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DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.d.d. Medicare and medical assistance participation.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.e.e. Number and type of medical professionals on staff.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.f.f. Number of staffed beds.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.g.g. Services provided.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.h.h. Accreditation status.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.i.i. Date of last inspection by the department.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.j.j. Degree of compliance with medicare and medical assistance regulations.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.k.k. Evaluation by consumers.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.L.L. Membership in professional organizations.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.m.m. If applicable, performance measures such as complication rates, volume of procedures, patient satisfaction and last report of facility surveys of care delivered.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.n.n. Years of operation.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.p.p. Satisfaction of clients.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.q.q. Measures of financial strength.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)1.r.r. Affiliations with specific physicians, clinics or hospitals.
DHS 120.23(4)(c)2.2. The department shall provide consumers with information regarding how to assess the information specified in subd. 1. and what additional questions consumers may want to ask the health care facility.
DHS 120.23 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, December, 2000, No. 540, eff. 1-1-01.
DHS 120.24DHS 120.24Hospital rate increase report.
DHS 120.24(1)(1)Data sources. The hospital rate increase report shall be based on notarized copies of notices placed in newspapers and submitted to the department by hospitals.
DHS 120.24(2)(2)Contents.
DHS 120.24(2)(a)(a) The hospital rate increase report shall contain all of the following information:
DHS 120.24(2)(a)1.1. For each hospital that publishes a notice as specified under s. DHS 120.09 (2), the report shall list all of the following:
DHS 120.24(2)(a)1.a.a. The name of the hospital and the city in which the hospital is located.
DHS 120.24(2)(a)1.b.b. The date the increase will be effective.
DHS 120.24(2)(a)1.c.c. The resulting annualized percentage increase.
DHS 120.24(2)(a)1.d.d. The geographic area of analysis in which the hospital is located.
DHS 120.24(2)(a)2.2. A list of hospitals that have closed since 1993.
DHS 120.24(3)(3)Report dissemination. The department shall make the report available from the department’s website at no charge.
DHS 120.24(4)(4)Suggested use of report. Some suggestions for using the report are as follows:
DHS 120.24(4)(a)(a) To understand changes in hospital rates.
DHS 120.24(4)(b)(b) To compare rates across hospitals within and across state regions or statewide.
DHS 120.24(4)(c)(c) To project expected costs of hospitalizations.
DHS 120.24 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, December, 2000, No. 540, eff. 1-1-01.
DHS 120.25DHS 120.25Uncompensated health care services report.
DHS 120.25(1)(1)Data sources. The uncompensated health care services report shall be based on data derived from all of the following sources:
DHS 120.25(1)(a)(a) Annual hospital plans for the provision of uncompensated health care submitted to the department by hospitals.
DHS 120.25(1)(b)(b) Fiscal surveys of hospitals conducted by the department.
DHS 120.25(2)(2)Contents. The uncompensated health care services report shall contain all of the following information:
DHS 120.25(2)(a)(a) For each hospital, the report shall list all of the following:
DHS 120.25(2)(a)1.1. The city in which the hospital is located.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)2.2. The type of the hospital.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)3.3. The dollar amount of charity care provided for the most recent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)4.4. The proportion of total annual gross patient revenue that constitutes the charity care.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)5.5. The annual amount of bad debt.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)6.6. The proportion of total annual gross patient revenue that constitutes the bad debt.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)7.7. The total annual dollar amount of charity care and bad debt.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)8.8. The proportion of total annual gross patient revenue that constitutes both charity care and bad debt.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)9.9. The proportion of total nongovernmental patient revenue that constitutes the charity care.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)10.10. The proportion of total nongovernmental patient revenue that constitutes the bad debt.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)11.11. The proportion of total annual nongovernmental patient revenue that constitutes both charity care and bad debt.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)12.12. The number of patients that received charity care during the most recent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)13.13. The number of patients projected to receive charity care during the subsequent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)14.14. The number of bad debt patient accounts during the most recent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)15.15. The number of bad debt patient accounts projected for the subsequent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)16.16. The total number of charity care and bad debt cases during the most recent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)17.17. The total number of charity care and bad debt cases projected for the subsequent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(a)18.18. Whether and to what extent the hospital has outstanding obligations on state loan funds, excluding fund proceeds from the Wisconsin health and educational facilities authority, during the most recent fiscal year.
