AAPCC Adjusted Average Per Capita Cost
AHP Accountable Health Plan
AWP Average Wholesale Price
BWC Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation
CCN Community Care Network
CF Conversion Factor
CHIN Community Health Information Network
COB Coordination of Benefits
CON Certificate of Need
CPR Computer-Based Patient Record
CPT Current Procedural Terminology
DME Durable Medical Equipment
DRGs Diagnosis Related Groups
ECF Extended Care Facility
EOB Explanation of Benefits
EOC Evidence or Explanation of Coverage
EPO Exclusive Provider Organization
EPSDT Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment
ERISA Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
HCFA 1500 Health Care Finance Administration's form 1500
HEDIS Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set
HHS The Department of Health and Human Services
HMO Health Maintenance Organization
HPP Health Partnership Program
IBNR Incurred But Not Reported
ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification
IPA (1) Independent Practice Association
IPA (2) Individual Practice Association
MCE Medical Care Evaluation Studies
MET Multiple Employer Trust
MLR Medical Loss Ratio
MSO (1) Management or Medical Services Organization
MSO (2) Medical Staff Organization
NCQA National Committee for Quality Assurance
PCP Primary Care Provider
PHO Physician-Hospital Organization
PMPM Per Member Per Month
POS Point-of-Service Plan
PPO Preferred Provider Organization
PPS Prospective Payment System
PSRO Professional Standards Review Organization
PTMPY Per Thousand Members Per Year
QA Quality Assurance
QHP Qualified Health Plan
RBRVS Resource-Based Relative Value Scale
R.N.'s Registered Nurses
TPA Third Party Administrator
UB-92 Uniform Bill 1992
UCR Usual, Customary, and Reasonable
UR Utilization Review
Access
The patient's ability to obtain medical care. The ease of access
is determined by such components as the availability of medical
services and their acceptability to the patient, the location
of health care facilities, transportation, hours of operation
and cost of care.
Accountable Health Plan (AHP)
A joint venture between practitioners and institutions (insurance
companies, HMO's, or hospitals) that would assume responsibility
for delivering medical care. Physicians and other providers would
either work for or contract with these health plans. As IDSs form
and demonstrate their ability to managed capitated care, they
begin to struggle with issues of ownership or alliance partnerships
with health maintenance organizations (HMOs), insurance companies,
or other financing entities. An Accountable Healthcare System
describes an IDS with a financing component. When an IDS operates
one or more health insurance benefit products, or a managed care
organization acquires a large scale medical delivery component,
it qualifies as an Accountable Health System or Accountable Health
Plan. In the 1994 debate on healthcare reform, the proposed system
of managed competition provided for an Accountable Health Plan
that would have combined delivery and financing, and assumed
accountability for patient care.
Actuarial
Refers to the statistical calculations used to determine the managed
care company's rates and premiums charged their customers based
on projections of utilization and cost for a defined population.
Actuary
A person who determines insurance policy rates, reserves and dividends,
as well as conducts various other statistical studies. You don't
develop capitated rates, or agree to a capitated contract without
one of these working for you in some capacity.
Acute Care
A pattern of health care in which a patient is treated for an
acute (immediate and severe) episode of illness, for the subsequent
treatment of injuries related to an accident or other trauma,
or during recovery from surgery. Acute care is usually given in
a hospital by specialized personnel using complex and sophisticated
technical equipment and materials. Unlike chronic care, acute
care is often necessary for only a short time.
Adjudication
Processing claims according to contract.
Adjusted Average Per Capita Cost (AAPCC)
HCFA's best estimate of the amount of money care costs for Medicare
recipients under fee-for-service Medicare in a given area. The
AAPCC is made up of 122 different rate cells; 120 of them are
factored for age, sex, Medicaid eligibility, institutional status,
and whether a person has both part A and part B of Medicare.
Administrative Costs
Costs related to utilization review, insurance marketing, medical
underwriting, agents' commissions, premium collection, claims
processing, insurer profit, quality assurance programs, and risk
management.
Administrative Services Organization (ASO)
A contract between an insurance company and a self-funded plan
where the insurance company performs administrative services only
and the self-funded entity assumes all risk.
Admission Certification
A method of assuring that only those patients who need hospital
care are admitted. Certification can be granted before admission
(preadmission) or shortly after (concurrent). Length-of-stay for
the patient's diagnosed problem is usually assigned upon admission
under a certification program.
Admissions Per 1,000
An indicator calculated by taking the total number of inpatient
and/or outpatient admissions from a specific group, e.g., employer
group, HMO population at risk, for a specific period of time (usually
one year), dividing it by the average number of covered members
in that group during the same period, and multiplying the result
by 1,000. This indicator can be calculated for behavioral health
or any disease in the aggregate and by modality of treatment,
e.g., inpatient, residential, and partial hospitalization, etc.
Adverse Selection
One of the following:
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR)
The agency of the Public Health Service responsible for enhancing
the quality, appropriateness, and effectiveness of health care
services.
Allowed Amount
Maximum dollar amount assigned for a procedure based on various
pricing mechanisms. Also known as a maximum allowable.
Ambulatory Care
Health services provided without the patient being admitted (on an
outpatient basis). No overnight stay in a hospital is required. The
services of ambulatory care centers, hospital outpatient departments,
physicians' offices and home health care services fall under this heading.
Ancillary Services
Professional charges for x-ray, laboratory tests, and other similar
patient services.
Anniversary Date
The beginning of an employer group's benefit year. The first day
of effective coverage as contained in the policy Group Application
and subsequent annual anniversaries of that date. An insured has
the option to transfer from an indemnity plan (which may have
maximum benefit levels) to an HMO.
Audit of Provider Treatment or Charges
A qualitative or quantitative review of services rendered or proposed
by a health provider. The review can be carried out in a number
of ways: a comparison of patient records and claim form information,
a patient questionnaire, a review of hospital and practitioner
records, or a pre- or post-treatment clinical examination of a
patient. Some audits may involve fee verification. Something we
had better get used to being subjected to since this is usually
first type or "first generation" managed care approach.
Average Wholesale Price (AWP)
Commonly used in pharmacy contracting, the AWP is generally determined
through reference to a common source of information.
Balance Billing
The practice of billing a patient for the fee amount remaining
after insurer payment and co-payment have been made.
