After physicians and other healthcare professionals (referred to herein generally as “healthcare providers”) provide healthcare services to patients, bills for such services must be generated. The process of generating such bills can be a tedious, time-consuming, risky, and error-prone process for a variety of reasons, such as:
For these and other reasons, what is needed are improved techniques for enabling users to generate bills quickly and accurately, while reducing the amount of expertise required by such users.
A computer system generates an initial set of billing codes based on one or more documents (e.g., a clinical note) representing a patient encounter, such as clinical notes created by a physician. The system expands the initial set of billing codes based on a billing code standard to create an expanded set of billing codes for consideration by the physician. The system provides output representing the expanded billing code set to the physician. The physician selects one or more billing codes from the expanded billing code set for inclusion in a final billing code set for use in a bill for the services provided in the patient encounter.
Other features and advantages of various aspects and embodiments of the present invention will become apparent from the following description and from the claims.
Embodiments of the present invention assist physicians and others responsible for generating billing codes (referred to herein as “billing coders”) in the generation of billing codes for use in bills for healthcare services. The techniques disclosed herein, however, may be applied in fields other than healthcare (such as law, accounting, and consulting), and by billing coders other than physicians, such as nurses, transcriptionists, and billing coding specialists.
For example, referring to
The billing coder 104 may be any human user of the system 100, such as a physician or billing coding specialist. For ease of explanation, the following description will refer to a particular example in which the billing coder 104 is a physician. It should be understood, however, that this is merely one example and does not constitute a limitation of the present invention. More specifically, the following description will refer to a particular example in which the physician 104, during or after an encounter with (e.g., examination of) a patient 106, a clinical note 108 describing the encounter. More generally, however, the system 100 of
In general, the physician 104 generates the clinical note 108 (
The system 100 also includes a billing code selection module 110. In general, and as will be described in more detail below, the billing code selection module 110 selects a set of billing codes 102 for consideration by the physician 104, and provides those billing codes 102 as output to the physician 104.
The physician 104 provides the clinical note 108 to the billing code selection module 110 (
The billing code selection module 110 receives the clinical note 108 and identifies data 112 related to the patient 106 (
The billing code selection module 110 may use any such patient identifier to obtain data related to the patient 106 from a patient data repository 116. The repository 116 may include any one or more of the following: electronic health records (EHRs) of the patient 106 and of other patients, clinical notes related to the patient 106 and to other patients, other documents (such as unstructured and/or structured documents) related to the patient 106 and to other patients, bills related to the patient 106 and other patients, and any other data (such as documents and/or database records) related to the patient 106 and other patients. Documents and other data stored in the repository 116 may include structured documents of the kind produced using the techniques disclosed in the above-referenced U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,584,103 and 7,716,040, and may therefore include encoded concepts. Although the patient data repository 116 is shown in
For purposes of example, the patient data repository 116 is shown in
The particular numbers of patient data records 120a-c, 124a-c, and 128a-c shown in
As mentioned above, the billing code selection module 110 may identify an identifier of the patient 106. The billing code selection module 110 may use this identifier to identify data 118 related to the patient 106, such as by using the identifier to query the repository 116 or as an index into the repository 116. The billing code module 110 may add some or all of the clinical note 108 to the patient 106's data 118 in the repository 116, such as by adding a copy of and/or reference to some or all of the clinical note 108 to the patient 106's data 118.
The billing code selection module 110 may include a patient data filter module 130. In general, the patient data filter module 130 may retrieve data from the repository 116 and, optionally, filter and/or otherwise process such data. For example, the filter module 130 may retrieve some or all of the data 118 related to patient 106 from the repository 116, and store such data as filtered data 112.
