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Health Care Risk Management: Organization and Claims Administration Health Care Risk Management: Organization and Claims Administration
By Gary P. Kraus
2000/06 - Beard Books
1587980185 - Paperback - Reprint - 346 pp.
US$34.95

This book is an important addition to the field of health care risk management since it combines the theory of risk management with its implementation and the law of risk management with practical implications for managers.

Publisher Comments

Category: Healthcare

This title is part of the Healthcare Administration list.

Of Interest:

Building a Health Care Organization: A Challenge for Physicians and Managers 

Evaluation and Decision Making for Health Services  

Falling Through the Safety Net: Insurance Status and Access to Health Care

Fundamentals of HMOs

Health Care and Insurance: Distortions in the Financing of Medical Expenditures

Health Plan: The Practical Solution to the Soaring Cost of Medical Care

Introduction to Risk and Insurance

Legal Aspects of Health Care Reimbursement

Management of Hospitals and Health Services: Strategic Issues and Performance

Managing Doctors

Partners: Forming Strategic Alliances in Health Care

The White Labyrinth: Guide to the Health Care System

Risk management is a complex set of tasks, functions, and decisions aimed at reducing financial loss. Intended for students, instructors, management, and health professionals alike, the book covers all the broad elements of health care risk management, with exercises, extensive references, and a comprehensive glossary of terms.

From the back cover blurb:

More than ever before, health care facilities and professionals need to guard against unexpected financial losses from casualty, worker's compensation, and professional liability. Risk management is that complex set of tasks, functions, and decisions carried out with the objective of reducing such losses. The field of risk management in the health-care industry developed out of the deluge of malpractice cases which stunned the medical community in the late 1960s and led to soaring insurance claims and premiums. 

This book treats all the broad and divergent elements of health care risk management, and is aimed at students, instructors, management, and health professionals alike. Risk management is divided into three processes: exposure of risk identification; risk measurement or evaluation; and risk handling or treatment. Managers first analyze exposure areas of an organization so that risks contained within it can be identified. Next they evaluate the risk by applying analytical skills and decision-making techniques to the risk areas to determine their potential for occurrence and the inherent financial impact. Finally, managers decide how the risks that have been identified and measured are to be handled by the organization. Risk handling includes risk financing, which may include retention, transfer, and self-financing of risks and exposure areas; and risk control, which includes avoidance, shifting, and prevention of risks. 

The text provides meaningful exercises, extensive references, and a comprehensive glossary of terms. It is well balanced, thorough, and provides an excellent overview of its subject.

 

From Henry Berry, Nightingale's Healthcare News:

Health Care Risk Management – Organization and Claims Administration is written by professionals who have been involved at the highest levels of risk management in healthcare organizations. One of these professionals is the editor, Gary Kraus. Kraus is the author or coauthor of approximately one-half of the chapters. Another is Joan Rines, a director of a college health information management program. 

Kraus begins by clarifying the concept of risk management, which he says is “a series of tasks and functions, the purpose of which is to reduce planned or unexpected financial loss to an organization.” While others in the field may define it differently, Kraus notes that risk management is universally understood to be a way to minimum exposure to loss. 

There are many types of risks in running an organization, and Kraus uses the example of a restaurant to clarify the sorts of risk that management should be concerned with. He explains that the risk that a restaurant will suffer a financial loss as a result of poor management, bad location, or competition is not a risk that risk management should be concerned with nor should deal with in any respect. On the other hand, risk management does extend to preventing fires that can cause a restaurant to close its doors, which could result in a significant financial loss. These are the types of risk that management can and should address.

As Kraus explains, the difference between the two kinds of risks is that the former is predictable: success or failure is tied to proven factors that apply to practically all restaurants. On the other hand, the risk of a fire is unpredictable with respect to any particular restaurant, albeit not inconceivable and, in fact, a certainty among the total universe of restaurants. Some restaurants never have a fire, but there are always fires in restaurants. 

Risk management is more critical to healthcare than almost any other field. There are few healthcare organizations of any size and scope where the risks that Kraus delves into have not, in fact, occurred. In healthcare, risk management cannot eliminate financial loss, but it can be very effective in reducing financial loss. This is the point of Kraus’s book – which he explores with exceptional depth and knowledge. 

