Medicare Takes Aim At Boomerang Hospitalizations Of Nursing Home Patients

https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/06/13/619259541/medicare-takes-aim-at-boomerang-hospitalizations-of-nursing-home-patients

“Oh my God, we dropped her!” Sandra Snipes said she heard the nursing home aides yell as she fell to the floor.

She landed on her right side where her hip had recently been replaced. She cried out in pain.

A hospital clinician later discovered her hip was dislocated.

That was not the only injury Snipes, then 61, said she suffered in 2011 at Richmond Pines Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center in Hamlet, N.C. Nurses allegedly had been injecting her twice a day with a potent blood thinner despite written instructions to stop.

“She said, ‘I just feel so tired,’ ” her daughter, Laura Clark, said in an interview. “The nurses were saying she’s depressed and wasn’t doing her exercises. I said no, something is wrong.”

Her children also discovered Snipes’ surgical wound had become infected and infested with insects. Just 11 days after she arrived at the nursing home to heal from her hip surgery, she was back in the hospital.

The fall and these other alleged lapses in care led Clark and the family to file a lawsuit against the nursing home. Richmond Pines declined to discuss the case beyond saying it disputed the allegations at the time. The home agreed in 2017 to pay Snipes’ family $1.4 million to settle their lawsuit.

While the confluence of complications in Snipes’ case was extreme, return trips from nursing homes to hospitals are far from unusual.

With hospitals pushing patients out the door earlier, nursing homes are deluged with increasingly frail patients. But many homes, with their sometimes-skeletal medical staffing, often fail to handle post-hospital complications — or create new problems by not heeding or receiving accurate hospital and physician instructions.

Patients, caught in the middle, may suffer. One in 5 Medicare patients sent from the hospital to a nursing home boomerangs back within 30 days, often for potentially preventable conditions such as dehydration, infections and medication errors, federal records show. Such rehospitalizations occur 27 percent more frequently than for the Medicare population at large.

Nursing homes have been unintentionally rewarded by decades of colliding government payment policies, which gave both hospitals and nursing homes financial incentives for the transfers. That has left the most vulnerable patients often ping-ponging between institutions, wreaking havoc with patients’ care.

“There’s this saying in nursing homes, and it’s really unfortunate: ‘When in doubt, ship them out,’ ” said David Grabowski, a professor of health care policy at Harvard Medical School. “It’s a short-run, cost-minimizing strategy, but it ends up costing the system and the individual a lot more.”

In recent years, the government has begun to tackle the problem. In 2013, Medicare began fining hospitals for high readmission rates in an attempt to curtail premature discharges and to encourage hospitals to refer patients to nursing homes with good track records.

Starting this October, the government will address the other side of the equation, giving nursing homes bonuses or assessing penalties based on their Medicare rehospitalization rates. The goal is to accelerate early signs of progress: The rate of potentially avoidable readmissions dropped to 10.8 percent in 2016 from 12.4 percent in 2011, according to Congress’ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.

“We’re better, but not well,” Grabowski said. “There’s still a high rate of inappropriate readmissions.”

The revolving door is an unintended byproduct of long-standing payment policies. Medicare pays hospitals a set rate to care for a patient depending on the average time it takes to treat a typical patient with a given diagnosis. That means that hospitals effectively profit by earlier discharge and lose money by keeping patients longer, even though an elderly patient may require a few extra days.

But nursing homes have their own incentives to hospitalize patients. For one thing, keeping patients out of hospitals requires frequent examinations and speedy laboratory tests — all of which add costs to nursing homes.

Plus, most nursing home residents are covered by Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor that is usually the lowest-paying form of insurance. If a nursing home sends a Medicaid resident to the hospital, she usually returns with up to 100 days covered by Medicare, which pays more. On top of all that, in some states, Medicaid pays a “bed-hold” fee when a patient is hospitalized.

None of this is good for the patients. Nursing home residents often return from the hospital more confused or with a new infection, said Dr. David Gifford, a senior vice president of quality and regulatory affairs at the American Health Care Association, a nursing home trade group.

“And they never quite get back to normal,” he said.

‘She Looked Like A Wet Washcloth’

Communication lapses between physicians and nursing homes is one recurring cause of rehospitalizations. Elaine Essa had been taking thyroid medication ever since that gland was removed when she was a teenager. Essa, 82, was living at a nursing home in Lancaster, Calif., in 2013 when a bout of pneumonia sent her to the hospital.

When she returned to the nursing home — now named Wellsprings Post-Acute Care Center — her doctor omitted a crucial instruction from her admission order: to resume the thyroid medication, according to a lawsuit filed by her family. The nursing home telephoned Essa’s doctor to order the medication, but he never called them back, the suit said.

