tracking system, HIPAA regulations must be followed.
How many follow up calls or reminders needed?
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PSICRisk Management Tips
Be Crystal Clear
Here’s what we are going to do for you
Use discharge handouts
Consider having patients sign them
Consider inviting family into room (if not already there)
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PSICWhat to Document
Document the reasons why you are ordering or NOT ordering a test/referral
DOCUMENT why it’s important to follow the recommendations
DOCUMENT the discussion
Document the patient’s understanding of the consequences of NOT following your recommendations
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Sample Scenario: Co-Pay/Deductible Patient cannot/will not pay co-pay or deductible Determine reason why (too much money?) Offer payment plan where possible If simply unwilling (i.e. ”forgot” wallet), offer to
reschedule for another date or time Uncooperative patients can be discharged
using proper approach Treat for emergencies always No abandonment issues/referrals to other
resources
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Sample Scenario:Not Filling Prescriptions Non-adherence: sicker, more complications, higher mortality rates =
$170 billion annually in U.S.
ACA has caused medications previously covered to no longer be covered or cost more. Generics not always available.
20% of first-time patient prescription not filled
Less likely to fill prescription by non-primary care specialists
Affordability/Ease of filling RX are key
Reduce liability: Electronic prescribing Follow-up with patient Lower cost alternatives/generics Ask before they leave office if they understand Check community research (cancer)
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Liability for Participation in ACOs New healthcare delivery models may require participants to function in
unfamiliar roles or adapt to new processes. In the long run, coordinated care is likely to benefit patients, but shorter term realigning of resources and implementing new processes and procedures may increase the likelihood of a medical error.
ACO-type models may increase professional liability risk by raising patient expectations. An ACO that falls short in delivering fully coordinated care may be more likely to become a target for a lawsuit.
ACOs may result in standards of care that exceed prevailing standards. This could occur broadly, with regional or national standards of care defined by practice specialty, or it could be specific to an organization.
For example, CMS requires ACOs to define processes to promote evidence-based medicine, which could result in creating, and documenting, a heightened standard of care for that organization.
ACO-type models may increase professional liability risk by raising patient expectations. An ACO that falls short in delivering fully coordinated care may be more likely to become a target for a lawsuit.
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Liability for Participation in ACOs Coordinated health care may result in additional discoverable
documentation that can be used against healthcare providers in a malpractice case. Additionally, since an ACO must issue public reports on certain aspects of its performance and operations, it may inadvertently provide plaintiff attorneys with a roadmap to problem areas of the organization.
Some observers have expressed concern the payment model runs the risk of providing incentives for physicians to not refer patients for needed treatment.
Some new healthcare delivery models expand the responsibilities of nurse practitioners and other types of providers, potentially increasing credentialing exposures and malpractice risk.
Physicians typically prefer vigorous defenses of malpractice claims, but if decisions to settle claims are made by ACO management, the emphasis could shift to settling claims early in order to manage costs. Databank issues must be considered.
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Liability from Use of Extenders
Increased use of extenders such as APNs and PAs. Check license and experience Make sure paper documents are filed with state for
employment and prescribing Meet supervision requirements Don’t supervise too many extenders (PA = 2) Bill properly: Incident-to versus using separate numbers Training, oversight and review are key to minimize
liability Proper record-keeping and education Various liability issues
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Liability from Increased Collection Efforts Guidelines for Handling Patient Debt:
Medical Debt Responsibility Act
Allow 120 days to resolve bill before taking “extraordinary collection action” such as reporting debt to credit bureau, filing lawsuit, liens, etc.
Remove paid medical debt from credit reports within 45 days
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Liability from Increased Collection Efforts
When transferring debt to collection agency/reporting to credit bureau, still need to communication with agents:
Monthly reconciliation of accounts Tracking of complaints Regular audits Make sure patients understand medical services they
require and fees for those services (10 most common services)
Make it convenient to pay at the time of treatment and encourage it
Send bills punctually and follow up consistently on unpaid debt
Have established system to deal with insurance claims Suing may invite a countersuit!
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Fair Debt Collection Act
1. Do not threaten to refer a bill to a collection agency or take any other action unless there is a plan to do so.
2. Do not threaten to take any action which you know is illegal or impermissible.
3. Do not call patients late at night or at work if you know they are not permitted to take personal calls.
4. Do not communicate to a third party, over the phone or otherwise, that you are attempting to collect a debt from the patient.
5. Do not send overdue notices on postcards.
6. Do not send statements with “Past Due” marked on the outside of the envelope.
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PSICRisk Management Tips
Be thoughtful
Develop a protocol/policy for handling outstanding balances Inform patients of the “rules” of the practice using printed marketing
materials (patient information brochures, website, etc.) Consider using a financial payment plan contract
Assign a point person Reduce complication by having the same person talk with the patient
AVOID allegations of abandonment Terminate appropriately Document Well
Communication is key
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Liability as a Result of Changes in Doctor-Patient Relationship Doctors to be forced to do more paperwork and spend less time with the
patients
Reduction in reimbursement will compel doctors to see more patients in less time
Time constraints will push patient doctor interactions away from a patient participatory discussion to a more a paternalistic physician-dominated approach
Physicians will have less time to educate, counsel, answer questions and offer explanations to patients and patients will be less likely to understand their diseases and how best to treat them
Physician autonomy will be impacted by more extensive regulation and medical decisions and treatment courses will become standardized by regulators with little medical background and no knowledge or compassion for individual situations
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Liability as a Result of Changes in Doctor-Patient Relationship
Patients will encounter difficulty of obtaining the care they’ve been accustomed to and want and may feel helpless and upset and likely will blame doctors
Physicians will not be able to practice medicine as they have in the past and will be unable to order tests, consults and medicine the patients need which will be frustrating
Consequences: patient dissatisfaction, misunderstanding, lack of trust in doctor, lack of long-term relationship with providers, poor continuity. MORE LAWSUITS.
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The Standard of Care Protection Act: Tort Reform A new Georgia law drafted from an AMA model legislation
prevents help performed metrics from being used as evidence in liability cases
Peer guidelines and quality criteria under federal law cannot be used to establish a basis for negligence or standard of care for the purposes of determining medical liability
“Administrative behavior” would not be admissible in court and would not be used in standard of care determination. This could not be “malpractice” or “negligence”.
Will prohibit health system reform provisions from being construed to establish a standard or duty of care or by a healthcare professional to a patient in any liability case.
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The Standard of Care Protection Act
Would not allow lawsuits be brought against healthcare providers based simply on whether they followed national guidelines created by health care law.
Reinforces medical decisions must be made between patients and the doctors and there is no “one size fits all” practice of medicine.
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The Standard of Care Protection Act How would the law work?
Example In a gallbladder case, the issue should be whether
the physician met the standard of care.
Under the ACA: a plaintiff could introduce evidence about the physician’s readmission rate, complication rate or other issues that deal primarily with reimbursement and payment
Under the law, the individual’s physician deciding what is in the best interest of the patient would be determining factor.
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PSICRisk Management Tips
Office Hire well Treat staff well
Cost of hiring, training, etc. Cross train Time study/office flow
Patients Under promise, over deliver Increase office hours
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PSICRisk Management Tips
Get a good history Preventative Care Ask QUESTIONS Document Establish reasonable expectations Don’t skimp on TRAINING Invest in staff
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PSICNew “Business” Ideas
Think out of the box! Group appointments
Great for chronic disease management Physician speaks to the group on common issues Patients then go off for 5 minutes personal
appointments with PA/NP/MD
Meet and Beat patient expectations Improve waiting room experience
Coffee, TV, magazines, no clocks