Large, complex, modern-day healthcare organizations are exposed to inherent and inevitable risks from both internal and external factors. The main internal risks that healthcare organizations face are from employee injuries and workers’ compensation claims and, in some cases, from related lawsuits. The main external risks are from lawsuits and other claims stemming from alleged mistakes and negligence in patient treatment and care. Services ranging from emergency care to inpatient and long-term care to outpatient care each come with its own risks. All of these risks can be managed with a comprehensive risk management program tailored to the particular operations of the organization. While there are general elements and advice applicable to any risk management program, the particularities of work force, location, facilities, services, goals, and so forth require a risk management program tailored to each organization. 

The book’s content is sufficiently detailed to provide a foundation for designing a specific risk management program, and guidance is offered on how to implement it. Methodically, informatively, and thoroughly, Kraus builds a risk management program, beginning with the basic definition he gives at the start of the book and then moving to basic elements, considerations, and purposes. He then introduces organization-specific considerations. For example, healthcare organizations must identify general and specific risks, assess the probabilities of the risks occurring, evaluate the corresponding levels of possible financial loss, and, lastly, design policies, practices, and procedures for managing those risks. 

While risk management is an ongoing, organization-wide process that involves all employees – even, and perhaps most importantly, those outside the risk management operation – an optimal risk management program requires a risk manager. “The role of the healthcare facility risk manager is primarily that of a coordinator and facilitator of the risk management process carried out by others,” offers Kraus. In addition to coordinating and facilitating, the work of the risk manager falls into the “category of risk prevention and identification.” 

Kraus recognizes that some in the field believe risk management should concentrate on improving patient care. He takes the position, however, that “this is inconsistent with the purpose of risk management and represents the frequent misunderstanding of the total risk management process.” The purpose and aim of risk management for Kraus is guarding an organization against significant or serious financial losses. With this book, first publiched in 1989, he tells how this is done. 

Gary P. Kraus has been the Director of Professional Liability and Risk Management and also a Professor of Health Services Management at the University of Missouri. He has also served as this state’s attorney general. His latest positions are founding partner of Registrar, Incorporated and fellow at the American Society for Health Care Risk Management. 

From Peter Free (Amazon.Com) from Beale AFB, CA USA 

(1) Editor Kraus' logically excellent framework for risk management in the hospital setting is unfortunately dated. Originally published in 1986, it was reprinted without revision in 2000. The organizational and management data provided comes from the 1970s and early 80s. (2) I'm not a risk manager and am not competent to comment in detail about the material included. However, my limited medical training questions the wisdom of relying on a 15-year old text. The risk-checklists for Obstetrics, Surgery, and ER, for example, are logically excellent, but to the degree they comment on specific medical practices, they should probably not to be trusted. Similarly, the otherwise superb Medical Records section is marred by its failure to mention and analyze the computerization of medical charts that innovative hospitals now use. These shortcomings lead me to wonder if the business-organizational models provided are also outdated. (3) Legal training leads me to doubt the practicality of depending on a framework provided by old case law. One is left wondering how much Health Law has changed since the early 80s. Surely burgeoning regulation has implications for risk management that are not mentioned in the text. In the book's defense, much of the law cited is tort law-a field that changes slowly. (4) Aside from the currency issue, the text is reasonably good. The logical framework of the ideas provided is outstanding. However, the collected essays suffer from some redundancy, and the writing is often academically verbose. (5) Overall, I hesitate to recommend the volume, excellent though its ideas are. The datedness issue means that the reader will have to update Kraus' information with significant data from more modern sources. Since medical texts are revised every four to six years, fifteen years for a related discipline seems too long.

