Patient-Based Costing, DRGs, EHR Design, Process Mining, and Clinical Terminologies in Acute Hospitals
Abstract In an acute hospital, Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs) and patient-based costing solve different, complementary problems. DRGs are a prospective payment and case-mix classification mechanism : they group inpatient episodes for reimbursement and resource allocation using coded diagnoses, procedures, severity, and other episode variables. Patient-based costing - especially Activity-Based Costing (ABC) and Time-Driven Activity-Based Costing (TDABC) - is an internal measurement method : it estimates the actual resources consumed by a given patient across the care cycle. The practical implication is that DRGs tell the hospital what it is likely to be paid, while patient-based costing tells the hospital what the case actually cost. An effective acute-hospital costing architecture therefore requires structured EHR data, reliable timestamps and event logs, linkage to HR/finance/supply systems, and a semantic layer that uses SNOMED CT and LOINC for point-of-care capture and WHO ICD-11 a...