Toward developing a relative value scale for medical and surgical services.

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Title
Toward developing a relative value scale for medical and surgical services.
First Author
Hsiao, William C
Date of Pub
1979 Fall
Pages
23-38
Abstract
A methodology has been developed to determine the relative values of surgical procedures and medical office visits on the basis of resource costs. The time taken to perform the service and the complexity of that service are the most critical variables. Inter-specialty differences in the opportunity costs of training and overhead expenses are also considered. Results indicate some important differences between the relative values based on resource costs and existing standards, prevailing Medicare charges, and California Relative Value Study values. Most dramatic are discrepancies between existing reimbursement levels and resource cost values for office visits compared to surgical procedures. These vary from procedure to procedure and specialty to specialty but indicate that, on the average, office visits are undervalued (or surgical procedures overvalued) four- to five-fold. After standardizing the variations in the complexity of different procedures, the hourly reimbursement rate in 1978 ranged from $40 for a general practitioner to $200 for surgical specialists.
Other Authors
Stason, William B
MeSH
Fee Schedules : Insurance, Health, Reimbursement : Models, Theoretical : Personal Health Services/economics : Practice Management, Medical/economics : Surgery/economics : Task Performance and Analysis : Time Factors : United States
Issue
2
NTIS Number
PB81-112807
Volume
1