Base Year Costs
In Medicare, the amount a hospital actually spent to render care
in a previous time period. Depending on the hospital's Medicare
cost reporting period, the base year was the fiscal year ending
on or after September 30, 1982 and before September 30, 1983 for
hospitals in operation at that time.
Beneficiary (Also eligible; enrollee; member)
Any person eligible as either a subscriber or a dependent for
a managed care service in accordance with a contract.
Benefit Limitations
Any provision, other than an exclusion, which restricts coverage
in the Evidence of Coverage, regardless of medical necessity
Benefit Package
The services a payer offers to a group or individual.
Benefit Payment Schedule
List of amounts an insurance plan will pay for covered health
care services.
Benefits
Benefits are specific areas of Plan coverage's, i.e., outpatient
visits, hospitalization and so forth, that make up the range of
medical services that a payer markets to its subscribers. Also,
a contractual agreement, specified in an Evidence of Coverage,
determining covered services provided by insurers to members.
Board Certified (Boarded, Diplomate)
Describes a physician who has passed a written and oral examination
given by a medical specialty board and who has been certified
as a specialist in that area.
Board Eligible
Describes a physician who is eligible to take the specialty board
examination by virtue of being graduated from an approved medical
school, completing a specific type and length of training, and
practicing for a specified amount of time. Some HMOs and other
health facilities accept board eligibility as equivalent to board
certification, significant in that many managed care companies
restrict referrals to physicians without certification.
Capitation
One of the following:
Carrier
An insurer; an underwriter of risk.
Carve-Outs
A payer strategy in which a payer separates ("carves-out")
a portion of the benefit and hires an MCO to provide these benefits.
This permits the payer to create a health benefits package, get
to market quicker with such a package, and greater control of
their costs. Many HMOs and insurance companies adopt this strategy
because they do not have in-house expertise related to the service
"carved out."
Case Management
The process by which all health-related matters of a case are
managed by a physician or nurse or designated health professional.
Physician case managers coordinate designated components of health
care, such as appropriate referral to consultants, specialists,
hospitals, ancillary providers and services. Case management is
intended to ensure continuity of services and accessibility to
overcome rigidity, fragmented services, and the misutilization
of facilities and resources. It also attempts to match the appropriate
intensity of services with the patient's needs over time.
The types of inpatients a hospital or post acute facility treats. The more complex the patients' needs, the greater the amount spent for patient care.
Case Mix Index
A measure of the relative costliness of treating in an inpatient
setting. An index of 1.05 means that the facility's patients are
5 % more costly than average.
Case Rate
Flat fee paid for a client's treatment based on their diagnosis
and/or presenting problem. For this fee the provider covers all
of the services the client requires for a specific period of time.
Also bundled rate, or Flat Fee-Per-Case. Very often used as an
intervening step prior to capitation. In this model, the provider
is accepting some significant risk, but does have considerable
flexibility in how it meets the client's needs. Keys to success
in this mode: (1) properly pricing case rate, if provider has
control over it, and (2) securing a large volume of eligible clients.
Certificate of Need (CON)
A state agency must review and approve certain proposed capital
expenditures, changes in health services provided, and purchases
of expensive medical equipment. Before the request goes to the
state, a local review panel (the health systems agency or HSA)
must evaluate the proposal and make a recommendation.
Chronic Care
Long term care of individuals with long standing, persistent diseases
or conditions. It includes care specific to the problem as well
as other measures to encourage self-care, to promote health, and
to prevent loss of function.
Claims Review
The method by which an enrollee's health care service claims are
reviewed prior to reimbursement. The purpose is to validate the
medical necessity of the provided services and to be sure the
cost of the service is not excessive.
Clinical Data Repository
That component of a computer-based patient record (CPR) which
accepts, files, and stores clinical data over time from a variety
of supplemental treatment and intervention systems for such purposes
as practice guidelines, outcomes management, and clinical research.
May also be called a data warehouse.
Clinical Decision Support
The capability of a data system to provide key data to physicians
and other clinicians in response to "flags" or triggers
which are functions of embedded, provider-created rules. A system
that would alert case managers that a client's eligibility for
a certain service is about to be exhausted would be one example
of this type of capacity. Also a key functional requirement to
support clinical or critical pathways.
Clinical or Critical Pathways
A "map" of preferred treatment/intervention activities.
Outlines the types of information needed to make decisions, the
timelines for applying that information, and what action needs
to be taken by whom. Provides a way to monitor care "in real
time." These pathways are developed by clinicians for specific
diseases or events. Proactive providers are working now to develop
these pathways for the majority of their interventions and developing
the software capacity to distribute and store this information.
Closed Panel
Medical services are delivered in the HMO-owned health center
or satellite clinic by physicians who belong to a specially formed,
but legally separate, medical group that only serves the HMO.
This term usually refers to a group or staff HMO models.
Coinsurance
A cost-sharing requirement under a health insurance policy which
provides that the insured will assume a portion or percentage of the
costs of covered services according to a specified ratio. After the
deductible is paid, this provision forces the subscriber to pay for
a certain percentage of any remaining medical bills, usually 20 percent.
Community Care Network (CCN)
This vehicle provides coordinated, organized, and comprehensive
care to a community's population. Hospitals, primary care physicians,
and specialists link preventive and treatment services through
contractual and financial arrangements, producing a network which
provides coordinated care with continuous monitoring of quality
and accountability to the public. While the term, Community Care
Network (CCN), often is used interchangeably with Integrated Delivery
System (IDS), the CCN tends to be community based and non-profit.
Community Health Information Network (CHIN)
An integrated collection of computer and telecommunication capabilities
that permit multiple providers, payers, employers, and related
healthcare entities within a geographic area to share and communicate
client, clinical, and payment information. Also known as community
health management information system.
Community Rating
Under the HMO Act, community rating is defined as a system of
fixing rates of payment for health services which may be determined
on a per person or per family basis and may vary with the number
of persons in a family, but must be equivalent for all individuals
and for all families of similar composition. With community rating,
premiums do not vary for different groups of subscribers or with
such variables as the group's claims experience, age, sex or health
status. Although there are certain exceptions, in general,
federally-qualified HMOs must community rate. The intent of community
rating is to spread the cost of illness evenly over all subscribers
rather than charging the sick more than the healthy for coverage.
Comorbid Condition
A medical condition that, along with the principal diagnosis,
exists at admission and is expected to increase hospital length
of stay by at least one day for most patients.
Complication
A medical condition that arises during a course of treatment and
is expected to increase the length of stay by at least one day
for most patients.