The filter module 130 may also retrieve some or all of the data 122 and 126 related to other patients in the repository 116. In particular, the filter module 130 may retrieve, from the repository 116, data related to patients other than patient 106, where the retrieved data satisfies a relevance criterion associated with patient 106 (
The filter module 130 may use any of a variety of relevance criteria to retrieve the filtered data 114. For example, the relevance criterion may select some or all of the patient data associated with patients having patient data which represents one or more of the following:
The filter module 130 may determine whether patient data associated with patients other than patient 106 satisfies the relevance criterion by, for example, comparing the patient data of the other patients to any one or more of the following: the relevance criterion, data in the patient 106's data 118, and data in the clinical note 108. For example, the filter module 130 may determine whether the patient associated with patient data 122 is taking similar medications to patient 106 by comparing the current medications list in patient data 122 with the current medications list in patient data 118 and/or current medications data in the clinical note 108.
As mentioned above, the filter module 130 may retrieve some or all of patient 106's data 118. If the filter module 130 retrieves less than all of the patient 106's data 118, the filter module 130 may select a subset of the patient 106's data in any of a variety of ways. For example, the filter module 130 may retrieve only data from the patient 106's data that is associated with the same encounter (e.g., hospital stay, procedure, or appointment) as the clinical note 108. Even if the filter module 130 retrieves only a subset of the patient 106's data 118, the filter module 130 may also retrieve certain summary elements from the patient 106's data, such as any one or more of the following: the patient 106's problem list (which may describe current and/or past medical problems and/or complaints of the patient 106), current medications list (which may describe medications currently prescribed to the patient 106), past medications list (which may describe medications previously but no longer prescribed to the patient 106), and procedures list (which may described procedures previously performed and/or scheduled to be performed on the patient 106). The filter module 130 may compare data 122 and 126 associated with other patients to determine whether to retrieve individual elements of such data, e.g., by retrieving only the elements of other patient data 122 and 126 that are sufficiently similar to the retrieved data 112 of the patient 106 according to some measure of similarity (e.g., the relevance criterion described above). In particular, the filter module 130 may retrieve data associated with encounters of other patients that are sufficiently similar to the current encounter of patient 106 (i.e., the encounter associated with clinical note 108).
In general, once the billing code module 110 has retrieved the data 112 associated with patient 106 and the data 114 associated with one or more other patients, a billing code selection module 131 in the billing code module 110 may use such data 112 and 114 to select the billing code set 102 (
The billing code selection module 110 may select the billing codes 102 in any of a variety of ways. Referring to
The billing code selection module 110 may include a seed set generation module 152, which generates a seed set 154 of billing codes (
The billing code selection module 110 may include a billing code filter module 156, which may filter the billing code seed set 154 (i.e., remove one or more billing codes from the billing code seed set 154) to produce a filtered billing code set 158 (
The billing code selection module 110 may include a billing code generation module 160, which may generate a set 162 of billing codes based on the concepts in or otherwise associated with the clinical note 108 (
The billing code selection module 110 may include a billing code reconciliation module 164, which may receive as input the filtered billing code set 158 and the generated billing code set 162, and reconcile the two to produce an initial billing code set 166 (
Recall that the seed set 154 is optional. If the seed set 154 is not used, then the billing code filter module 156, the filtered billing code set 158, and the billing code reconciliation module 164 may be omitted, and the generated billing code set 162 may be used to perform the functions disclosed herein for the initial billing code set 166.
The billing code selection module 110 may include a billing code expansion module 168, which may receive as input the initial billing code set 166 and produce an expanded billing code set 170 as output (
As one particular example, consider the billing code M17 in the ICD-10 code. This billing code represents Osteoarthritis of the knee. Descendants of this billing code in ICD-10 include the following billing codes:
If the initial billing code set 166 includes the ICD-10 code M17, then the billing code expansion module 168 may identify, and add to the initial billing code set 166, some or all of the related billing codes listed above, as a result of which both the original billing code M17 and the related billing codes listed above will appear within the expanded billing code set 170.
