Comments

  1. Robert Cutrell

    Multiply this scenario by 15 for a typical day in the hospital. How is it practical to keep track of the minutes you spend on a patient throughout the day? When I am rounding in the hospital I almost never spend much contiguous time on one patient. How does one track and document minutes spent with each patient while dealing with multiple patients all day long during a 12 hour shift? What about all the minutes that come up after I’ve already documented and charged for my time but then more comes up later? This doesn’t seem like something I will ever do.

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  2. Nick

    What is the verbiage required when documenting time based, can you just state how much time you spent or do you need to include what the time was spent on?

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  3. Linda Duckworth

    Document the total minutes you spent for the day and be as close as possible. Avoid using time ranges such as “60 to 75 minutes”, and do not default to a CPT code’s threshold. Briefly describe the activities that consumed your time, for example- reviewing records from a previous stay, lengthy conversations, or extensive time with orders/coordinating care.

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  4. Linda Duckworth

    Time should be more of an exception than rule, mainly for the reasons you cited above. For the majority of patients, you’ll be better served by concentrating your documentation efforts on fully describing the complexity of problems you’re addressing, data (lab, rads, interpretations, discussions, etc.) and developing a well-written plan (for risks).

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  5. Arunab Mehta

    Yes, I agree with all of the comments about how inconvenient it is to keep a track of how long you spent on each patient. It is only one rule of the two that you can use for billing. Most patients will likely have their bills be done using MDM. You could create a way that you could estimate the time you spent on each patient that seems most accurate to you though I agree that this is likely much more convenient in the outpatient world where you can see the clock on the wall.
    You do not have to document exactly how much time you spent on each task but should have verbiage on exactly how much time you spent in total (for example: “45 mins”) and the total of the tasks that needed this time. Most systems might make a dot/automatic phrase or such where you can just add in the time component on there. (For example: “total time personally spent today, including face-to-face with patient and/or caregiver(s), as well as non-face-to-face time spent in care coordination, consultation, reviewing records, and documentation was *** minutes”)

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