Benefits of Reporting Tools for Risk Adjustment Workflows
The risk adjustment (RA) workflow
process in healthcare is here to stay, and even if organizations are slowly
catching up, there are a lot of gaps that need to be closed for it to become
more efficient. There are several ways to help providers catch up and improve
their workflows that will help their health outcome management and, by and
large, improve their RAF scores.
Before we talk about how to improve
RA workflow processes, let’s see at a glance some of the limitations of the old medicare risk adjustment coding workflows according to reports we see at Inferscience while
working with healthcare providers.
Limitations of traditional RA workflows
Inefficient medical record retrieval
Healthcare providers feel very
frustrated using medical records generated from risk adjustment retrieval
projects. According to them, “it feels like throwing everything in the air and
hoping things land correctly.” This is because of several factors: the lack of
involvement and commitment from the healthcare team and the barely surviving process
of manual RA coding.
Inaccurate data coding
Some of the complaints we hear at
Inferscience from healthcare providers, previous to using an HCC Coding
software tool, is the added burden of coding. Coding is a complicated process
because it means having to sort through the ICD-10 codes that are unstructured
and disjointed, not to mention the obstacles they face from using incomplete
and carelessly reported medical histories.
Inadequate involvement of the healthcare team
Because the healthcare providers
feel that ICD-10 coding is like using a method that is buried somewhere that
would take more than an expert to find, this adds to their lack of involvement
and participation in the RA workflow process. Not to mention the technical
issues providers encounter as the team migrates to a new process.
Now that we have named some of the
limitations of traditional RA workflows let’s enumerate the merits of using new
technology-optimized reporting tools in implementing risk adjustment systems.
Benefits of Reporting in RA workflows
Team accountability
Tools like the HCC Assistant not
only make HCC medical coding simpler; they also eliminate the obstacle of
guessing who is utilizing the tool. With customized utilization reporting, the
HCC Assistant gives admins daily reports that can be seen by each provider to
review their results or everyone on the healthcare leadership team. This
process raises the satisfaction and ease of use for providers, therefore,
earning their participation and accountability.
Team leadership
Team leadership skills can be
strengthened by having the right information to keep the team accountable for
their HCC utilization and leaders can also get a glance at who is collaborating
with the overall goals and workflow.
Team performance
With better team leadership,
accountability, and participation, all healthcare providers will have ease of
practice over time. These factors will influence the team’s performance
contributing to better RA scores.
The Future of RA Workflows
A primary key in the future of
using automated and/or assisted RA workflows is the team of providers working
together consistently and committedly. Here are some keys to the future of RA
workflows:
Interoperability in healthcare
As the healthcare industry
landscape rapidly changes, intensified by the Covid-19 pandemic, all
stakeholders need to cooperate to make the system more interoperable. We all
know that post-pandemic, patients have now become advocates of greater and
easier access to their medical records, putting much emphasis on privacy.
On the other side of the spectrum
and as the sharing of health data increases, everyone on the provider side
needs to keep up with the demands by emphasizing everyone’s commitment to first;
provide quality care and second ensure access to complete and accurate medical
records.
Consent and data segmentation
On top of the need for
interoperability, informed consent is crucial to make patients well-informed
and become partners in the responsibility of their health management. Data, on
the other hand, is the sole responsibility of the providers making sure they
are handled with utmost confidentiality yet, not compromising availability to
everyone in the care of the patient.
21st Century Cures Act
In March 2020, a big step forward
was made as the 21st Century Cures Act was put together by the Office of the
National Coordinator (ONC) for Health Information Technology (IT). ONC,
together with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS), finalized the
implementing rules for the Cures Act requiring select payers, health care
systems, and health IT vendors to provide patients access to their data,
primarily through Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) Application
Programming Interface (API). The Cures Act is a significant advancement that
enables patients to easily access their medical records using any app of their
choice.
In Conclusion, Collaboration is KEY
It would be an understatement to
say that all stakeholders should collaborate to make these advancement efforts
become a success. The building blocks and key drivers were the frameworks for
consent and segmentation, coupled with a strong technology structure.
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