Comprehensive Major Medical Insurance
A policy designed to provide the protection offered by both a
basic and major medical health insurance policy. It is generally
characterized by a low deductible, a co-insurance feature, and
high maximum benefits.
Computer-Based Patient Record (CPR)
A term for the process of replacing the traditional paper-based
chart through automated electronic means; generally includes the
collection of patient-specific information from various supplemental
treatment systems, i.e., a day program and a personal care provider;
its display in graphical format; and its storage for individual
and aggregate purposes. Also called Electronic Medical Record,
On-Line Medical Record, Paperless Patient Chart.
Concurrent Review
Review of a procedure or hospital admission done by a health care
professional (usually a nurse) other than the one providing the
care.
Consumer Health Alliance
Regional cooperatives between government and the public that will
oversee the new payment system. Once all health insurance purchasing
cooperatives (HIPPC's), the alliance would make sure health plans
within a region conformed to federal coverage and quality standards,
and oversee costs within any mandated budget.
Continued Stay Review
A review conducted by an internal or external auditor to determine
if the current place of service is still the most appropriate
to provide the level of care required by the client.
Contract
A legal agreement between a payer and a subscribing group or individual
which specifies rates, performance covenants, the relationship
among the parties, schedule of benefits and other pertinent conditions.
The contract usually is limited to a 12-month period and is subject
to renewal thereafter. Contracts are not required by statute or
regulation, and less formal agreements may be made.
Contract Year
A period of twelve (12) consecutive months, commencing with each
Anniversary Date. May or may not coincide with a calendar year.
Contract Provider
Any hospital, skilled nursing facility, extended care facility,
individual, organization, or agency licensed that has a contractual
arrangement with an insurer for the provision of services under
an insurance contract.
Conversion
In group health insurance, the opportunity given the insured and
any covered dependents to change his or her group insurance to
some form of individual insurance, without medical evaluation
upon termination of his group insurance.
Conversion Factor (CF)
The dollar amount used to multiply the Relative Value Schedule
(RVS) of a procedure to arrive at the maximum allowable for that
procedure.
Conversion Privilege
The right of an individual insured under a group policy to certain
kinds of individual coverage, without a medical examination, upon
termination of his association with the group.
Coordination of Benefits (COB)
Provisions and procedures used by third-party payers to determine the
amount payable to each payer when a claimant is covered under two or
more group health plans.
Co-Payment
A cost-sharing arrangement in which the HMO enrollee pays a specified
flat amount for a specific service (such as $10.00 for an office
visit or $7.00 for each prescription drug) with the third party payer
reimbursing some portion of remaining charges. The amount paid must
be nominal to avoid becoming a barrier to care. It does not vary
with the cost of the service, unlike co-insurance which is based
on some percentage of cost.
Cost Outlier
In Medicare, a patient who is more costly to treat compared with
other patients in a particular diagnosis related group.
Cost Sharing
The general set of financing arrangements whereby the consumer
must pay out-of-pocket to receive care, either at the time of
initiating care, or during the provision of health care services,
or both. Cost sharing can also occur when an insured pays a portion
of the monthly premium for health care insurance.
Cost Shifting
Charging one group of patients more in order to make up for underpayment
by others. Most commonly, charging some privately insured patients
more in order to make up for underpayment by Medicaid or Medicare.
Covered Benefit
A medically necessary service that is specifically provided for
under the provisions of an Evidence of Coverage. A covered benefit
must always be medically necessary, but not every medically necessary
service is a covered benefit. For example, some elements of custodial
or maintenance care, which are excluded from coverage, may be
medically necessary, but are not covered.
Coverage
Health care services provided or authorized by the payer's Medical
Staff or payment for health care services.
Credentialling
The process of reviewing a practitioners credentials, i.e., training,
experience, or demonstrated ability, for the purpose of determining
if criteria for clinical privileging are met.
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT)
A standardized mechanism of reporting services using numeric codes
as established and updated annually by the AMA.
Days or Visits Per 1,000
An indicator calculated by taking the total number of days (for
inpatient, residential, or partial hospitalization) or visits
(for outpatient) received by a specific group for a specific period
of time (usually one year). This number is then divided by the
average number of covered members or lives in that group during
the same period and multiplied by 1,000. A measure used to evaluate
utilization management performance.
Day Outlier
A patient with an atypically long length of stay compared with
other patients in a particular diagnosis related group.
Deductible
The out-of-pocket expenses that must be borne by an insurance
subscriber before the insurer will begin reimbursing the subscriber
for additional expenses.
Dependent
In a payer's policy of insurance, a person other than the subscriber
eligible to receive care because of a subscriber's contract.
Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs)
A patient classification scheme used by Medicare and other insurers
that clusters patients into 468 categories on the basis of patients'
illnesses, diseases and medical problems. All Medicare inpatient hospital
operating costs are determined in advance and paid on a per-case basis,
according to fixed amount or weight established for each DRG.
Direct Contracting
Providing health services to members of a health plan by a group
of providers contracting directly with an employer, thereby butting
out the middleman or third party insurance carrier. This can be
provider heaven, since middleman-MCO-is cut out and provider gets
some portion of the money usually made by it. Key is to price
services correctly, since provider is usually at full risk in
this situation. Takes a strong IDS or AHP to pull this off.
Direct Payment Subscriber
A person enrolled in a prepayment plan who makes individual premium
payments directly to the plan rather than through a group. Rates
of payment are generally higher, and benefits may not be as extensive
as for the subscriber enrolled and paying as a member of the group.
Discounted Fee-For-Service
An agreed upon rate for service between the provider and payer
that is usually less than the provider's full fee. This may be
a fixed amount per service, or a percentage discount. Providers
generally accept such contracts because they represent a means
to increase their volume or reduce their chances of losing volume.
Disease Management
A type of product or service now being offered by many large pharmaceutical
companies to get them into broader healthcare services. Bundles
use of prescription drugs with physician and allied professionals,
linked to large databases created by the pharmaceutical companies,
to treat people with specific diseases. The claim is that this
type of service provides higher quality of care at more reasonable
price than alternative, presumably more fragmented, care. The
development of such products by hugely-capitalized companies should
be all the indicator necessary to convince a provider of how the
healthcare market is changing. Competition is coming from every
direction--other providers of all types, payers, employers (who
are developing their own in-house service systems), the drug companies.