The expanded billing code set 170 is generated with the intent of producing a set of proposed billing codes that is comprehensive and therefore extremely unlikely to omit any applicable billing code. Embodiments of the present invention generate such a comprehensive set of billing codes to eliminate the need for the billing coder 104 to look outside the expanded billing code set 170 for applicable billing codes. In other words, one benefit of making the expanded billing code set 170 comprehensive is that it presents the billing coder 104 with a set of billing codes 104 from which the final set of billing codes for inclusion in the bill can be confidently selected. Eliminating the need for the billing coder 104 to look outside the expanded billing code set 170 for billing codes to include in the final bill is a feature of embodiments of the present invention that both increases the speed with which the final bill may be generated and increased the accuracy of that bill.
Another benefit of making the set of proposed billing codes comprehensive is that presenting the billing coder 104, such as a physician, with such a comprehensive set of billing codes increases the likelihood that reviewing such a set of billing codes will prompt the physician to remember any additional billable services that the physician provided to the patient 106, but which the physician forgot to document. In response to reviewing the comprehensive set of billing codes, the physician may recall a billable service that was performed, including one or more billing codes for such a service on the bill, and possibly modify the clinical note 108 to include documentation of the forgotten service. This may result in an improvement both to the quality of documentation of the patient encounter and the quality of reimbursement for services performed by the physician.
The billing code selection module 110 may provide output representing the expanded billing code set 170 to the billing coder 104. For example, referring to
The billing code selection module 110 may include a billing code output module 182, which may produce output 184 representing some or all of the expanded billing code set 170, and provide such output 184 to the physician 104 (
The clinically-relevant representations of the billing codes in the billing code output 184 may be simplified, in comparison to the corresponding billing codes in the expanded billing code set 170, in any of a variety of ways. For example:
Regardless of the particular techniques that are used to generate the billing code output 184 based on the expanded billing code set 170, the billing code output 184 may include descriptions of clinical conditions, either instead of or in addition to the billing codes 170 themselves. Such descriptions may include text and/or other content which is not defined according to the billing code standard in which the expanded billing code set 170 is encoded. Such output 184 is intended to be presented in a format that is understandable to a person who is not an expert in the billing code system in which the billing code set 170 is encoded, and to present information about the billing code set 170 that is clinically relevant and understandable to the user 104.
A list representing the expanded billing code set 170 may, for example, be displayed hierarchically according to the hierarchy of the billing code standard that defines the billing codes in the billing code set 170. For example, if a first billing code in the set 170 is a descendant of a second billing code in the set 170, then the visual representation of the first billing code may be displayed in a manner that is superior to (e.g., above or to the left of) the visual representation of the second billing code. In this way, the billing code output 184 may display the billing code set 170 in a visual hierarchical structure that corresponds to the hierarchical relationships of the billing codes in the billing code set 170 within the defining billing code standard. Such a visual hierarchical structure may, for example, be collapsible and expandable so that the physician 104 may provide input that causes the billing code selection module 110 to modify the billing code output 184 to collapse or expand branches of the hierarchical structured based on the physician's input. Other alternative ways of visually representing the code selection include, for example, breaking the code selection process along dimensional lines, as suggested in the example earlier with respect to billing code M84521D.
The billing code selection module 110 may include a billing code input module 118. The physician 104 may provide, to the billing code input module 188, billing code selection input 186 which specifies one or more of the billing codes in the expanded billing code set 170. The billing code input module 188 may receive the input 118 (
The physician 104 may provide the billing code selection input 186 in any of a variety of ways. For example, the physician 104 may click on, tap, or otherwise select one or more visual representations of billing codes in the billing code output 184 to select the billing codes represented by such representations in the expanded billing code set 170. This is merely one example of a way in which the physician 104 may provide the billing code selection input 186 by providing input that references representations of billing codes in the billing code output 184.
