Revision [470]

Last edited on 2011-08-18 15:41:59 by SethKrieger
Additions:
The following query gives a count by Plan and (primary) Provider. For the count across providers, remove line 3, line 9, and the comma and __d.provcode__ from the GROUP BY and ORDER BY clauses. Better yet, look at the second version of the query below, featuring a ROLLUP that gives you all the totals and subtotals without the need to edit.
Deletions:
The following query gives a count by Plan and (primary) Provider. For the count across providers, just remove the comma and __d.provcode__ from the GROUP BY clause. Better yet, look at the second version of the query below, featuring a ROLLUP that gives you all the totals and subtotals without the need to edit.


Revision [469]

Edited on 2011-08-16 09:44:21 by SethKrieger
Additions:
======Count Of Patients By Insurance Plan======
The SOS report “Patients by Insurance Carrier” lists every active patient. Can that report be trimmed to just giving the carrier and the number of active patients within each carrier, perhaps also with a grand total of active patients? Knowing the exact amount of patients we serve is helpful when negotiating with carriers about rates, etc.
The following query gives a count by Plan and (primary) Provider. For the count across providers, just remove the comma and __d.provcode__ from the GROUP BY clause. Better yet, look at the second version of the query below, featuring a ROLLUP that gives you all the totals and subtotals without the need to edit.
SELECT
c.payorname AS "Ins Plan",
d.provcode,
count(a.ptnum) as "N"
FROM
patients a
JOIN ptpayors b on a.ptnum = b.ptnum
JOIN payors c on b.payornum = c.payornum
JOIN providers d on a.providernum = d.providernum
WHERE
a.flag = 0
AND a.dischargedate IS NULL
AND c.payortype = 'I'
GROUP BY
c.payorname, d.provcode
ORDER BY
c.payorname, d.provcode
The version below adds the ROLLUP operator to the GROUP BY. That creates a result set that includes NULL in various cells. Read NULL as "ALL." Therefore if you see NULL in the ProvCode column, it means that this count is for all providers. There is also a row with NULL in both the Plan and Provider columns, meaning all plans and all providers, which in this case is the number of patients in the result set.
SELECT
c.payorname AS "Ins Plan",
d.provcode,
count(a.ptnum) as "N"
FROM
patients a
JOIN ptpayors b on a.ptnum = b.ptnum
JOIN payors c on b.payornum = c.payornum
JOIN providers d on a.providernum = d.providernum
WHERE
a.flag = 0
AND a.dischargedate IS NULL
AND c.payortype = 'I'
GROUP BY
ROLLUP(c.payorname, d.provcode)
ORDER BY
c.payorname, d.provcode
Deletions:
======Query Title ======
comments here appear in italics
paste your tested query here


Revision [468]

The oldest known version of this page was created on 2011-08-16 09:33:27 by SethKrieger [Cloned from NewQuery]
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