Critical Care Explorations (Sep 2023)

Sepsis-2.5: Resolving Conflicts Between Payers and Providers

  • Howard Rodenberg, MD, MPH,
  • Theodore Glasser, MD,
  • Alison Bartfield, MD,
  • Shalika Katugaha, MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000970
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 9
p. e0970

Abstract

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Competing definitions of sepsis have significant clinical implications and impact both medical coding and hospital payment. Although clinicians may prefer Sepsis-2, payer use of Sepsis-3 to validate clinical diagnoses may result in denial of payment or requests to recoup previously paid funds from healthcare providers. The Sepsis-2.5 project was a cooperative effort between a hospital system and a private payer to develop a community-based, literature-supported consensus definition for sepsis characterized by the presence of clinical illness, a source of infection, and evidence of organ dysfunction. This new definition (“Sepsis-2.5”) has been instrumental in resolving provider-payer conflicts in defining clinical sepsis and reimbursing care.