As described above, the representations of the billing codes in the billing code output 184 may take the form of clinically-relevant text, graphics and/or other content, such as described above in connection with the pathologic fracture example presented earlier. If the user 104 provides the billing code selection input 186 by providing input in association with such clinically-relevant content, such as by selecting the clinically-relevant content (e.g., the graphical selection of the applicable dimensions that aids in the convergence to a specific code) and/or providing an instruction in association with the clinically-relevant content (e.g., if the base disease—pathologic fracture—is not applicable to this patient, the clinician may issue an instruction to reject the entire structure associated with it), then the billing code input module 188 may identify the corresponding billing code in the expanded billing code set 170 and take an action consistent with the input 186 in connection with that billing code to generate or update the final billing code set. For example:
When taking action in response to the billing code selection input 186 to generate the final billing code set 190, the billing code input module 188 may identify the billing code(s), in the expanded billing code set 170, to which the user 104's selection input refers in a variety of ways. For example, when generating the billing code output 184 based on the expanded billing code set 170, the billing code output 182 module may generate and store (e.g., in the billing code output 184) mappings between each of the codes in the expanded billing code set 170 and the corresponding representation of that code in the billing code output 184. For example, when generating the related code sets for pathologic fracture in the billing code output 184 based on a code in the expanded billing code set 170 representing the diagnosis of pathologic fracture for the patient, the billing code output module 182 may generate and store data representing a mapping between the text in the output 184 and the corresponding code in the expanded billing code set 170. As a result, when the user 104 provides input 186 representing an instruction which references a portion of the billing code output 184 (such as the diagnosis of pathologic fracture), the billing code selection input 186 may use the previously-stored mappings between text and codes to identify the code, in the expanded billing code set 170, that corresponds to the text referenced by the user 104's input 186. The billing code input module 188 may then perform an appropriate action on the identified code based on the user 104's input 186, such as removing the identified code from the final billing code set 190 or retaining the identified code in the final billing code set 190.
The billing code input module 188 may generate the final billing code set 190 in any of a variety of ways. For example, the billing code input module 188 may include, in the final billing code set 190, those billing codes, and only those billing codes, specified by the billing code selection input 186.
Although not shown in
Although certain embodiments described above are described as using preconfigured rules or other preconfigured steps to generate the expanded billing code set 170 that is presented to the user 104, this is merely an example and does not constitute a limitation of the present invention. Embodiments of the present invention are not limited to using a fixed set of techniques to generate billing codes to present to users, but instead may adapt the techniques used to generate billing codes in response to behavior of the user 104 (and of other users) over time.
For example, referring to
As described above, the billing code selection module 110 may use any of a variety of techniques to generate the billing code set 170 that is presented to the user 104 for review. For example, the billing code selection module 110 may use a set of rules to generate the expanded billing code set 170. The term “billing code extraction data” will be used herein to refer to the data (e.g., rules) that the billing code selection module 110 uses to generate the expanded billing code set 170. As shown in
More specifically, the billing code selection module 110 may obtain a first billing code selection input 186a from the user 104, in any of the ways disclosed above (
The billing code selection module 110 may also receive context data 195a representing a current context of the user 104 (e.g., a context of the user 104 at the time when the user 104 provides the billing code selection input 186a) (
The billing code selection module 110 may also receive the expanded billing code set 170a that was provided to the user 104 within the context represented by the context data 195a (
The billing code input storage module 192 stores a record of the billing code selection input 186a, the corresponding context data 195a, and the corresponding expanded billing code set 170a as a billing code input history record 193a (
Operations 242-248 of
The system of
For example, if the billing code history 193a-n indicates that the user 104 (and possibly other users) tends to accept a particular billing code in the expanded billing code sets 170a-n in a particular context (or a particular set of related contexts), then the adaptation module 194 may revise the initial extraction data 196 to indicate, in the revised extraction data 197, that the accepted billing code should continue to be presented to the user 104 (and possibly other users) in expanded billing code sets 170 in the same and similar contexts in the future, and possibly that the accepted billing code should be emphasized such users 104, such as by displaying it in bold or displaying it higher in a list than previously.
As another example, if the billing code history 193a-n indicates that the user 104 (and possibly other users) tends to reject a particular billing code in the expanded billing code sets 170a-n in a particular context (or a particular set of related contexts), then the adaptation module 194 may revise the initial extraction data 196 to indicate, in the revised extraction data 197, that the rejected billing code should not be presented to the user 104 (and possibly other users) in expanded billing code sets 170 in the same and similar contexts in the future.
