Emerging Nurse Billing and Reimbursement Models.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Journal of Nursing Administration Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-05 DOI:10.1097/NNA.0000000000001456
John M Welton, Robert Longyear
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: To explore and make recommendations to implement direct billing and reimbursement models for nursing care in the United States.

Background: Nurses make up the largest group of healthcare professionals and within hospitals, nurses represent approximately a quarter of all resources and associated costs of patient care. This care is mostly hidden in daily room and board charges.

Methods: The authors surveyed the recent and historical literature related to costing and billing for nursing care. These results were synthesized and led to the recommendation of several new models to cost, bill, and pay for nursing care provided by nurses who are not currently billing for their services.

Results: Two basic billing models are proposed: the 1st is to remove nursing care out of the current daily room or facility-based charges and allocate nursing care time provided to each patient during each day of stay. The 2nd is to expand existing Current Procedural Terminology codes to bill for specific activities and interventions by nurses in all settings where nursing care is delivered.

Conclusions: It is feasible to implement the proposed methods to identify patient-level nursing intensity, cost, services, and interventions provided by individual nurses in all healthcare settings.

新兴的护士计费和报销模式。
目的背景:护士是美国最大的医疗保健专业人员群体:背景:护士是医疗保健专业人员中最大的群体,在医院内,护士约占所有资源和病人护理相关成本的四分之一。这种护理大多隐藏在日常的食宿费用中:作者调查了与护理成本计算和收费相关的最新和历史文献。作者对这些结果进行了综合,并推荐了几种新的模式,用于计算护士提供的护理服务的成本、费用和支付,这些护士目前没有为其服务收费:结果:提出了两种基本计费模式:第一种模式是将护理服务从目前的每日病房或设施收费中剔除,并对每位病人每天住院期间的护理时间进行分配。第二种是扩展现有的《现行程序术语》代码,对护士在提供护理服务的所有环境中的具体活动和干预进行收费:结论:采用所建议的方法来确定患者级别的护理强度、成本、服务以及护士在所有医疗环境中提供的干预措施是可行的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ​JONA™ is the authoritative source of information on developments and advances in patient care leadership. Content is geared to nurse executives, directors of nursing, and nurse managers in hospital, community health, and ambulatory care environments. Practical, innovative, and solution-oriented articles provide the tools and data needed to excel in executive practice in changing healthcare systems: leadership development; human, material, and financial resource management and relationships; systems, business, and financial strategies. All articles are peer-reviewed, selected and developed with the guidance of a distinguished group of editorial advisors.
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