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by walnutclosefarm
1180 days ago
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I'm pretty sure the truth is a mix of malicious compliance and inability, but I'd weight it heavily in favor of malicious compliance, especially for the insurance data. Insurers know their costs, and when and why they pay specific charges. (My qualifications to make this statement: 15 years in healthcare IT, including UHG/Optum, and 8 years as CTO of a large clinical organization that included primary through tertiary care, research, and an insurance operation.) |
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Sure, insurance companies ultimately know what they paid, but consider that these MRFs are almost certainly not being prepared by the people responsible for that knowledge. They were probably tasked to one or two data analysts who quickly banged them out in whatever BI/reporting tool they use and did nothing to verify correctness. It's not like they had an accountant audit these if they weren't absolutely required to (they weren't). Most healthcare analytics tools are complete junk drawers of data from numerous systems and getting these MRFs right was probably never a priority for anyone. Just a total "I have no idea if these are right but they sure are numbers" exercise.
I mean, how many times have you seen some Tableau report that's all screwed up because some of the MRNs aren't actually MRNs (even though someone named the model field community_mrn) but file numbers from the scheduling system, and now you've got duplicate patients? BI systems just breed that kind of problem unless you are extremely careful about managing them, and since they're "not systems of record" (these are scare quotes) few people are.