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NORTH CAROLINA
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION HOSPITAL OUTPATIENT PAYMENTS GROWING
IN SPITE OF RECENT EFFORTS TO REDUCE THEM, NEW STUDY FINDS
CAMBRIDGE, MA,
June 18, 2012—
Hospital charges for the treatment of injured workers in
North Carolina are growing quickly following regulatory
changes to help reduce outpatient costs, according to a new
study, Early Impact of Outpatient Fee Schedule Reduction
in North Carolina: CompScopeTM Medical
Benchmarks, 12th Edition, by the Workers
Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).
“This study is an invaluable tool for policymakers and other
stakeholders who are looking to better understand the impact
of recent provisions focused on cost drivers in North
Carolina’s workers’ compensation system, such as the fee
schedule reductions” said Ramona Tanabe, Deputy Director and
Counsel.
The study provides a look at the early impact of the effort
to reduce outpatient hospital costs. Hospital payments per
claim in North Carolina have been among the highest of the
16 states studied since at least 2004.
Regulations enacted in 2009 reduced the reimbursement rate
for hospital outpatient services. Effective July 27, 2009,
the outpatient fee schedule was reduced to 79 percent of
charges from 95 percent for most hospitals. The study
findings reflect eight months of experience under the fee
schedule reduction.
The WCRI study said that the payment-to-charge ratio for
hospital outpatient services overall was reduced as
expected, to 72 percent from 82 percent. Growth in the
average payment per service was moderate at three percent.
However, the study reported the average charge per service
grew 17 percent compared with a similar period for the prior
year. By contrast, in prior years the changes for payments
and charges generally were consistent.
The study reported that charges increased at a rate much
faster than cost-savings estimates anticipated. Over time,
the study said, this could affect the impact of the fee
schedule reduction, because a lower percentage of a higher
charge would be less likely to achieve the state
cost-savings goals.
According to the study, prior to the implementation of the
fee schedule reduction, charges per service increased
rapidly for some services, especially for
treatment/operating/recovery room services.
Physical medicine services, a high frequency service, showed
little impact from the fee schedule reduction because they
were already being paid at significantly lower than 79
percent of charges, the study said.
ABOUT WCRI:
The Workers
Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) is an independent,
not-for-profit research organization based in Cambridge,
MA. Since 1983, WCRI has been a catalyst for significant
improvements in workers' compensation systems around the
world with its objective, credible, and high-quality
research. WCRI's members include employers; insurers;
governmental entities; managed care companies; health care
providers; insurance regulators; state labor organizations;
and state administrative agencies in the U.S., Canada,
Australia and New Zealand. |