Gary P. Kraus was born in Southern California and received an undergraduate degree from Tulane University and a MBA from George Washington University. He became a Clinic Administrator and Instructor at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, and then moved to St. Louis to become an Assistant Professor and Director of Allied Health at Maryville College. After graduation from the Law School at Washington University, he became the Chairman of the Department of Health Administration at the University of Health Sciences/Chicago Medical School. He then became the Director of Professional Liability and Risk Management, as well as the Professor of Health Services Management at the University of Missouri. He also became a faculty member for the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations. A return to Chicago followed as an Assistant Legal Counsel and Director of Risk Management at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. Later, he was the Director of Quality Risk Management of the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists. He then returned to Missouri to become an Assistant Attorney General. Today, he is a founding partner of Registrar, Incorporated, and is a fellow of the American Society for Health Care Risk Management. Mr. Kraus is married and has two sons.

Contributors xi
Foreword by Kurt Darr xiii
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xvii
Chapter 1 Introduction to Risk Management  1
Definition and Purpose 1
The Risk Management Process 3
Summary 16
Chapter Exercise 16
Questions 18
References 19
Chapter 2 Risk Management Program Design 21
Organizational Models 22
Inter-institutional Relationships 31
Risk Management and Quality Assurance 35
The Role of the Medical Record Department in Quality Assurance 40
Internal Office Organization 47
The Risk Management Committee 50
Summary 54
Chapter Exercise 55
Questions 55
References 56
Chapter 3 The Risk Manager 57
Role of the Risk Manager 57
Educational and Experience Prerequisites 63
Job Descriptions and Compensation 68
Professional Societies and Credentialing 71
Summary 75
Chapter Exercises 75
References 75
Chapter 4 The Risk Management Information System 77
Risk Management Communications 77
Incident Screening 86
Computerized Filing and Report Systems 89
Summary 95
Chapter Exercises 95
References 96
Chapter 5 A Summary of Health Provider Liability Law 97
Fundamentals of Liability Law 97
Corporate Negligence 106
Respondeat Superior 107
Informed Consent 110
Privacy and Confidentiality 118
Antitrust Law 120
Labor and Personnel Issues 123
Medical Staff Issues 128
Workers' Compensation Law 132
Summary 142
Chapter Exercises 143
References 144
Chapter 6 Adverse Occurrence Screening and Investigation 149
The Potential Compensable Event 151
P.C.E.s and Occurrence Screening 153
Record and Evidence Preservation 157
Inquiry Procedures 159
Witness and Actor Interviews 162
Case Verification 164
Case Evaluation and Decision Making 165
Summary 168
Chapter Exercise 169
Questions 169
References 169
Chapter 7 Strategy, Settlement Techniques, and Litigation Defense 171
Lawsuit and Claims Management Filing System 172
Relationships with the Insurance Company 175
Prelitigation Strategy 178
Plaintiff Strategy 180
Ethical, Legal, and Administrative Considerations 183
Settlement Techniques 185
Risk Management and Defense Counsel 187
Releases and Related Instruments 189
Structured Settlements 193
Summary 197
Chapter Exercises 198
References 199
Chapter 8 Developing and Implementing a Comprehensive Risk Prevention Program 201
Defining Risk Prevention Activities 201
Setting Institutional Priorities 202
Addressing Institutional Priorities 215
A Selection of Literature on Risk Management, Law, and Quality Assurance 220
Summary 223
Chapter Exercise 223
References 224
Chapter 9 The Medical Record and Risk Management 227
The Importance of the Medical Record 227
The Purpose of the Medical Record 228
Failure to Comply with Minimum Requirements for Medical Record Keeping 229
Rules of Medical Record Keeping 230
Risk Management Uses of the Medical Record 241
The Medical Record and Confidentiality of Patient Information 244
The Medical Record Department's Role in Risk Management 248
The Role of Medical Record Practitioners in Risk Management 251
Suggestions for Improved Medical Record Maintenance 254
Summary 255
Chapter Exercises 255
References 256
Chapter 10 Risk Management in the Future 259
The Liability and Malpractice Crisis 259
Legislative Reforms and Curative Measures 264
Early Dispute Resolution: Model for an Internal Program 269
Summary 274
Chapter Exercises 274
References 275
Glossary of Legal and Insurance Terms 277
Index 321
Contributors
Thomas S. Gaudiosi
Joan T. Rines
Phyllis S. Solomon
Nancy J. Sublette
David Tapp
Herb Squire
Jacquelyn Goldberg

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