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The evolution of a chest wall injury and reconstruction clinic during a pandemic

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Chest Wall Injury and Reconstruction Center at MUSC serves patients with chest wall pain or injury. Patients with rib fractures, sternal fractures rib pain, or slipped rib syndrome can receive… Click to show full abstract

Chest Wall Injury and Reconstruction Center at MUSC serves patients with chest wall pain or injury. Patients with rib fractures, sternal fractures rib pain, or slipped rib syndrome can receive care in-person or via telehealth. BACKGROUND In 2019, we sought to develop a chest wall injury and reconstruction clinic (CWIRC) to treat patients with chest wall pain and rib fractures. This initiative was fueled by the recognition of an unmet need and evolving research demonstrating improved patient care and experience. We will describe the evolution of this clinic program from an acute care surgery/general surgery (ACS/GS) clinic to a CWIRC. METHODS We identified outpatient encounters generated from a general surgery clinic staffed by a physician and nurse practitioner team. A retrospective cohort review was performed to identify all outpatient encounters and surgeries associated with these encounters from January 1, 2017, to November 30, 2021. Outpatient and operative work relative value unit (wRVU) production as well as payer mix was compared as the primary outcome. RESULTS Over this time period, the number of clinic interactions decreased (2017–284 vs. 2021–229). Clinic productivity increased however from 181 wRVUs in 2017 to 295 wRVUs in 2021. The CWIRC patient visits increased from 4% to 70%. In addition, telehealth visits increased from 0% to 23% of encounters. The operative wRVU productivity attributable to outpatient clinic visits increased (2017–253 vs. 2021–591). Combined, the CWIRC resulted in an overall growth of 104% in total wRVUs. The payer mixes for patients with rib diagnosis have a higher number of Blue Cross Blue Shield, Medicare, and Managed Care compared with ACS/GS. The most common diagnosis was rib fracture initial evaluation (37%), rib fracture subsequent encounter (25%), rib pain (24%), and flail chest initial evaluation (4%). CONCLUSION The initiation of a CWIRC increased wRVU production despite a decrease in clinical encounters. These clinics may produce more wRVUs per encounter than ACS/GS clinics. An underserved population has been identified of chest wall pathology patients presenting for initial evaluation as outpatients. Further investigation into this concept is warranted to serve this population. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic/Care Management; Level IV.

Keywords: wall; chest wall; care; wall injury; injury reconstruction

Journal Title: Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery
Year Published: 2022

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