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Aetna to Refuse Payment for Some Preventable Inpatient Errors


 

In a move that could have significant implications for physicians and hospitals, the insurer Aetna has said it will not pay its network hospitals for care necessitated by certain preventable errors.

The announcement follows a policy shift by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which has finalized plans to stop paying for eight preventable events as of October 2008.

Aetna has added language to its hospital contracts calling for waiving all costs related to a number of serious reportable events. The language comes from the Leapfrog Group's “never events” policy that includes a list of 28 events considered so harmful that they should never occur. The list, compiled by the National Quality Forum (NQF), comprises events ranging from surgery performed on the wrong body part or on the wrong patient, to stage III or IV pressure ulcers acquired after admission to a health care facility.

The policy instructs hospitals to report errors within 10 days to the Joint Commission, state reporting programs, or patient safety organizations. Hospitals also are asked to take action to prevent future events and to apologize to the patient or family affected by the error. Aetna is the first health plan to endorse the Leapfrog policy.

“The major goal is to get hospitals to focus on having the systems in place to prevent these events from happening,” said Dr. Charles Cutler, Aetna's national medical director. Adopting the never events policy is not about saving money—in fact, many of the never events carry no additional cost, he said. Instead, Aetna is seeking to send a consistent message to hospitals about quality. “The intent here is not to be punitive.”

But the Aetna announcement ran into some skepticism from the physician community.

The NQF list of never events is much broader than the eight preventable events selected under the Medicare policy, said Cynthia Brown, director of the division of advocacy and health policy at the American College of Surgeons (ACS). One reason that many of those events were not included on Medicare's list is that they are difficult to measure with the current coding system, she said. Another problem is that it's hard to affix blame to a hospital or a particular physician. “If there's a problem with blood incompatibility, is it the surgeon's fault?” she asked.

When used properly, the NQF never events list protects patients and directs a patient environment enriched with safety and quality, said Dr. Frank Opelka, chair of the ACS Committee on Patient Safety and Quality Improvement. But he cautioned that if payers drift from the intentions of the NQF never events, the specifications could be lost and overreporting could create unintended consequences.

He also questioned whether hospitals would continue to report these types of serious preventable errors if they aren't being paid for the care. “If the reports are generated from a hospital claims system and the payer no longer recognizes the events as payable, isn't the message to stop reporting rather than to prevent the never events?” asked Dr. Opelka, also vice chancellor for clinical affairs at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans.

The policy is likely to affect all of Aetna's network hospitals over the next 3 years as the company renegotiates its contracts, Dr. Cutler said.

Since Medicare announced its policy shift last summer, other insurers have considered changes to their policies. Officials at Cigna, for example, are evaluating how to implement a similar policy within their hospital network and plans to have a national policy in place by October 2008, said Cigna spokesman Mark Slitt.

In some situations, the message might be to stop reporting rather than to prevent the never events. DR. OPELKA

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