DHS 120.25(2)(b)(b) For each hospital with county general relief revenues greater than $500,000 or 1% of total gross patient revenue for the most recent fiscal year, the report shall list all of the following:
DHS 120.25(2)(b)1.1. The county in which the hospital is located.
DHS 120.25(2)(b)2.2. The amount of general relief revenues the hospital received.
DHS 120.25(2)(b)3.3. The proportion of total gross revenue that the general relief revenue represents.
DHS 120.25(2)(b)4.4. The proportion of charges for general relief cases that were reimbursed by counties.
DHS 120.25(2)(c)(c) A copy of the department’s hospital uncompensated health care plan survey.
DHS 120.25(2)(d)(d) A copy of the department’s hospital fiscal survey.
DHS 120.25(2)(e)(e) A glossary of terms used in the report.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)(f) Brief discussions of all of the following:
DHS 120.25(2)(f)1.1. The definition of uncompensated health care services.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)2.2. Problems associated with measuring hospitals’ charitable contributions to their communities.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)3.3. Summary statistics pertaining to uncompensated health care services.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)4.4. How hospitals project uncompensated health care.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)5.5. How hospitals verify the need for charity care.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)6.6. A list of hospitals with obligations to provide reasonable amounts of charity care.
DHS 120.25(2)(f)7.7. How hospitals notify the public about charity care.
DHS 120.25(3)(3)Report dissemination. The department shall distribute a paper copy of the report at no charge to the governor, the legislature and a board-approved list of individuals and agencies. The department shall make the paper version of the report available for purchase by others. The department shall make available from the department’s website an electronic version of the report at no charge.
DHS 120.25(4)(4)Suggested uses of report. Some suggestions for using the report are as follows:
DHS 120.25(4)(a)(a) By legislators and policymakers to determine the level of uncompensated health care provided in various areas of the state and, in turn, whether the burden of uncompensated health care is fairly shared by all hospitals.
DHS 120.25(4)(b)(b) In conjunction with other available information, by insurance companies and other third-party payers and by business or consumer groups to determine the extent to which uncompensated health care affects hospitals’ charges and hospitals’ ability to provide services to a community.
DHS 120.25(4)(c)(c) As a resource document for persons wishing to conduct research or seek information on uncompensated health care.
DHS 120.25 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, December, 2000, No. 540, eff. 1-1-01.
DHS 120.26DHS 120.26Hospital quality indicators report.
DHS 120.26(1)(1)Data source. The hospital quality indicators report shall be based on hospital inpatient data collected by the department under s. DHS 120.12 (5). The inpatient discharge data are reformatted by the department to be consistent with nationally recognized quality indicators.
DHS 120.26 NoteNote: An example of nationally recognized quality indicators are the health care utilization project (HCUP) quality indicators.
DHS 120.26(2)(2)Contents. The hospital quality indicators report shall present variations in the delivery of inpatient care at individual hospitals without identifying the individual hospitals. The purpose of the report is to promote improvements in the overall quality of hospital care by providing an analysis of the variations in care delivery across the state. Where appropriate, national comparisons serve as improvement benchmarks. Each report shall include all the following information:
DHS 120.26(2)(a)(a) A description of the report’s data and the limitations in interpreting the data.
DHS 120.26(2)(b)(b) A description of nationally recognized quality indicators.
DHS 120.26(2)(c)(c) A discussion of how to interpret the analysis of the variations in care delivery across the state.
DHS 120.26(2)(d)(d) A graphical presentation of the performance of hospitals relative to the quality indicators selected for presentation in the report.
DHS 120.26(2)(e)(e) A discussion of how a hospital may obtain from the department hospital-specific information resulting from application of the nationally recognized quality indicators.
DHS 120.26(3)(3)Report dissemination.
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Published under s. 35.93, Stats. Updated on the first day of each month. Entire code is always current. The Register date on each page is the date the chapter was last published.