The DRG system was set up to make sure that the care you need is the care you get and that your bill isn’t full of unnecessary charged. Diagnostic-related grouping encompasses several metrics designed to classify the resources needed to care for you based on diagnosis, prognosis, and other factors.
In this article, you’ll learn how to better understand Medicare fees and the impact of diagnostic-related groups.
What Are Diagnosis-Related Grouping (DRG) Systems?
Since the 1980s, the DRG system has included both:
An all-payer component for non-Medicare patientsThe Medicare-Severity Diagnostic-Related Group (MS-DRG) system for Medicare patients
The MS-DRG system is more widely used and is the focus of this article.
MS-DRG System
Under Medicare’s DRG approach, Medicare pays the hospital a predetermined amount under the inpatient prospective payment system (IPPS). The exact amount is based on the patient’s DRG or diagnosis.
Long-Term Care
A different system called the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System (LTCH-PPS) is used for long-term acute care hospitals. It’s based on different DRGs under the Medicare Severity Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related Groups system (MS‑LTC‑DRGs).
How Do DRGs Work?
When you’re discharged from the hospital, Medicare will assign a DRG based on the main diagnosis that caused the hospitalization, plus up to 24 secondary diagnoses.
Every person is different, and two patients with the same condition might need very different types of care. That’s why the DRG can also be affected by your:
Specific procedures needed to treat youAgeGender
What Is the History of the DRG System?
Before the DRG system was introduced in the 1980s, the hospital would send a bill to Medicare or your insurance company that included charges for every bandage, X-ray, alcohol swab, bedpan, and aspirin, plus a room charge for each day you were hospitalized.
This incentivized hospitals to keep you for as long as possible, perform as many procedures as possible, and use more supplies.
As health care costs increased, the government looked for ways to control costs while encouraging hospitals to provide care more efficiently. The DRG system is what resulted.
Starting in the 1980s, DRGs changed how Medicare pays hospitals.
What Are the Benefits of DRG?
The idea is that each DRG encompasses patients with clinically similar diagnoses whose care requires the same amount of resources to treat.
The DRG system is intended to standardize hospital reimbursement. It considers:
Where a hospital is locatedWhat type of patients are being treatedOther regional factors
What Are the Challenges of Medicare and DRG?
The implementation of the DRG system has had its challenges.
The reimbursement methodology affects the bottom line of many private hospitals, leading some to channel their resources to higher-profit services.
To counter this, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) introduced Medicare payment reforms, including bundled payments and Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).
Still, DRGs remain the structural framework of the Medicare hospital payment system.
How Is a DRG Calculated?
To come up with DRG payment amounts, Medicare calculates the average cost of the resources needed to treat people in a particular DRG, including:
Primary diagnosisSecondary diagnosesComorbiditiesNecessary medical proceduresAgeSex
This base rate is then adjusted based on various factors, including the wage index for a given area. For example, a hospital in New York City pays higher wages than a hospital in rural Kansas, which is reflected in the payment rate each hospital gets for the same DRG.
For hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii, Medicare adjusts the non-labor portion of the DRG base payment amount because of the higher cost of living. Adjustments to the DRG base payment are also made for teaching hospitals and hospitals that treat many uninsured patients.
What Is the Impact of DRGs on Health Care?
The DRG payment system encourages hospitals to be more efficient and reduces their incentive to overtreat you. But this isn’t always a good thing.
Discharge Rate
Hospitals are eager to discharge you as soon as possible and are sometimes accused of discharging people before they’re healthy enough to go home safely.
Medicare has rules that penalize a hospital in certain circumstances if a patient is readmitted within 30 days. This is meant to discourage early discharge, a practice often used to increase the bed occupancy turnover rate.
Outpatient Services
In some DRGs, the hospital must share part of the DRG payment with the rehab facility or home healthcare provider if it discharges a patient to an inpatient rehab facility or with home health support.
Those services mean you can be discharged sooner, so the hospital is eager to use them to make a profit from the DRG payment.
However, Medicare requires the hospital to share part of the DRG payment with the rehab facility or home healthcare provider to offset the additional costs associated with those services.
The IPPS payment based on your Medicare DRG also covers outpatient services that the hospital (or an entity owned by the hospital) provided in the three days leading up to the hospitalization.
Outpatient services are typically covered under Medicare Part B, but this is an exception to that rule, as the IPPS payments come from Medicare Part A.
ICD (international classification of diseases): Classifies a patient’s diagnosisCPT (current procedural terminology): Describes services a healthcare professional provides to a patientDRG (diagnostic-related group): Categorizes hospital services using information from a patient’s diagnosis (ICD), treatment provided (CPT), and other factors