Dual Choice (or Multiple Choice; Dual Option)
The opportunity for an individual within an employed group to
choose from two or more types of health care coverage such as
an HMO and a traditional insurance plan. Section 1310 of the HMO
Act provides for dual choice.
Durable Medical Equipment (DME)
Items of medical equipment owned or rented which are placed in
the home of an insured to facilitate treatment and/or rehabilitation.
DME generally consist of items which can withstand repeated use.
DME is primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose
and is usually not useful to a person in the absence of illness
or injury.
Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment (EPSDT)
A program which covers screening and diagnostic services to determine
physical or mental defects in recipients under age 21, as well
as health care and other measures to correct or ameliorate any
defects and chronic conditions discovered.
Effective Date
The date on which a policy's coverage of a risk goes into effect.
Emergency
Sudden unexpected onset of illness or injury which requires the
immediate care and attention of a qualified physician, and which,
if not treated immediately, would jeopardize or impair the health
of the Member, as determined by the payer's Medical Staff. Significant
in that Emergency may be the only acceptable reason for admission
without pre-certification.
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)
Also called the Pension Reform Act, this act regulates the majority
of private pension and welfare group benefit plans in the United States.
It sets forth requirements governing, among many areas, participation,
crediting of service, vesting, communication and disclosure, funding,
and fiduciary conduct. Key legislative battleground now, because
ERISA exempts most large self-funded plans from State regulation
and, hence, from any reform activities undertaken at state level --
which is now the arena for much healthcare reform.
Enrolled Group
Persons with the same employer or with membership in an organization
in common, who are enrolled collectively in a health plan. Often,
there are stipulations regarding the minimum size of the group
and the minimum percentage of the group that must enroll before
the coverage is available. Same as Contract group.
Enrollee (or Beneficiary; Individual; Member)
Any person eligible as either a subscriber or a dependent for
service in accordance with a contract.
Evidence or Explanation of Coverage (EOC)
A booklet provided by the carrier to the insured summarizing benefits
under an insurance plan.
Exclusions
Clauses in an insurance contract that deny coverage for select
individuals, groups, locations, properties or risks.
Exclusive Provider Organization (EPO)
A managed care organization that is organized similarly to PPOs
in that physicians do not receive capitated payments, but that
only allows patients to choose medical care from network providers.
If a patient elects to seek care outside of the network, then
he or she will not be reimbursed for the cost of the treatment.
Exclusivity Clause
A part of a contract which prohibits physicians from contracting
with more than one managed care organization (HMO, PPO, IPA, etc.)
Expansion
Some HMOs compute Plan expansion as part of the capitation rate
in order to provide the necessary capital for growth.
Experience Rating
One of the following:
Experience-Rated Premium
A premium with is based upon the anticipated claims experience
of, or utilization of service by, a contract group according to
its age, sex, constitution, and any other attributes expected
to affect its health service utilization, and which is subject
to periodic adjustment in line with actual claims or utilization
experience.
Explanation of Benefits (EOB)
A summary of benefits provided subscribers by the carrier.
Extended Care Facility (ECF)
A nursing or convalescent home offering skilled nursing care and
rehabilitation services.
Federally Qualified HMOs
HMOs that meet certain federally stipulated provisions aimed at
protecting consumers, e.g., providing a broad range of basic health
services, assuring financial solvency, and monitoring the quality of
care. HMOs must apply to the federal government for qualification.
The process is administered by the Health Care Financing
Administration (HCFA), Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS).
A federally-qualified HMO is eligible for loans and loan guarantees not
available to non-qualified plans. Employers of 25 or more workers were,
until recently, required to offer a federally-qualified HMO if the
plan requested to be included in the company's health benefits program.
Fee Disclosure
Physicians and caregivers discussing their charges with patients
prior to treatment.
Fee-For-Service
One of the following:
Fee Schedule
A listing of accepted fees or established allowances for specified
medical procedures. As used in medical care plans, it usually
represents the maximum amounts the program will pay for the specified
procedures.
First-Dollar Coverage
Insurance coverage with no front-end deductible where coverage
begins with the first dollar of expense incurred by the insured
for any covered benefit.
Fiscal Intermediary
The agent (e.g., Blue Cross) that has contracted with providers
of service to process claims for reimbursement under health care
coverage. In addition to handling financial matters, it may perform
other functions such as providing consultative services or serving
as a center for communication with providers and making audits
of providers' needs.
Fixed Costs
Costs which do not change with fluctuations in census or in utilization
of services.
Flat Fee-Per-Case
Flat fee paid for a client's treatment based on their diagnosis
and/or presenting problem. For this fee the provider covers all
of the services the client requires for a specific period of time.
Often characterizes "second generation" managed care
systems. After the MCOs squeeze out costs by discounting fees,
they often come to this method. If provider is still standing
after discount blitz, this approach can be good for provider and
clients, since it permits a lot of flexibility for provider in
meeting client needs.
Formulary
A list of selected pharmaceuticals and their appropriate dosages
felt to be the most useful and cost effective for patient care.
Organizations often develop a formulary under the aegis of a pharmacy
and therapeutics committee. In HMOs, physicians are often required
to prescribe from the formulary.
Gatekeeper
A primary care physician responsible for overseeing and coordinating
all aspects of a patient's medical care. In order for a patient
to receive a specialty care referral or hospital admission, the
gatekeeper must preauthorize the visit, unless there is an emergency.
Grievance Procedures
The process by which an insured can air complaints and seek remedies.
Gross Charges Per 1,000
An indicator calculated by taking the gross charges incurred by
a specific group for a specific period of time, dividing it by
the average number of covered members or lives in that group during
the same period, and multiplying the result by 1,000. This is
calculated in the aggregate and by modality of treatment, e.g.,
inpatient, residential, partial hospitalization, and outpatient.
A measure used to evaluate utilization management performance.
Gross Costs Per 1,000
An indicator calculated by taking the gross costs incurred for
services received by a specific group for a specific period of
time, dividing it by the average number of covered members or
lives in that group during the same period, and multiplying the
result by 1,000. This is calculated in the aggregate and by modality
of treatment, e.g. inpatient, residential, partial hospitalization,
and outpatient. A measure used to evaluate utilization management
performance. This is the key concept for the provider. What matters
is our cost and, in managed care, we must control this indicator
and make sure it is below our Collections per 1,000.
