HIM 481 White Ch 5 Variance Analysis
Budget Cycle
1. Budget created 2. Compared to actual results 3. Analysis of significant variances 4. Corrective action 5. Feedback for next budget cycle
Variance
1. disagreement between two figures 2. The square of the standard deviation; a measure of variability that gives the average of the squared deviations from the mean 3. In financial management, the difference between the budgeted amount and the actual amount of a line item; in project mgmt., the diff between the original project plan and current estimates
Threshold
A boundary, beginning point, or target amount. Fixed cutoffs based primarily on historical experience
Standard deviation
A measure of variability that describes the deviation from the mean of a frequency distribution in the original units of measurement; the square root of the variance.
Intensity of service
A statistic that measures the level of diagnostic and therapeutic services required to treat a set of patients.
Decision tree
A structured data mining technique based on a set of rules useful for predicting and classifying information and making decisions
Statistical process control
A tool that may be used to ID budget variances that go beyond random occurrences. SPC is an alternative to setting fixed budget thresholds. -Analyze historical values compared to bell shaped curve -Identify when process is "out of control" -Out of control → significant budget variance -Appropriate for budget values that vary approximately symmetrically around an average
Specificity
Ability of the decision rule to not falsely ID a variance as significant or a false positive
Variance analysis
An assessment of the department's financial transactions to identify the exact cause of the diff between the budget amount and actual amount of the line item.
Controllable costs
Costs that can be influenced by a dept. director or manager
Cost Center
Groups of activities where costs are specified together for mgmt. purposes
Volume
Represent quantity of items produced or purchased to drive the budget line Examples: Laboratory tests Discharges Clinic visits Surgical trays
Sensitivity
The ability of a decision rule to detect a true difference
Unit price
The cost to produce the unit of volume or the revenue per unit volume Cost variance analysis: Cost to produce a unit Revenue variance analysis: Revenue per unit "Unit" must be defined the same as volume metric
Decision theory
The expected cost of investigating and not investigating a budget variance are calculated and compared to determine the most effective alternative.Includes the cost of "doing nothing" Decision theory assess the expected cost of each decision Investigate variance - find and fix root cause Do not investigate - continue to monitor for additional periods
Unfavorable variance
The negative difference between the budgeted amount and the actual amount of a line item. where actual revenue is less than budget or where actual expenses exceed budget
Favorable variance
The positive difference between budgeted amount and the actual amount of a line item, that is, when actual revenue exceeds budget or actual expenses are less than budget
Root Cause
The underlying event(s) that led to a problem, determined through methodical investigation
Normal Distribution
There is a 5% chance of observing a value outside of +/- 2 standard deviations from the mean Is used to identify outliers or variances worthy of investigation
Define various approaches to objectively defining significant budget variances.
Thresholds Statistical Process Control Charts Decision Theory
What do you analyze to understand the root cause of budget variances?
Volume Unit Price Intensity of Service (most difficult to measure)
Define Budget variance.
When the actual performance is different from the budget Budget variance = actual value - budget value Positive - actual > budget Negative - actual < budget