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Paperwork Burns Time, Money in U.S. Medical Practices


 

FROM HEALTH AFFAIRS

Physician practices in the United States spend four times as much money as do those in Ontario, Canada, to cope with paperwork and communications involving health insurers and payers, according to a study published Aug. 4.

The study, which appears in the journal Health Affairs (doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0893), found that medical practices in the United States spend nearly $83,000 per year per physician to deal with health plans. In contrast, physician practices in Ontario spend about $22,200 to interact with Canada’s single-payer health care system. The report adjusted the figures slightly to account for exchange rates and specialty mix.

"If U.S. physicians had similar administrative costs to Ontario physicians, the total savings would be approximately $27.6 billion per year," wrote Dr. Dante Morra, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Toronto, and his colleagues.

Most of the problems U.S. physicians face relate to the fact that they’re trying to cope with multiple payers, while Canadian physicians must deal with only one, said Dr. Morra and colleagues, who added that U.S. insurers could help by taking steps to improve the efficiency of transactions, such as implementing electronic transactions.

"The price of inefficiencies is not only the cost measured in this study," the authors said. "When these inefficiencies result in frequent interruptions in the work of physicians and their staff, they are likely to interfere with patient care. Everyone – health plans, physicians and their staff, and patients – will be better off if inefficiencies in transactions between physicians and health plans can be reduced."

The differences in staff time spent on insurance issues started with the physicians themselves. U.S. physicians spent an average of 3.4 hours per week interacting with multiple insurers, while Canadian physicians spent an average of 2.2 hours per week dealing with that country’s single payer. The main difference in time is the 1 hour per week that U.S. physicians spent obtaining prior authorizations, which accounted for most of the difference in the results, the study said.

In addition, practice staff members in the United States spent far more time on insurance issues than did their Canadian peers, according to the study, which called the differences "striking." U.S. nursing staff, including medical assistants, spent 20.6 hours per physician in the practice per week interacting with payers, nearly 10 times the 2.5 hours per week spent by Ontario nursing staff.

The study found that the U.S. nursing staff members spent more time in every possible category, including prior authorizations, which cost them 13.1 hours per physician in the practice per week. In Canada, nursing staff members spent no time on prior authorizations.

Clerical staff members worked 53.1 hours per physician per week in the United States, mainly on billing issues and obtaining prior authorizations, the study said. Meanwhile, clerical staff members in Canada worked only 15.9 hours per week, and only on claims and billing issues.

"The major difference between the United States and Ontario is that nonphysician staff members in the United States spend large amounts of time obtaining prior authorizations and on billing," Dr. Morra said in a statement.

Standardizing transactions and conducting them electronically holds the potential for reducing some of these administrative costs in the United States, the study concluded. For example, the authors backed creating common, possibly mandatory standards for billing, claims payment, and prior authorization; requiring payers and physicians to communicate electronically; implementing automated verification of insurance benefits at the point of care; and using standard credentialing and quality measurement processes.

The authors reported no financial conflicts of interest for the study, which was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Commonwealth Fund.

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