Group Insurance
Any insurance policy or health services contract by which groups
of employees (and often their dependents) are covered under a
single policy or contract, issued by their employer or other group
entity.
Group Model HMO
One of the following:
Group Practice
A group of persons licensed to practice medicine in the State,
who, as their principal professional activity, and as a group
responsibility, engage or undertake to engage in the coordinated
practice of their profession primarily in one or more group practice
facilities, and who (in their connection) share common overhead
expenses (if and to the extent such expenses are paid by members
of the group), medical and other records, and substantial portions
of the equipment and the professional, technical, and administrative
staffs.
Group Practice without Walls
Similar to an independent practice association, this type of physician
group represents a legal and formal entity where certain services
are provided to each physician by the entity, and the physician
continues to practice in his/her own facility. It can include
marketing, billing and collection, staffing, management, and the
like.
HCFA 1500
The Health Care Finance Administration's standard form for submitting
physician service claims to third party (insurance) companies.
Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)
HMOs offer prepaid, comprehensive health coverage for both hospital
and physician services. An HMO contracts with health care providers,
e.g., physicians, hospitals, and other health professionals, and
members are required to use participating providers for all health
services. Members are enrolled for a specified period of time.
Model types include staff, group practice, network and IPA (for
additional information, see staff, group, network and IPA model
definitions).
Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS)
A set of performance measures designed to standardize the way
health plans report data to employers. HEDIS currently measures
five major areas of health plan performance: quality, access and
patient satisfaction, membership and utilization, finance, and
descriptive information on health plan management.
Health and Human Services, The Department of (HHS)
The Department of Health and Human Services which is responsible
for health-related programs and issues. Formerly HEW, the Department
of Health, Education, and Welfare. The Office of Health Maintenance
Organizations (OHMO) is part of HHS and detailed information on
most companies is available here through the Freedom of Information
Act.
Health Partnership Program (HPP)
Health Partnership Program, administered by the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation, is the new medical managed care for State Insurance
Fund employers designed to provide quality medical care for Ohio's
injured workers.
Hold Harmless Clause
A clause frequently found in managed care contracts whereby the
HMO and the physician hold each other not liable for malpractice
or corporate malfeasance if either of the parties is found to
be liable. Many insurance carriers exclude this type of liability
from coverage. It may also refer to language that prohibits the
provider from billing patients if their managed care company becomes
insolvent. State and federal regulations may require this language.
Home Health Care
Full range of medical and other health related services such as
physical therapy, nursing, counseling, and social services that
are delivered in the home of a patient, by a provider.
Hospital
Any institution duly licensed, certified, and operated as a Hospital.
In no event shall the term "Hospital" include a convalescent
facility, nursing home, or any institution or part thereof which
is used principally as a convalescence facility, rest facility,
nursing facility, or facility for the aged.
Hospital Affiliation
A contractual agreement between an HMO and one or more hospitals
whereby the hospital provides the inpatient benefits offered by
the HMO.
Hospital Audit Companies
Retrospective audit providers that typically achieve a 15-20 percent
savings of billed claims.
Hospital Days Per 1,000
A measurement of the number of days of hospital care HMO members
use in a year. It is calculated as follows: Total Number Of Days
Spent In A Hospital By Members divided by Total Members. This
information is available through HHS, OHMO and a variety of sources.
Incurred But Not Reported (IBNR)
Refers to claims which reflect services already delivered, but,
for whatever reason, have not yet been reimbursed. These are bills
"in the pipeline." This is a crucial concept for proactive
providers who are beginning to explore arrangements that put them
in the role of adjudicating claims--as the result, perhaps, of
operating in a sub-capitated system (see below). Failure to account
for these potential claims could lead to some very bad decisions.
Good administrative operations have fairly sophisticated mathematical
models to estimate this amount at any given time.
Indemnify
To make good a loss.
Indemnity Carrier
Usually an insurance company or insurance group that provides
marketing, management, claims payment and review, and agrees to
assume risk for its subscribers at some pre-determined rate.
Indemnity Plan or Indemnity Health Insurance
A plan which reimburses physicians for services performed, or
beneficiaries for medical expenses incurred. Such plans are contrasted
with group health plans, which provide service benefits through
group medical practice.
Independent Practice Association (IPA)
A health maintenance organization delivery model in which the HMO
contracts with a physician organization, which, in turn, contracts with
individual physicians. The IPA physicians practice in their own offices
and continue to see fee-for-service patients. The HMO reimburses the
IPA on a capitated basis; however, the IPA usually reimburses the
physicians on a fee-for-service basis. This type of system combines
prepayment with the traditional means of delivering health care.
Individual Plans
A type of insurance plan for individuals and their dependents
who are not eligible for coverage through an employer group (group
coverage).
Individual Practice Association (IPA)
An HMO model in which the HMO contracts with a physician organization
that in turn contracts with individual physicians. The IPA physicians
provide care to HMO members from their private offices and continue
to see their fee-for-service patients.
Inpatient Care
Care given a registered bed patient in a hospital, nursing home
or other medical or post acute institution.
Inpatient Services
Inpatient hospital services are items and services furnished to an
inpatient of a hospital by the hospital; including bed and board,
nursing and related services, diagnostic and therapeutic services,
and medical or surgical services.
Internal Medicine
Generally, that branch of medicine that is concerned with diseases
that do not require surgery, specifically, the study and treatment
of internal organs and body systems; it encompasses many subspecialties;
internists, the doctors who practice internal medicine, often
serve as family physicians to supervise general medical care.
International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM)
A coding scheme used to document the incidence of disease, injury,
mortality and illness.
No entries at this time.
No entries at this time.
No entries at this time.
Major Medical Expense Insurance
Policies designed to help offset the heavy medical expenses resulting
from catastrophic or prolonged illness or injury. They generally
provide benefits payments for 75 to 80 percent of most types of
medical expenses above a deductible paid by the insured.
Malpractice Insurance
Insurance against the risk of suffering financial damage due to
professional misconduct or lack of ordinary skill. Malpractice
requires that the patient prove some injury and that the injury
was the result of negligence on the part of the professional.
Managed Care
A general term for organizing doctors, hospitals, and other providers
into groups in order to enhance the quality and cost-effectiveness
of health care. Managed Care Organizations include HMOs, PPOs,
POSs, EPOs, etc.
Managed Competition
A health insurance system that bands together employers, labor
groups and others to create insurance purchasing groups; employers
and other collective purchasers would make a specified contribution
toward insurance purchase for the individuals in their group;
the employer's set contribution acts as an incentive for insurers
and providers to compete.
