增强医疗服务提供者的能力:提高临床实践中的财务绩效和生产力的合作方法》。

IF 2.3 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurology. Clinical practice Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-11 DOI:10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200314
Scott Friedenberg, Edward Stefanowicz, Timothy Frymoyer, Clemens M Schirmer, Neil R Holland, Trudi Dempsey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:财务培训不足、基准有限以及思维定势等因素导致许多医生将收入置于质量、疗效和安全之上。这对医院管理者激励临床医生改善 RVU 生成和增加收入提出了挑战:创建医生/管理者团队,定义并探索观察到的财务绩效与预期绩效之间的差距,同时了解医生的执业偏好,可为计费创造新的机会。建议的三阶段方法强调非评判性沟通、教育和伙伴关系。最常见、最有效的改进机会包括账单优化、日程安排和系统基础设施改造:随着报销额度的减少,平衡创收与医生满意度变得至关重要。促进数据驱动的双向交流可以发现以前未曾认识到的计费机会,这些机会是由医疗服务提供者驱动的,而不是由单一的机构目标驱动的。
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Empowering Health Care Providers: A Collaborative Approach to Enhance Financial Performance and Productivity in Clinical Practice.

Background: The combination of inadequate financial training, limited benchmarks, and mindset contribute to many physicians prioritizing revenue below quality, outcomes, and safety. This creates a challenge as hospital administrators aim to motivate clinicians to improve RVU generation and increase revenue.

Recent findings: Creating physician/administrator teams that defines and explores the gap between observed and expected financial performance in parallel with appreciating the physician's practice preferences can create new opportunities for billing. The proposed 3 phase approach emphasizes nonjudgmental communication, education and partnership. The most common and effective opportunities for improvement include billing optimization, scheduling and system infrastructure modifications.

Implications for practice: As reimbursement decrease, balancing revenue generation with physician satisfaction has become paramount. Promoting data drive bidirectional communication can lead to identifying previously unrecognized billing opportunities where change is driven by providers rather than by 1-dimensional institutional goals.

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来源期刊
Neurology. Clinical practice
Neurology. Clinical practice CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: Neurology® Genetics is an online open access journal publishing peer-reviewed reports in the field of neurogenetics. The journal publishes original articles in all areas of neurogenetics including rare and common genetic variations, genotype-phenotype correlations, outlier phenotypes as a result of mutations in known disease genes, and genetic variations with a putative link to diseases. Articles include studies reporting on genetic disease risk, pharmacogenomics, and results of gene-based clinical trials (viral, ASO, etc.). Genetically engineered model systems are not a primary focus of Neurology® Genetics, but studies using model systems for treatment trials, including well-powered studies reporting negative results, are welcome.
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