AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates physician reimbursement for upper limb decompression surgeries, comparing carpal tunnel, cubital tunnel, and brachial plexus release procedures.
  • Brachial plexus surgeries took significantly longer (147 mins) than carpal (16 mins) and cubital tunnel (57 mins), but carpal tunnel procedures had the highest reimbursement per minute (0.310 wRVUs).
  • The findings highlight that more complex surgeries are reimbursed less adequately under the current wRVU system, indicating a potential disconnect between procedure difficulty and compensation.

Article Abstract

Background: Work relative value units (wRVUs) are part of Resource Based Relative Value Scale system. It is expected that a more difficult and time-consuming procedure would yield higher wRVUs. Brachial plexus nerve decompression surgery is a more time-consuming procedure compared with carpal and cubital tunnel procedures. The aim of this study was to analyze physician reimbursement in upper limb decompression procedures by comparing mean operative times, wRVUs per minute, and dollars per minute.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted from June 2016 to June 2019, including all patients who underwent carpal tunnel, cubital tunnel, and brachial plexus release procedures. Operating time was collected, and calculations of mean operative time, wRVUs per minute, and dollars per minute were performed and compared between groups.

Results: A total of 209 cases were included. Carpal tunnel accounted for 75.1% of the cases, followed by cubital tunnel and brachial plexus releases. Brachial plexus release had the highest median operative time (147 minutes), followed by cubital tunnel (57 minutes) and carpal tunnel release (16 minutes, P < 0.0001). Carpal tunnel release procedures had a significantly higher wRVUs per minute (0.310) when compared with cubital tunnel and brachial pleaxus release procedures, 0.127 and 0.077, respectively (P < 0.0001). Same was true for dollars per minute; carpal tunnel procedures yielded significantly more compensation than cubital tunnel and thoracic outlet procedures (P < 0.0001).

Conclusions: More complex and time-consuming procedures yielded a lower reimbursement for physicians. The current work relative unit system does not account adequately for the time spent in each procedure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SAP.0000000000002900DOI Listing

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