Without the medication, Essa’s appetite diminished, her weight increased and her energy vanished — all indications of a thyroid imbalance, said the family’s attorney, Ben Yeroushalmi, discussing the lawsuit. Her doctors from Garrison Family Medical Group never visited her, sending instead their nurse practitioner. He, like the nursing home employees, did not grasp the cause of her decline, although her thyroid condition was prominently noted in her medical records, the lawsuit said.

Three months after her return from the hospital, “she looked like a wet washcloth. She had no color in her face,” said Donna Jo Duncan, a daughter, in a deposition. Duncan said she demanded the home’s nurses check her mother’s blood pressure. When they did, a supervisor ran over and said, “Call an ambulance right away,” Duncan said in the deposition.

At the hospital, a physician said tests showed “zero” thyroid hormone levels, Deborah Ann Favorite, a daughter, recalled in an interview. She testified in her deposition that the doctor told her, “I can’t believe that this woman is still alive.”

Essa died the next month. The nursing home and the medical practice settled the case for confidential amounts. Cynthia Schein, an attorney for the home, declined to discuss the case beyond saying it was “settled to everyone’s satisfaction.” The suit is still ongoing against one other doctor, who did not respond to requests for comment.

Dangers In Discouraging Hospitalization

Out of the nation’s 15,630 nursing homes, one-fifth send 25 percent or more of their patients back to the hospital, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis of data on Medicare’s Nursing Home Compare website. On the other end of the spectrum, the fifth of homes with the lowest readmission rates return fewer than 17 percent of residents to the hospital.

Many health policy experts say that spread shows how much improvement is possible. But patient advocates fear the campaign against hospitalizing nursing home patients may backfire, especially when Medicare begins linking readmission rates to its payments.

“We’re always worried the bad nursing homes are going to get the message ‘Don’t send anyone to the hospital,’ ” said Tony Chicotel, a staff attorney at California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, a nonprofit based in San Francisco.

Richmond Pines, where Sandra Snipes stayed, has a higher than average rehospitalization rate of 25 percent, according to federal records. But the family’s lawyer, Kyle Nutt, said the lawsuit claimed the nurses initially resisted sending Snipes back, insisting she was “just drowsy.”

After Snipes was rehospitalized, her blood thinner was discontinued, her hip was reset, and she was discharged to a different nursing home, according to the family’s lawsuit. But her hospital trips were not over: When she showed signs of recurrent infection, the second home sent her to yet another hospital, the lawsuit alleged.

Ultimately, the lawsuit claimed that doctors removed her prosthetic hip and more than a liter of infected blood clots and tissues. Nutt said if Richmond Pines’ nurses had “caught the over-administration of the blood thinner right off the bat, we don’t think any of this would have happened.”

Snipes returned home but was never able to walk again, according to the lawsuit. Her husband, William, cared for her until she died in 2015, her daughter, Clark, said.

“She didn’t want to go back into the nursing home,” Clark said. “She was terrified.”

 

 

 

8 healthcare leaders share their No. 1 piece of advice

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/8-healthcare-leaders-share-their-no-1-piece-of-advice.html

Good leadership advice is meant to be shared. Here eight healthcare leaders — including CEOs, CFOs and chief strategy officers — offer the No. 1 piece of advice they would give other leaders in their field.

1. Rob Bloom, CFO of Carthage (N.Y.) Area Hospital. “The best advice I have is to find the courage to change what must be changed and accept those things that cannot be changed in the short term. Regardless of whether a hospital is profitable or struggling, there will be challenges. The difficult task is to determine where to focus resources while accepting criticism for problems that will not change the short-term viability of the organization. You have to learn to trust your judgment and resist pressures from others that might tempt you to alter your course based on their lack of understanding. It is very much a triage process: Stop the bleeding first, then worry about infection later.”

2. Mona Chadha, chief strategy officer of San Francisco-based Dignity Health’s Bay Area. “One of the key strengths of being a good leader is really listening and leading people by example. That to me is one of the successes. Then, do some thinking outside of the box. That’s been my mantra of success in the past.”

3. JoAnn Kunkel, CFO of Sioux Falls, S.D.-based Sanford Health. “The very first CFO I worked for in 1990 always said, ‘you’re only as good as your team. … I’d never be able to be successful without having you and the team working with me.’ [That CFO] was a very thoughtful and inclusive leader. He gave me opportunities to be part of the team and think strategically and develop into a leader. So since then, it’s always been my belief that we have a very strong team that should always participate. If we have someone that needs help, we have multiple individuals ready to step up. And working together makes us all better. My advice would be: It’s important to remember you are only as good as your team. Sometimes I think when you get into these leadership roles you can forget that. You always want to be inclusive, give credit to the work and the team and the efforts that help make you successful in your role.”