Management or Medical Services Organization (MSO)
An entity formed by, for example, a hospital, a group of physicians
or an independent entity, to provide business-related services such
as marketing and data collection to a grouping of providers like an
IPA, PHO or CWW. This second definition is becoming the almost
exclusive usage.
Market Area
The targeted geographic area or areas of greatest market potential.
The market area does not have to be the same as the post acute
facility's catchment area.
Market Share
That part of the market potential that a managed care company has
captured; usually market share is expressed as a percentage of the
market potential.
Master Patient or Member Index
An index or file with a unique identifier for each patient or
member that serves as a key to a patient's or member's health
record.
Medical Allied Manpower
This category includes some sixty occupations or specialties that
can be divided into two large categories based on time required
for occupational training. The first category includes those occupations
that require at least a baccalaureate degree, for example, clinical
laboratory scientists and technologists, dietitians and nutritionists,
health educators, medical record librarians, and occupational
speech and rehabilitation therapists. The second group includes
those occupations that require less than a baccalaureate degree,
such as aides for each of the above categories as well as physician
assistants and radiological technicians.
Medical Care Evaluation Studies (MCE)
The name given to a generic form of health care review in which
problems in the quality of the delivery and organization of health
care services are addressed and monitored. A program based on
Mk--Es is recommended as a way of meeting the federal government's
requirements for an internal quality assurance program for federally-qualified
HMOs.
Medical Group Practice
Provision of health care services by a group of at least three
licensed physicians engaged in a formally organized and legally
recognized entity sharing equipment, facilities, common records
and personnel involved in both patient care and business management.
Medically Necessary
Services or supplies which meet the following tests:
Medical Loss Ratio (MLR)
The amount of revenues from health insurance premiums that is
spent to pay for the medical services covered by the plan. Usually
referred to by a ratio, such as 0.96--which means that 96% of
premiums were spent on purchasing medical services. The goal is
to keep this ratio below 1.00--preferably in the 0.80 range, since
the MCO's or insurance company's profit comes from premiums. Currently,
successful HMOs do have MLRs in the 0.70-0.80 range.
Medical Staff Organization (MSO)
An organized group of physicians, usually from one hospital, into an
entity able to contract with others for the provision of services.
Medicaid
A federal program, run and partially funded by individual states
to provide medical benefits to certain low income people. The
state, under broad federal guidelines, determines what benefits
are covered, who is eligible and how much providers will be paid.
All states but Arizona have Medicaid programs.
Medicare
A nationwide, federal health insurance program for people age
65 and older. It also covers certain people under 65 who are disabled
or have chronic kidney disease. Medicare Part A is the hospital
insurance program; Part B covers physicians' services.
Medigap
Private health insurance plans that supplement Medicare benefits
by covering some costs not paid for by Medicare.
Midlevel Practitioner
Nurse practitioners, certified nurse-midwives and physicians'
assistants who have been trained to provide medical services that
otherwise might be performed by a physician. Midlevel practitioners
practice under the supervision of a doctor of medicine or osteopathy
who takes responsibility for the care they provide. Physician
extender is another term for these personnel.
Miscellaneous Expenses
Hospital charges, other than room and board, such as those for
x-rays, drugs, laboratory fees, and other ancillary services.
Multiple Employer Trust (MET)
A legal trust established by a plan sponsor that brings together
a number of small, unrelated employers for the purpose of providing
group medical coverage on an insured or self-funded basis. Not
quite a Health Plan Purchasing Cooperative, but along the same
lines. More market-oriented and usually smaller in scale.
Multi-Specialty Group
A group of doctors who represent various medical specialties and
who work together in a group practice.
National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA)
A non-profit organization created to improve patient care quality
and health plan performance in partnership with managed care plans,
purchasers, consumers, and the public sector.
Network Model HMO
A health plan that contracts with multiple physician groups to
deliver health care to members. Generally limited to large single
or multi-specialty groups. Distinguished from group model plans
that contract with a single medical group, IPA's that contract
through an intermediary, and direct contract model plans that
contract with individual physicians in the community. This type
may include a few solo practices, but is primarily organized
around groups.
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (Neo ICU)
A hospital unit with special equipment for the care of premature
and seriously ill newborn infants.
Non-Plan Provider
A health care provider without a contract with an insurer. Similar
to a nonparticipating provider under Medicare.
Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC)
The Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation has provided
injured workers, or their families, with medical and wage-loss
compensation for work-related injuries, diseases and deaths since
1913. BWC has a central office in Columbus and service offices
located statewide. Ohio's workers' compensation system has the
largest exclusive state fund in the nation and is the second largest
underwriter of workers' compensation insurance in the country.
Open Enrollment
A period of time which eligible subscribers may elect to enroll
in, or transfer between, available programs providing health care
coverage.
Organized Care System
Often used to discuss a more evolved form of IDSs and CCNs, this
relatively new term describes the result of mergers and alliances
between and among physicians, health systems, and managed care
organizations. These systems often have the same performance imperatives
as IDSs and CCNs: improve health status, integrate delivery, demonstrate
value, improve efficiency of care delivery and prevention, and
meet patient and community needs.
Out-of-Area Benefits
The coverage allowed to HMO members for emergency situations outside
of the prescribed geographic area of the emergency situations outside
of the prescribed geographic area of the HMO.
Outcomes Management
A clinical outcome is the result of medical or surgical intervention
or nonintervention. It is thought that through a database of outcomes
experience, caregivers will know better which treatment modalities
result in consistently better outcomes for patients. Outcomes
management may lead to the development of clinical protocols.
Outlier Thresholds
The day and cost cutoff points that separate inlier patients from
outlier patients.
Outpatient Care
Care given a person who is not bedridden.
Outpatient Services
Outpatient services are medical and other services provided by a
hospital or other qualified facility, such as a mental health clinic,
rural health clinic, mobile X-ray unit, or free-standing dialysis unit.
Such services include outpatient physical therapy services, diagnostic
X-ray and laboratory tests.
Participating Physician
A primary care physician in practice in the payer's managed care
service area who has entered into a contract.
Participating Provider
A health care provider who participates through a contractual
arrangement with a health care service contractor, HMO, PPO, IPA or
other managed care organization.
Patient Liability
The dollar amount which an insured is legally obligated to pay
for services rendered by a provider.
