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[Contribution] Nursing care benefit recovery risk, an ‘invisible enemy’ shaking up hospital management

Media Medipana
Date

2025-11-25

Views 50

[기고] 요양급여 환수 리스크, 병원 경영 뒤흔드는 '보이지 않는 적'

1. Introduction

 

The issue of recovery of nursing care benefits and unfair claims has now become a core management risk that all directors must pay attention to, regardless of the size of medical institutions such as clinics, hospitals, and nursing hospitals. Cases where incorrect claims due to simple practical errors or mistakes lead to recovery of tens of millions of won to hundreds of millions of won, and if repeated, escalate into business suspension or criminal investigation are steadily occurring. In particular, recently, as EMR logs, CCTV videos, billing patterns, and AI-based anomaly detection technology have been used for crackdowns, the hospital's daily recording and billing process has become exposed during the investigation process.

 

2. Characteristics and enforcement system of recovery of nursing care benefits

 

The most important feature of recovery of nursing care benefits is that they are recovered regardless of whether it was intentional or not. In clinics, missing records are common during busy outpatient treatment, and at the hospital level, as records are shared among multiple doctors, nurses, and therapists, the timing and content are likely to differ. In nursing hospitals, it is easy for management to accumulate as the standards for nursing grade and staffing vary from day to day. Due to these structural characteristics, cases of claiming non-covered items as benefits, recording post-emergency EMR routines, overcharging compared to the implementation of physical therapy and manual therapy, and non-compliance with hospitalization fee standards are common in all institutions regardless of size.

 

The same enforcement procedures apply. The Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service analyzes EMR logs, revision time, input person, and CCTV, focusing on whether medical records and claims match. The National Health Insurance Corporation determines refunds based on several years' worth of claims, and the Ministry of Health and Welfare imposes business suspensions or fines. If the amount is large or repeated, it may expand into a criminal investigation related to medical law violations or insurance fraud. In this trend, the size of the medical institution does not affect the intensity of crackdown.

 

3. Major cases of detection by type of institution and causes of increased recovery risk

 

The points with a high risk of detection are different for each type of institution. At the clinic level, missing records, mixing of non-coverage and benefit, and discrepancies in the implementation of manual and physical therapy are the most common. At the hospital level, the main problems are errors in calculating nursing grades, differences in recording times for multiple personnel, and inconsistencies in document management standards between medical departments. In nursing hospitals, structural risks accumulate, such as not meeting staffing standards, violating long-term hospitalization standards, and adjusting functional evaluation scores. However, although the characteristics of each type are different, the results are all the same. Recovery, business suspension, and criminal risks apply equally to all organizations.

 

Looking at actual cases, the danger becomes clearer. A clinician who was busy writing records after work due to busy outpatient treatment was notified of a refund of hundreds of millions of won when hundreds of post-mortem records were revealed in the EMR log pattern. At the hospital level, they continued to bill for 1:1 manual therapy, but were suspended from business after being caught in CCTV footage for rotating multiple patients. There was a case in a nursing hospital where hundreds of millions of won in refunds and fines were imposed at the same time due to the fact that claims for the same nursing level were accumulated even on days when there was a nurse vacancy. In addition, there were clinics that received tens of millions of won refund notification due to incorrect input by the billing agency, and in this case, responsibility was transferred to the medical institution that made the claim.

 

The reason why the risk of redemption is increasing so rapidly is clear. First, a precise crackdown system was established in which AI automatically compares claims, records, CCTV, and logs. Second, there is a structural factor that strengthens the crackdown on unfair claims due to financial pressure on health insurance. Third, it becomes easier to secure digital evidence, allowing investigative agencies to reconstruct medical institutions' practical processes in virtually real time. Fourth, as the perception that ‘unfair claims = insurance fraud’ spreads, the number of cases being turned into criminal cases is increasing.

 

4. Establishment of response strategies and prevention systems for medical institutions

 

In the end, clinics, hospitals, and nursing hospitals must all recognize the risk of nursing care benefits as a 'management system problem' rather than a simple administrative mistake. It is essential to establish an internal system to check whether records and claims match, strengthen the EMR revision and log management system, manage CCTV evidence, train claim staff, and introduce a pre-audit system. In particular, the moment you are notified of an investigation, the speed of response and the establishment of an initial strategy become key factors in determining the scope of recovery and level of disposition.

 

The recovery of nursing care benefits is a risk that goes beyond a simple financial burden and directly impacts the management stability of clinics, the organizational management of hospital-level medical institutions, and the overall long-term operating structure of nursing hospitals. However, most risks are fully preventable as long as medical record management, billing accuracy, and internal control systems are in place. Unfair claims are not a problem that arises overnight, but are simply a matter of management gaps accumulated in the absence of standards and systems being revealed at a specific point in time.

 

5. Conclusion

 

Now that the boundaries between medicine and law are becoming more elaborate, all directors, regardless of the type and size of medical institution, need to view the risk of nursing care benefits as a ‘management risk that must be managed preemptively.’ With systematic preparation, medical institutions will be able to secure stability from recovery, disposal, and criminal risks and continue operating more sustainably.
 

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[Contribution] Nursing care benefit recovery risk, an 'invisible enemy' shaking up hospital management (link)

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