MDNUM2_S - Physician 2 number (synthetic) |
Documentation Sections: |
General Notes |
Uniform Values |
State Specific Notes |
General Notes | ||||||||
HCUP encrypted physician identifiers are referred to by different names in the HCUP data across years.
Prior to 2001, this data element is called SURGID_S. MDNUM2_S contains a fixed-key (one-to-one) encryption of the supplied physician 2 number (MDNUM2), according to the following rules:
Except in those data sources where physician license numbers are supplied, it is not known whether the physician identifier MDNUM2_S refers to individual physicians or to groups. If the physician 2 numbers supplied by the data source are not restricted to license numbers, the state-specific note includes available information about reporting practices, including whether MDNUM2_S refers to individual physicians or to groups. Beginning in the 1993 data, supplied physician identifiers were checked for null characters. If null characters were found, they were replaced by blanks before the identifier was encrypted. Since this conversion was not done in prior years of HCUP data, the encrypted physician identifiers from 1993 on may not match those in earlier years. However, null characters are rarely included. |
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Uniform Values | ||||||||||
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State Specific Notes |
Arizona In Arizona two types of physician identifiers are available:
Physician identification numbers may not accurately track physicians across hospitals for the following reasons:
The physician identification number includes license numbers from the following board of examiners: Medical, Osteopathic, Podiatrists, and Nurses. In addition, Arizona accepts licensing numbers from other health practitioner licensing boards, but these boards are unspecified. The provided physician identifiers are encrypted during HCUP processing. The physician identifiers provided by Arizona for the second half of 2002 were constructed differently than the first half of 2002 and following years (i.e., 2003 forward). Physicians cannot be accurately tracked across the second half of 2002. Colorado In Colorado two types of physician identifiers are available:
Physician identification numbers may not accurately track physicians across hospitals. The state encourages hospitals to use the Professional State License Number as an identifier, but some hospitals continue to use their own internal identification number. Also, some hospitals appear to pad the Professional State License Number (a 5-digit code). Information was not available from the data source about the prevalence of these practices. Some hospitals may use one license number for all physicians in order to protect physician confidentiality. Information was not available from the data source about the prevalence of this practice. The provided physician identifiers are encrypted during HCUP processing. Florida In Florida two types of physician identifiers are available:
Physician identification numbers may be used to track physicians within and across hospitals. Florida reports state license numbers for the physician identifiers. During HCUP processing, physician identifiers were encrypted. |
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Internet Citation: HCUP Central Distributor SID Description of Data Elements - All States. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). October 2024. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/db/vars/siddistnote.jsp?var=mdnum2_s. |
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Last modified 10/16/24 |