PCP Capitation
A reimbursement system for healthcare providers of primary care
services who receive a pre-payment every month. The payment amount
is based on age, sex and plan of every member assigned to that
physician for that month. Specialty capitation plans also exist
but are little used.
Peer Review
A review by members of the profession "peers" regarding the quality
of care provided a patient, including documentation of care (medical
audit), diagnostic steps used, conclusions reached, therapy given,
appropriateness of utilization (utilization review), and reasonableness
of charges claims. The evaluation covers how well services are
performed by all health personnel and how appropriate the services
are to meet the patients' needs.
Performance Standards
Standards an individual provider is expected to meet, especially
with respect to quality of care. The standards may define volume
of care delivered per time period. Thus, performance standards
for obstetrician/gynecologist may specify some or all of the following
office hours and office visits per week or month, on-call days,
deliveries per year, gynecological operations per year, etc.
Per Member Per Month (PMPM)
Specifically applies to a revenue or cost for each enrolled member
each month.
Per Thousand Members Per Year (PTMPY)
A common way of reporting utilization. The most common example
of hospital utilization, expressed as days PTMPY.
Physician Attestation
The requirement that the attending physician certify, in writing,
the accuracy and completion of the clinical information used for
DRG assignment.
Physician Organization
This term describes physician linkages and alliances that allow
physicians to manage risk and capitation. Information systems,
physician relationships, and financial integration allow these
organizations to be more integrated than the traditional solo
practice or IPA relationship between healthcare providers and/or
managed care organizations that are working to develop a
"seamless" continuum of healthcare services.
Physician-Hospital Organization (PHO)
A contracted arrangement among physicians and hospital(s) wherein
a single entity, the PHO, agrees to provide services to insurers'
subscribers.
Plan Administration
A term often used to describe the management unit with responsibility
to run and control a managed care plan - includes accounting,
billing, personnel, marketing, legal, purchasing, possibly underwriting,
management information, facility maintenance, servicing of accounts.
This group normally contracts for medical services and hospital
care.
Point-of-Service Plan (POS)
Also known as an open-ended HMO, POS plans encourage, but do not
require, members to choose a primary care physician. As in traditional
HMOs, the primary care physician acts as a "gatekeeper"
when making referrals; plan members may, however, opt to visit
non-network providers at their discretion. Subscribers choosing
not to use the primary care physician must pay higher deductibles
and copays than those using network physicians.
Practical Nurses
Practical nurses, also known as vocational nurses, provide nursing
care and treatment of patients under the supervision of a licensed
physician or registered nurse. Licensure as a licensed practical
nurse (L.P.N.) or in California and Texas as a licensed vocational
nurse (L.V.N.), is required.
Practice Parameters
Strategies for patient management, developed to assist physicians
in clinical decision making. Practice parameters may also be
referred to as practice options, practice guidelines, practice
policies, or practice standards.
Preadmission Review
The practice of reviewing claims for inpatient admission prior
to the patient entering the hospital in order to assure that the
admission is medically necessary.
Preauthorization
A method of monitoring and controlling utilization by evaluating
the need for medical service prior to it being performed.
Pre-Certification
The process of notification and approval of elective inpatient
admission and identified outpatient services before the service
is rendered.
Predetermination
An administrative procedure whereby a health provider submits
a treatment plan to a third party before treatment is initiated.
The third party usually reviews the treatment plan, monitoring
one or more of the following: patient's eligibility, covered service,
amounts payable, application of appropriate deductibles, copayment
factors and maximums. Under some programs, for instance, predetermination
by the third party is required when covered charges are expected
to exceed a certain amount. Similar processes: pre-authorization,
pre-certification, pre-estimate of cost, pretreatment estimate,
prior authorization.
Pre-Existing Condition
One of the following:
Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)
One of the following:
Prepaid Group Practice
Prepaid Group Practice Plans involve multi-specialty associations
of physicians and other health professionals, who contract to
provide a wide range of preventive, diagnostic and treatment services
on a continuing basis for enrolled participants.
Prepayment
A method providing in advance for the cost of predetermined benefits
for a population group, through regular periodic payments in the
form of premiums, dues, or contributions, including those contributions
which are made to a Health and Welfare Fund by employers on behalf
of their employees.
Primary Care Provider (PCP)
A primary care provider such as a family practitioner, general
internist, pediatrician and sometimes an ob/gyn. Generally, a
PCP supervises, coordinates and provides medical care to members
of a plan. The PCP may initiate all referrals for specialty care.
Principal Diagnosis
The medical condition that is ultimately determined to have caused
a patient's admission to the hospital. The principal diagnosis
is used to assign every patient to a diagnosis related group.
This diagnosis may differ from the admitting and major diagnoses.
Profile
Aggregated data in formats that display patterns of health care
services over a defined period of time.
Profile Analysis
Review and analysis of profiles to identify and assess patterns
of health care services.
Prospective Payment System (PPS)
A payment method that establishes rates, prices or budgets before
services are rendered and costs are incurred. Providers retain
or absorb at least a portion of the difference between established
revenues and actual costs.
Primary Care
One of the following:
Primary Physician Capitation
The amount paid to each physician monthly for services based on
the age, sex and number of the Members selecting that physician.
Professional Standards Review Organization (PSRO)
A physician-sponsored organization charged with reviewing the
services provided patients who are covered by Medicare, Medicaid
and maternal and child health programs. The purpose of the review
is to determine if the services rendered are medically necessary;
provided in accordance with professional criteria, norms and standards;
and provided in the appropriate setting.
Purchaser
This entity not only pays the premium, but also controls the premium
dollar before paying it to the provider. Included in the category
of purchasers or payers are patients, businesses and managed care
organizations. While patients and businesses function as ultimate
purchasers, managed care organizations and insurance companies
serve a processing or payer function.
Qualified Health Plan (QHP)
A program created by the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation, which
gives Ohio's self-insuring employers the option to form their own health
plans to deliver medical services to injured employees.
Quality Assurance (QA)
Activities and programs intended to assure the quality of care
in a defined medical setting. Such programs include peer or utilization
review components to identify and remedy deficiencies in quality.
The program must have a mechanism for assessing its effectiveness
and may measure care against pre-established standards.
Referral Pool
An amount set aside to pay for non-capitated services provided
by a PCP, services provided by a referral specialist and/or emergency
services.