Regardless of the particular manner in which the adaptation module 194 adapts the initial extraction data 196 to produce the revised extraction data 197, once the revised extraction data have been produced, the billing code selection module 110 may apply the revised extraction data 197 to the techniques disclosed herein in connection with
More generally, any of the methods of
Embodiments of the present invention have a variety of advantages, such as the following. As the healthcare industry adopts increasingly complex billing coding schemes, such as ICD-10, it is becoming increasingly important to provide assistance to physicians and other billing coders in the process of generating billing codes based on services rendered. Embodiments of the present invention may be used to assist billing coders in selecting appropriate billing codes for inclusion in bills by providing such billing codes with a set of potentially relevant billings codes for inclusion in bills. Such proposed billing codes may be based on data related to the patient encounter for which the bill is being generated, such as any one or more of the following: a clinical note created by the physician, data (such as data in EHRs) related to the patient who is the subject of the clinical note, and data (such as data in EHRs) related to other patients who are similar to the patient who is the subject of the clinical note. As a result, the proposed billing codes that are presented to the billing coder are designed to be relevant to the encounter and therefore likely to be useful for inclusion in the bill.
Such techniques reduce the cognitive burden on the billing coder by providing the billing coder with a relatively small set of proposed billing codes from which to select, compared to the very large set of billing codes in a system such as ICD-10. As a result, physicians may use the techniques disclosed herein to select billing codes more easily than if they had to consult the entire set of ICD-10 codes, especially because physicians may not be familiar with the details of the ICD-10 code specification. Similarly, embodiments of the present invention may benefit billing coders who are expert in billing coding systems (such as ICD-10) but who are not medical experts by providing such billing coders with a set of billing codes that are relevant to the healthcare services provided by the physician to the patient, and which the billing coder might not otherwise have been able to identify easily due to a lack of specialized medical knowledge.
Furthermore, because embodiments of the present invention may be used to generate a customized set of proposed billing codes each time a clinical note is generated, the proposed billing codes generated by embodiments of the present invention may be dynamically generated and tailored to the current patient encounter and the physician's field of practice. In the current state of the art it is known for physicians to use printed forms, known as “superbills,” which contain a list of billing codes that are tailored to a specific medical practice, such as cardiology, orthopedics, and internal medicine. Embodiments of the present invention may be used to generate the electronic equivalents of such superbills, but to do so in a way that is tailored dynamically to the current patient encounter, not merely to the physician's field of practice, based on a variety of data such as the clinical note 108 and the filtered patient data 132. As a result, the proposed billing codes 170 generated by embodiments of the present invention are more likely to contain billing codes that are relevant to the current patient encounter than traditional superbills, and are less likely to omit billing codes that are relevant to the current patient encounter than traditional superbills.
Similarly, if individual codes within a billing code standard change, or if a new billing code standard is adopted, embodiments of the present invention may use the techniques disclosed herein to generate relevant billing codes that are consistent with such changes automatically, i.e., without requiring modifications to the systems and methods disclosed herein, other than to update such systems and methods with knowledge of the new billing codes and/or standards. As a result, embodiments of the present invention provide a significant advantage over traditional printed superbills, which are effectively “hardwired” with a particular set of billing codes, and which must be manually redesigned and reprinted to reflect changes in billing codes and/or standards.
Furthermore, embodiments of the present invention provide a variety of benefits over traditional Computer Assisted Coding (CAC). CAC techniques attempt to automatically identify the most relevant codes to include in a bill based on available data. Such systems are subject to false positives (including billing codes that should not be included) and false negatives (failing to include codes that should be included). In contrast, embodiments of the present invention seek to assist human billing coders in selecting appropriate billing codes, not to replace such human billing coders. In particular, embodiments of the present invention combine the ability of an automated computer system to generate a relatively small, but still over-inclusive proposed set (e.g., the expanded billing code set 170) of billing codes quickly and easily, with the ability of a human billing coding expert to select the appropriate billing codes from such a set based on the billing coder's knowledge of the patient encounter, services rendered, and/or billing coding system. This combination of automation and human expertise is likely to strike a better balance between speed and accuracy than CAC systems.