4. Michael McAnder, CFO of Atlanta-based Piedmont Healthcare. “I think what I’d say is try and look for the long-term play. You can’t manage this business on a day-to-day basis. You have to have a clear direction and stick with it. I think that’s probably the thing our CEO Kevin Brown has done really well. I have never worked at an organization with a one-page strategic plan before. Every meeting starts with it, and we use it at every presentation. That consistency has brought clarity. It’s also why we’ve gone from five hospitals to 11 in the three years I’ve been here. That resonates with other organizations when we talk about our plan. It’s really important. In addition, obviously, you have to act with integrity and character. If you’re in a position where you can’t do that, you have to make a different decision about whether you can keep working for someone.”

5. Alan B. Miller, CEO of King of Prussia, Pa.-based Universal Health Services. “I often give a few pieces of advice to other CEOs and leaders, including:

  • Character is destiny — a person with good character will always be better off in life. Choose your friends carefully because you are known by the friends you keep.
  • Hard work is critical. If you are going to do something, do it well.
  • Hire the best team possible. Build trust, and rally the team to focus on a common goal.”

6. David Parsons, MD, CMO of Portland-based Northwest Permanente. “Listen to the people you lead and be honest about which problems you can solve and which ones you can’t. People usually don’t mind being told no as long as you are direct and honest about the reasons why. People detest ambivalence.”

7. Mike Pykosz, CEO and founder of Chicago-based Oak Street Health. “Be persistent and be motivated by your mission. One thing we found really early was everything is a lot harder and takes a lot longer than you think it will. Things that make a lot of sense to you and are super logical will always take a little longer. [Success] requires breaking down a lot of little barriers, including a lot of inefficiencies, a lot of complexities and mindshare. But whatever it is, be persistent and have faith that if you’re trying to do the right thing, and if you stay at it, you’ll be able to break down those barriers and accomplish these things.”

8. Michael Wallace, president and CEO of Fort Atkinson, Wis.-based Fort HealthCare. “I’d say visualize the outcome you want and then go get it. I also like the phrase ‘try hard, fail fast, move on, start over.’ You’re one step closer to a solution if the last one didn’t work. But don’t let perfect get in the way of good. I like to be 8 for 10 rather than 3 for 3. Failure is the byproduct of trying to move an organization forward. If I get 8 of 10 things right, I am going to end up further along, closer to my vision than if I wait to be sure about everything to get that perfect 3 for 3.”

 

 

More than a quarter of major health systems plan Medicare Advantage launch, though many lack confidence

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/more-quarter-major-health-systems-plan-medicare-advantage-launch-though-many-lack-confidence?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWkdSaE9UZzRPV0poTW1FeCIsInQiOiJTK1lnZEdEakdOVlZNYWRBSzF5M3o1d3BRWmpQXC8ydVBYN2lFY01mUEQwbnhTVjBIU2NScmdIMWtXcjN3NGpXb1NoSG53clwvXC90TzJ1QWFPRWpoeGFtXC9jSHl4TFwvbDgwMEZYaU1kVmxRa1NCNHloRk9lK0VUZFBkVEVuV1hHTytIIn0%3D

 

Executives say the top reason for launching a Medicare Advantage plan is the opportunity to capture more value.

A new survey from Lumeris found that 27 percent of major U.S. health system executives intend to launch a Medicare Advantage plan in the next four years. Despite that, confidence among these same execs is lacking, with only 29 percent reporting they felt confident in their organization’s ability to make the launch successfully.

“These survey findings are consistent with our conversations with healthcare executives across the country who are feeling a sense of urgency around Medicare Advantage strategies, but also realize that this type of work is vastly different than traditional health system operations,” said Jeff Carroll, executive director of health plans at Lumeris, by statement.

In April, The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced it was releasing Medicare Advantage encounter data for the first time by request from the CMS Research Data Assistance Center. The MA encounter data, starting from 2015, provides detailed information about services to beneficiaries enrolled in a Medicare Advantage managed plan. It will give researchers insight into the care delivered under MA plans and will help them improve the Medicare program, CMS said. Annual updates are planned.

According to the 90 executives Lumeris surveyed from major health systems, the top reason for launching a Medicare Advantage plan is the opportunity to capture more value by controlling a greater portion of the premium dollar as compared to fee-for-service Medicare.

