Government Mandated Fee Schedule: Does History Repeat Itself?

Here’s a modest suggestion re an alternative fee schedule methodology that deserves careful consideration by legislators and regulators alike –

From the medical fee schedule section of the Code of Hammurabi (1730 BCE):

215 If a physician make a large incision with an operating knife and cure it, or if he open a tumor (over the eye) with an operating knife, and saves the eye, he shall receive ten shekels in money.

216. If the patient be a freed man, he receives five shekels.

217. If he be the slave of some one, his owner shall give the physician two shekels.

218. If a physician make a large incision with the operating knife, and kill him, or open a tumor with the operating knife, and cut out the eye, his hands shall be cut off.

219. If a physician make a large incision in the slave of a freed man, and kill him, he shall replace the slave with another slave.

220. If he had opened a tumor with the operating knife, and put out his eye, he shall pay half his value.

221. If a physician heal the broken bone or diseased soft part of a man, the patient shall pay the physician five shekels in money.

222. If he were a freed man he shall pay three shekels.

223. If he were a slave his owner shall pay the physician two shekels.

224. If a veterinary surgeon perform a serious operation on an ass or an ox, and cure it, the owner shall pay the surgeon one-sixth of a shekel as a fee.

225. If he perform a serious operation on an ass or ox, and kill it, he shall pay the owner one-fourth of its value.

Gary Anderburg of Broadspire was kind enough to forward this to my attention; he included the veterinary section just for comparison purposes. Gary says, and I agree, that we should give serious thought to reinstituting this, and go back to shekels.

That said, I’m wondering if Medata, Coventry, Mitchell, Stratacare, MCMC, and ACS/CompIQ can get this programmed…

Posted by Joe Paduda at 7:33 AM | Link to this post | Comments (3)