It is to be understood that although the invention has been described above in terms of particular embodiments, the foregoing embodiments are provided as illustrative only, and do not limit or define the scope of the invention. Various other embodiments, including but not limited to the following, are also within the scope of the claims. For example, elements and components described herein may be further divided into additional components or joined together to form fewer components for performing the same functions.
Any of the functions disclosed herein may be implemented using means for performing those functions. Such means include, but are not limited to, any of the components disclosed herein, such as the computer-related components described below.
Although certain examples of billing code standards, such as ICD-9, ICD-10, and CPT are disclosed herein, these are merely examples and do not constitute limitations of the present invention. More generally, embodiments of the present invention may be used on connection with billing codes of any type and in any combination.
Although in the particular example described herein, the physician 104 both generates the clinical note 108 and selects billing codes for inclusion on a bill (by providing the billing code selection input 186), such functions need not be performed by the same person or entity. For example, a first person, such as a physician, may generate the clinical note 108, while a second person (not shown), such as a billing coding specialist, may select one or more billing codes to include on a bill based on the clinical note 108 by providing the billing code selection input 186.
Although in examples disclosed herein billing codes are generated based on a clinical note representing information related to a patient encounter, more generally the techniques disclosed herein may be used to generate billing codes based on any data representing a product and/or service provided to a subject. The subject may, for example, be a person or a legal entity (such as a corporation). The resulting billing codes may be included on a bill for the product and/or service provided to the subject.
The techniques described above may be implemented, for example, in hardware, one or more computer programs tangibly stored on one or more computer-readable media, firmware, or any combination thereof. The techniques described above may be implemented in one or more computer programs executing on (or executable by) a programmable computer including any combination of any number of the following: a processor, a storage medium readable and/or writable by the processor (including, for example, volatile and non-volatile memory and/or storage elements), an input device, and an output device. Program code may be applied to input entered using the input device to perform the functions described and to generate output using the output device.
Each computer program within the scope of the claims below may be implemented in any programming language, such as assembly language, machine language, a high-level procedural programming language, or an object-oriented programming language. The programming language may, for example, be a compiled or interpreted programming language.
Each such computer program may be implemented in a computer program product tangibly embodied in a machine-readable storage device for execution by a computer processor. Method steps of the invention may be performed by one or more computer processors executing a program tangibly embodied on a computer-readable medium to perform functions of the invention by operating on input and generating output. Suitable processors include, by way of example, both general and special purpose microprocessors. Generally, the processor receives (reads) instructions and data from a memory (such as a read-only memory and/or a random access memory) and writes (stores) instructions and data to the memory. Storage devices suitable for tangibly embodying computer program instructions and data include, for example, all forms of non-volatile memory, such as semiconductor memory devices, including EPROM, EEPROM, and flash memory devices; magnetic disks such as internal hard disks and removable disks; magneto-optical disks; and CD-ROMs. Any of the foregoing may be supplemented by, or incorporated in, specially-designed ASICs (application-specific integrated circuits) or FPGAs (Field-Programmable Gate Arrays). A computer can generally also receive (read) programs and data from, and write (store) programs and data to, a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium such as an internal disk (not shown) or a removable disk. These elements will also be found in a conventional desktop or workstation computer as well as other computers suitable for executing computer programs implementing the methods described herein, which may be used in conjunction with any digital print engine or marking engine, display monitor, or other raster output device capable of producing color or gray scale pixels on paper, film, display screen, or other output medium.
Any data disclosed herein may be implemented, for example, in one or more data structures tangibly stored on a non-transitory computer-readable medium. Embodiments of the invention may store such data in such data structure(s) and read such data from such data structure(s).
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61791127 | Mar 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 14211322 | Mar 2014 | US |
Child | 14218220 | US |