Background: Clinical documentation improvement programs are utilized by most health care systems to enhance provider documentation. Suggestions are sent to providers in a variety of ways, and are commonly referred to as coding queries. Responding to these coding queries can require significant provider time and do not often align with workflows. To enhance provider documentation in a more consistent manner without creating undue burden, alternative strategies are required.
Objectives: The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of a real-time documentation assistance tool, named AutoDx, on the volume of coding queries and encounter-level outcome metrics, including case-mix index (CMI).
Methods: The AutoDx tool was developed utilizing tools existing within the electronic health record, and is based on the generation of messages when clinical conditions are met. These messages appear within provider notes and required little to no interaction. Initial diagnoses included in the tool were electrolyte deficiencies, obesity, and malnutrition. The tool was piloted in a cohort of Hospital Medicine providers, then expanded to the Neuro Intensive Care Unit (NICU), with addition diagnoses being added.
Results: The initial Hospital Medicine implementation evaluation included 590 encounters pre- and 531 post-implementation. The volume of coding queries decreased 57% ( < 0.0001) for the targeted diagnoses compared with 6% ( = 0.77) in other high-volume diagnoses. In the NICU cohort, 829 encounters pre-implementation were compared with 680 post. The proportion of AutoDx coding queries compared with all other coding queries decreased from 54.9 to 37.1% ( < 0.0001). During the same period, CMI demonstrated a significant increase post-implementation (4.00 vs. 4.55, = 0.02).
Conclusion: The real-time documentation assistance tool led to a significant decrease in coding queries for targeted diagnoses in two unique provider cohorts. This improvement was also associated with a significant increase in CMI during the implementation time period.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2319-0598 | DOI Listing |
Arthrosc Sports Med Rehabil
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Purpose: To use a large nationwide administrative database to directly compare usage, complications, and need for revision stabilization surgery after medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction (MPLFR), tibial tubercle osteotomy (TTO), and combined MPFLR and TTO (MPFLRTTO).
Methods: The PearlDiver Mariner database was queried for all reported cases of MPLFR, TTO, and combined MPFLRTTO performed between 2010 and 2020 using Current Procedural Terminology codes. Subsets from those cohorts with laterality-specific , , codes for patellar instability were used to evaluate 2-year incidence of infection, stiffness, fracture, and revision stabilization with MPFLR and/or TTO.
Arthrosc Sports Med Rehabil
December 2024
Cedars Sinai Kerlan Jobe Institute, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Purpose: To determine the patient demographics and incidence of hip arthroscopy after total hip arthroplasty using the PearlDiver database.
Methods: This is a retrospective study of patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty and arthroscopic hip surgery. The PearlDiver Claims Database was queried using Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for records from 2010 to 2021.
Brain Sci
November 2024
School of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595, USA.
Background/objectives: Recent studies reveal an "obesity paradox", suggesting better clinical outcomes after intracranial hemorrhage for obese patients compared to patients with a healthy BMI. While this paradox indicates improved survival rates for obese individuals in stroke cases, it is unknown whether this trend remains true across all forms of intracranial hemorrhage. Therefore, the objective of our study was to investigate the incidence, characteristics, and outcomes of hospitalized obese patients with intracranial hemorrhage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trauma Acute Care Surg
January 2025
From the Division of Trauma, Surgical Critical Care, Burns and Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery (L.A.P., Z.M., J.M., B.H., T.W.C., L.N.H., A.B., L.A., J.J.D., J.E.S.), UC San Diego School of Medicine, San Diego, California; and Division of Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery (A.E.L.), University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
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