
Modern Healthcare
Bifocals needed for focus on HIPAA
Eye on Info: Internet Technology and HIPAA
By John Morrissey
February 7, 2000
URL:
http://www.modernhealthcare.com
What do you see in the initials HIPAA?
Information management provisions in the federal Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 will test the vision of
healthcare organizations, say consultants anticipating final rules early
this year.
Senior executives will need plenty of vision to direct the biggest
forced revamping of healthcare operations since Medicare. But to see
clearly, use bifocals.
That's to help see near and far at the same time. Even though the
HIPAA challenge is imminent and pressing, it presents a defining moment
for improving business processes well beyond the scope of the
regulations themselves, says Tim Segall, a partner with Computer
Sciences Corp.'s healthcare consulting group.
A voluminous checklist of regulatory do's and don'ts will require a
sharply focused near-term plan to meet mandates on electronic
transaction standards, information security and patient confidentiality
within a tight two-year timeline.
But experts say healthcare organizations also need a long-term view
of where this flurry of activity fits into larger goals that stretch to
the horizon: fostering efficiency and knifing unnecessary costs. Early
efforts demonstrate the potential to save or recoup millions of dollars
annually.
"It can create major efficiency -- if you look at it as the driver of
what should have been done in any organization," says Shannah Koss,
HIPAA services executive for IBM Global Solutions. "This is finally
going to get us where we need to be."
The bad news is that the process of cutting costs from business
operations will itself be costly. The good news is that Internet
technology, a new recruit in the data management campaign, has reported
for duty.
"The presence of Internet technology will make these things easier to
do in 24 months," says John Glaser, vice president and chief information
officer at Partners HealthCare System, a Boston-based organization of
six hospitals and nearly 1,000 physicians.
In the Boston area, major provider and payer organizations already
are well on their way toward a uniform method of handling healthcare
transactions, including a common technological basis for sending them
electronically.
A consortium called New England Healthcare EDI Network incorporated
last November, two years after regional providers and payers began
discussing a cooperative plan for designing and implementing
administrative cost-reducing measures.
NEHEN's objectives are to:
- Improve care quality by facilitating timely exchange of
electronic data.
- Reduce labor costs associated with current administrative
processes.
- Reduce financial exposure related to inefficient and incomplete
business procedures, such as confirming eligibility for insurance
reimbursement.
- Help organizations meet HIPAA regulatory requirements.
Getting the major provider and payer organizations to agree to such a
joint undertaking was the first of two critical elements in the overall
plan, Glaser says.
Partners is one of NEHEN's three founding provider organizations,
along with CareGroup Healthcare System, with five Boston-area hospitals,
and Lifespan, with five hospitals in Rhode Island and Boston.
Founding payer organizations are Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, the
second- largest payer and largest managed-care organization in eastern
Massachusetts, and Tufts Health Plan, the region's second-largest
managed- care organization. Harvard Pilgrim and Tufts have recently
gushed red ink, in part because they could not control expenses. That
gives them all the more reason to back NEHEN.
Three other provider organizations recently joined the network:
Boston Medical Center, Children's Hospital of Boston and UMass Memorial
Health Care, a system of four hospitals in the Worcester area.
The other critical element involved agreement on a common set of
transactions, and the federal government's adoption of a particular set
of industry standards did the trick, Glaser says.
Work groups under the banner of the Accredited Standards Committee
X12 had met six times per year since 1993 to hammer out a comprehensive
set of national standards. But it took the push from HIPAA to lend
authority to the effort to streamline administrative processes, says
Segall, who's also the NEHEN project manager.
"Two years ago, nobody knew how to start fixing this problem," he
says. "Now it's supremely clear."
To establish a common technological base for the transaction network,
NEHEN members agreed to adopt the protocols that are central to
information exchange on the Internet. But rather than use the public
Internet, they decided to stay within a private areawide
telecommunications network, Segall says.
"It doesn't have to be the Internet per se; it has to be the Internet
technology," Glaser says. All participants had to speak the same
electronic language, and all had World Wide Web browsers either in place
or as part of their computer plans, which made Internet protocols
"well-suited to the task," he says.
The extra cost of a private network was worth avoiding the potential
for public wrath over conducting healthcare transactions via the
Internet, Segall says. "We pay a small amount of money, we stay out of
the press, and we get a good-quality level of service."
Each NEHEN member pays $120 per month for the network connection. The
consortium operation, run by Computer Sciences, is supported by
subscription fees of $6,000 per member per month.
For now, the priorities center on reducing the mistakes and omissions
early on that lead to denial of payment and inability to collect.
After an 18-month pilot project, a procedure for verifying
eligibility under terms of a patient's insurance plan is in operation
networkwide, Segall says. A program for confirming referrals and gaining
authorization for treatments is scheduled for launch later this month or
in March.
Once those principal obstacles to claims payment are addressed, an
electronic claims-processing initiative is scheduled to begin in August,
using standardized transactions between providers and payers.
The savings potential of the automated process is "a tens of millions
of dollars proposition" for Partners, which has 300 people devoted to
deducing the reasons for claims denials and trying to fix them, Glaser
says. The usual denial rate: 10% to 12%.
In one outpatient department at an unnamed Partners hospital, the
push for eligibility verification reduced claim rejections by 50% in the
first four months, Segall says. It also reduced the time spent reworking
denied claims, improved data quality within hospital information systems
and cut down on the number of administrative queries from patients.
Less than 5% of outpatient cases underwent an eligibility check under
the manual process of verification, and inpatient verification was done
after registration, according to results of the case study. That led to
misdirected claims, wrong insurance identification numbers and services
provided but not covered. What's more, the revenue to be gained by
bird-dogging outpatient billing problems after the fact usually isn't
worth the cost, Segall says.
The new electronic approach provides access to eligibility
verification in scheduling, registration and billing departments,
covering 80% of the patients with insurance.
For Partners, a provider organization with more than $2.5 billion in
annual revenue, the annual impact could amount to "$25 million to $30
million we'll get that we were losing before," Glaser estimates.
Technology alone did not suffice, however, for business operations
employees who were not focused on checking for eligibility, especially
in the outpatient departments. Once the computer system is built, "you
can turn it on, but that doesn't mean they're quite ready to use it,"
Glaser says. Part of the initiative involved redesigning work flow to
capture correct data at the beginning of the patient encounter.
To capture a critical mass of that data from payers, Boston-area
providers had an easier time than most. "We didn't have to have 20
people in the room," he says about getting the cooperation of payers.
"We just had to have five."
A key conclusion of the NEHEN pilot project was that providers
require "all- payer access," defined as support for a minimum of 70% of
their payer transactions. More than a dozen payers serve eastern
Massachusetts, but NEHEN corralled "the only five payers who count,"
Segall says.
Besides Harvard Pilgrim and Tufts, Partners forged data connections
with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts, the state Medicaid
program and the Medicare fiscal intermediary.
By contrast, the Stamford, Conn., market just 200 miles away has a
large number of payers with small percentages of market share. Hospitals
in that market would do well to wait for payers to conform to HIPAA
standards, easing the initial burden of gaining cooperation and building
interfaces with that many insurance data sources, Segall says.
The more destinations for data a network must serve, the more
critical an Internet-style approach becomes, Glaser says. Markets with
many scattered players need such an option, but NEHEN could have done
just fine using non- Internet technology, he says. The compact core of
essential players in the consortium made the availability of Internet
technology less critical to success.
But the use of Internet protocols in its network sets up the
consortium to take advantage of innovations in security that could
someday pave a path to the public highway, Segall says. "With a trivial
amount of work, we can drop it onto the Internet."

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