- online-crc.com
   
 
 
 
 
Subscribe Now!
About CRC
Home
Site Map
Help
Contact Us
About Platinum
Platinum Resources
Core Privileges
Benchmarking Reports
Clinical Privilege Update (E-News)
Policy and Procedures
Members Resources
Briefings on Credentialing
Clinical Privilege White Papers
Medical Staff Talk
Member Privileging Forms
Consulting Resources
CRC Consulting
White Papers
Advisors
Events
Free Resources
CRC Blog
Credentialing and
Privileging Advisor
Credentialing Links
New Tech Links
 
credentialing and privileging desk reference_verification resource
Visit our sister website for credentials verification help!
 

It's Not Only Medical Records - Add Prescription Records to the Mix

Washington Post reporter Ellen Nakashima recently wrote an article on healthcare databases being used to develop a "health credit report". It appears that insurance companies to help improve health care and reduce costs can use prescription drug databases containing over 200 million records. 

Instead of using physician medical records, drug profiles are considered more accurate, less expensive, and quicker to obtain. This practice demonstrates the use of electronic data obtained for one purpose, then used and marketed for quite another. Is such a practice protected by the federal health privacy rules? Does it border on accepted – non-accepted practice? 

Here's what is occurring: companies Ingenix and Milliman construct patient profiles using prescription drug databases to retrieve prescription drug histories. Insurance companies may then make an on-line query on a patient. The database is searched and returns aggregated data going back as far as t years and includes information such as dosages, dates filled, therapeutic class and prescribing physician. This data is massaged to produce a "pharmacy risk score." High scores suggest higher medical costs. 

According to report Nakashima, such profiles cost about $15/search. One company gets approximately 1 million queries from insurers each year. Sounds like a very lucrative business! 

Questions for MSPs to consider: How will this affect a hospital's pharmacy? How does this affect the confidentiality of patient health information? 

 

Carole La Pine, MSA, CPMSM, CPCS

Hendrickson: POLST program designed to improve end-of-life care

A relatively new and an-up-and-coming BioEthics Management consideration is the Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) paradigm.  This is a program designed to improve end-of-life care by converting patients’ treatment preferences into medical orders that are transferable throughout the health care system.  It was initially developed in Oregon and is now implemented in several states with many others considering review with possible implementation. 

The program was developed to improve end-of-life care by overcoming many of the Advance Directives limitations.  It is designed to convert patient preferences for life-sustaining treatments into immediately actionable medical orders.  The form is recommended for persons who have an advanced chronic progressing illness, who might die within a year or who wish to further define their preferences for treatment.

The POLST Paradigm Program relies on teamwork and coordinated systems to ensure preferences are honored throughout the healthcare system. 

More to come on this subject down the road as our facility will be working with legal counsel and our Bio Ethics Committee in light of representing the best interests of patient care at our facility. 

About HCPro | Privacy Statement | Contact Us
Copyright © 2008 Credentialing Resource Center.