Financial Impact of the Surgical Treatment of Infection on the Practice of Orthopedic Trauma

Daniel C Flinn, Taylor P. Gurnea, P. Althausen
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Abstract

Objectives: The treatment of bone, muscle, and joint infections has been under the purview of orthopedic surgeons for years. As care has become more specialized, orthopedic surgeons are offloading infection cases to services such as general surgery or podiatry. Orthopedics as a field has already yielded portions of spine to neurosurgery, recovery to physiatrists, and foot and ankle to podiatry. The purpose of this study was to report the financial impact of infection treatment on our group practice at a busy community Level II trauma center. Design: Retrospective Economic Review Setting: Level II Trauma Center Patients/Participants: All patients receiving orthopedic surgical intervention at our facility from January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018. Intervention: Surgical treatment of bone, muscle and joint infections. Main Outcome Measurements: Surgical Volume, Relative Value Units, Physician Charges, Physician Collections and Payer Mix Results: The surgical treatment of infections including irrigation and debridement, wound closure and amputations amounted to 908 out of 3700 total cases. This included 11,405 total RVUs, 5,771 work RVUs, $2,056,677 in charges and $407,479 in collections over the 2018 calendar year. This was 16.8% of total RVUs, 19% of all charges, and 15% of collections for the orthopedic trauma service. The payer mix for these patients was less favorable with a collection rate of 20% compared to a 25% average for all surgical cases. Conclusions: The treatment of orthopedic infections represents a large proportion of surgical volume for orthopedic surgeons covering hospital call. Relinquishing control of these patients will result in significant financial loss as well as a decrease in our ability to control the episode of care and patient access in the changing healthcare environment. Level of Evidence: Therapeutic Level III
感染手术治疗对骨科创伤实践的经济影响
目的:骨、肌肉和关节感染的治疗多年来一直是骨科医生的工作范围。随着护理变得更加专业化,整形外科医生正在将感染病例转移到普通外科或足部等服务部门。骨科作为一个领域已经为神经外科提供了部分脊柱,为物理医生提供了部分恢复,为足病提供了部分足部和踝关节。本研究的目的是报告感染治疗对我们在一个繁忙的社区二级创伤中心的集体实践的财务影响。设计:回顾性经济评价设置:二级创伤中心患者/参与者:2018年1月1日至2018年12月31日在我们医院接受骨科手术干预的所有患者。干预:手术治疗骨、肌肉和关节感染。主要观察指标:手术量、相对价值单位、医师收费、医师收费、付款人组合结果:3700例中,手术治疗感染包括冲洗清创、伤口闭合、截肢共908例。其中包括11,405个总rvu, 5,771个工作rvu, 2,0056,677美元的收费和407,479美元的收款。这占总rvu的16.8%,占所有费用的19%,占骨科创伤服务的15%。这些患者的付款人组合不太有利,收款率为20%,而所有外科病例的平均收款率为25%。结论:骨科感染的治疗占骨科外科手术量的很大一部分。放弃对这些患者的控制将导致重大的经济损失,并降低我们在不断变化的医疗保健环境中控制护理和患者访问的能力。证据等级:治疗性III级
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