Referral Services
Medical Services arranged for by the physician and provided outside
the physician's office other than Hospital Services.
Registered Nurses (R.N.'s)
Registered nurses are responsible for carrying out the physician's
instructions. They supervise practical nurses and other auxiliary
personnel who perform routine care and treatment of patients.
Registered nurses provide nursing care to patients or perform
specialized duties in a variety of settings from hospital and
clinics to schools and public health departments. A license to
practice nursing is required in all states. For licensure as a
registered nurse (R.N.), an applicant must have graduated from
a school of nursing approved by the state board for nursing and
have passed a state board examination.
Reinsurance
One of the following:
Reserves
One of the following:
Resource-Based Relative Value Scale (RBRVS)
A Medicare weighting system to assign units of value to each CPT
code (procedure) performed by physicians and other providers.
The number of units or value for each procedure includes a portion
for physician skill, expenses associated with the procedure, and
geographic area.
Retrospective Review Process
A review that is conducted after services are provided to a patient.
The review focuses on determining the appropriateness, necessity,
quality, and reasonableness of health care services provided.
Becoming seen as least desirable method; supplanted by concurrent
reviews.
Risk
The chance or possibility of loss. For example, physicians may
be held at risk if hospitalization rates exceed agreed upon thresholds.
The sharing of risk is often employed as a utilization control
mechanism within the HMO setting. Risk is also defined in insurance
terms as the possibility of loss associated with a given population.
Risk Load
In underwriting, a factor that is multiplied into the rate to
offset some adverse parameter of the group.
Risk Pool
A pool of money that is to be used for defined expenses. Commonly,
if the money that is put at risk is not expended by the end of
the year, some or all of it is returned to those managing the risk.
Risk Sharing
A method by which medical insurance premiums are shared by plan
sponsors and participants. In contrast to traditional indemnity
plans in which insurance premiums belonged solely to insurance
company that assumed all risk of using these premiums. Key to
this approach is that the premiums are only payment providers
receive; provides powerful incentive to be parsimonious with care.
Self-Funding
The practice of an employer or organization assuming responsibility
for health care losses of its employees. This usually includes
setting up a fund against which claim payments are drawn and claims
processing is often handled through an administrative services
contract with an independent organization.
Self-Insured
The practice of an employer or organization assuming responsibility
for health care losses of its employees. This usually includes
setting up a fund against which claim payments are drawn and claims
processing is often handled through an administrative services
contract with an independent organization.
Shared Risk Pool for Referral Services
In capitation, the pool established for the purpose of sharing
the risk of costs for Referral Services among all Participating
Physicians.
Skilled Nursing Facility
A licensed institution, as defined by Medicare, which is primarily
engaged in the provision of skilled nursing care.
Staff Model HMO
A model in which the HMO hires its own physicians. Very much like
the group model, except the doctors are employees of the HMO.
Generally, all ambulatory health services are provided under one
roof in the staff model.
Stop Loss
That point at which a third party has reinsurance to protect
against the overly large single claim or the excessively high aggregate
claim during a given period of time. Large employers, who are
self-insured, may also purchase "reinsurance" for stop-loss purposes.
Stop Loss Insurance
Insuring with a third party against a risk which an MCO cannot
financially and totally manage. For example, a comprehensive prepaid
health plan can self-insure hospitalization costs with one or
more insurance carriers.
Sub-Capitation
An arrangement that exists when an organization being paid under
a capitated system contracts with other providers on a capitated
basis, sharing a portion of the original capitated premium. Can
be done under Carve Out, with the providers being paid on a PMPM
basis.
Subrogation
The recovery of the cost of services and benefits provided to
the insured of one MCO which other parties are liable.
Tertiary Care
One of the following:
Third Party Administrator (TPA)
One of the following:
Third-Party Payment
One of the following:
Total Budget
Otherwise known as a "global" budget, a cap on overall
health spending.
Transfer
Movement of a patient between hospitals or between units in a
given hospital. n Medicare, a full DRG rate is paid only for transferred
patients that are defined as discharged.
Treatment Episode
The period of treatment between admission and discharge from a
modality, e.g., inpatient, residential, partial hospitalization,
and outpatient. Many healthcare statistics and profiles use this
unit as a base for comparisons.
Uniform Bill 1992 (UB-92)
Bill form used to submit hospital insurance claims for payment
by third parties. Similar to HCFA 1500, but reserved for the inpatient
component of health services.
Underwriting
One of the following:
Urgent Services
Benefits covered in an Evidence of Coverage that are required
in order to prevent serious deterioration of an insured's health
that results from an unforeseen illness or injury.
Usual, Customary, and Reasonable (UCR)
Health insurance plans that pay a physician's full charge if it
is reasonable and does not exceed his or her usual charges and
the amount customarily charged for the service by other physicians
in the area.
Utilization
Use of services. Utilization is commonly examined in terms of
patterns or rates of use of a single service or type of service
such as hospital care, physician visits, prescription drugs. Measurement
of utilization of all medical services in combination is usually
done in terms of dollar expenditures. Use is expressed in rates
per unit of population at risk for a given period such as the
number of admissions to the hospital per 1,000 persons over age
65 per year, or the number of visits to a physician per person
per year for an annual physical.
Utilization Review (UR)
Also known as utilization management or utilization control,
utilization review is a systematic means for reviewing and
controlling patients' use of medical care services as well as the
appropriateness and quality of that care. Usually involves data
collection, review and/or authorization, especially for services
such as specialist referrals, emergency room use, and hospitalization.
No entries at this time.
Waiting Periods
The length of time an individual must wait to become eligible
for benefits for a specific condition after overall coverage has
begun.
Wellness
Preventive medicine associated with lifestyle and preventive care
that can reduce health-care utilization and costs.
Withhold
That portion of the monthly capitation payment to physicians
withheld by an HMO to create an incentive for efficient care. A
physician who exceeds utilization norms does not receive the withheld
amount. This system serves as a financial incentive for lower
utilization. The withhold can cover all services or be specific to
hospital care, laboratory usage, or specialty referrals.
Withhold Pool
The amount withheld from a PCP's capitation payment or a specialists
payment amount to cover excess expenditures of his or a groups
referral or other pool.
Workers' Compensation
A state-mandated program providing insurance coverage for work-related
injuries and disabilities.
No entries at this time.
No entries at this time.
No entries at this time.
http://www.careworks.com
Copyright © 1998 CareWorks. All rights reserved.