Other key drivers cited include market and regulatory trends supporting Medicare Advantage. In particular, shrinking Medicare margins could threaten the viability of hospitals and health systems as the senior population continues to grow and becomes a larger proportion of providers’ patient panels.

The respondents also recognized that launching a Medicare Advantage plan will be challenging due to the complexities of operating an insurance plan, which are far different than the capabilities required to successfully operate a health system.

They also shared concerns about the significant financial investment required and an overall lack of expertise in the health plan space. The majority of respondents, 59 percent, indicated they were likely to use outside resources to launch their plans — and that those resources are very likely to include a vendor partner that can mitigate operational risk.

“Launching and managing a Medicare Advantage plan requires skills beyond the core competencies of most health systems, which is one reason many provider-sponsored plans fail in the first few years,” Carroll said. “Through those failures, it has become clear that providers who select the right partners increase the likelihood for greater success in a shorter period of time.”

 

AHA report: Hospitals spend almost $3 trillion, support more than 16 million jobs

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/aha-report-hospitals-spend-almost-3-trillion-support-more-16-million-jobs?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWkdSaE9UZzRPV0poTW1FeCIsInQiOiJTK1lnZEdEakdOVlZNYWRBSzF5M3o1d3BRWmpQXC8ydVBYN2lFY01mUEQwbnhTVjBIU2NScmdIMWtXcjN3NGpXb1NoSG53clwvXC90TzJ1QWFPRWpoeGFtXC9jSHl4TFwvbDgwMEZYaU1kVmxRa1NCNHloRk9lK0VUZFBkVEVuV1hHTytIIn0%3D

Every dollar a hospital spends yields roughly $2.30 of additional business activity; for every hospital job, another two are supported.

A new report from the American Hospital Association highlights just how much hospitals are driving their local economies, as well the national one, with data showing hospitals directly employ nearly 6 million people and purchase more than $900 billion worth of goods and services from other businesses.

But that’s not all. Enter the ripple effect. The goods and services hospitals buy drive economic vitality throughout their communities, with each hospital job supporting roughly two additional jobs in the community. Every dollar a hospital spends yields roughly $2.30 of additional business activity.

When you incorporate that ripple effects into calculations, the AHA reported hospitals actually support 16.5 million jobs nationwide and almost $3 trillion in economic activity.

“In 2016, America’s hospitals treated 143 million people in their emergency departments, provided 605 million outpatient visits, performed over 27 million surgeries and delivered nearly 4 million babies. Every year, hospitals provide vital health care services like these to hundreds of millions of people in thousands of communities. However, the importance of hospitals to their communities extends far beyond health care,” the AHA said.

When it come to states whose hospitals send the most money into the their economies, it’s no surprise that California is the top spender, with $103 billion in total expenditures. Factor in that ripple effect and the Golden State’s total economic output from its hospitals more than doubles to $230 billion.

New York, Texas, Florida and Pennsylvania rounded out the top five states that are most impacted by hospital expenditures, the report said.

When it comes to a hospitals impact on the state’s labor force, it’s not just about who creates the most. Maine is actually the state most impacted by hospital job creation with total of 38,105 hospital jobs. That hospital workforce makes up a little more than 14 percent of the states overall workforce. Ohio was the second most impacted state, with 298,371 hospital jobs that constitute just almost 13 percent of the state’s workforce.

Minnesota, West Virginia and Massachusetts rounded out the other top five states whose workforce is impacted by hospital jobs. Minnesota’s hospital workforce constitutes a little more than 12 percent of the overall state force, West Virginia’s hospital workforce was nearly 11.7 percent and Massachusetts was almost the same with 11.6 percent.

As both healthcare and economic cornerstones of their communities, the pressure is greater for hospitals leaders to find new ways to add value, maintain financial margins and keep doors open. That is one of the drivers behind the rash of merger and acquisition activity. With ever-increasing regulatory burdens that require more manpower or physician’s time to manage, coupled with the need to make much needed updates in technology, modernize facilities to meet current trends or just maintain appropriate levels of care and accommodation for patients, not to mention staying competitive for hospitals in areas where other systems want to dip into their patient volumes, hospital leaders are eyeing mergers as a means of keeping doors open sot they can continue to support their communities both clinically and economically.

 

Geisinger CEO forgoes chief exec role at Amazon, Berkshire, JPMorgan health company

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/geisinger-ceo-forgoes-chief-exec-role-at-amazon-berkshire-jpmorgan-health-company.html

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Geisinger President and CEO David T. Feinberg, MD, who was reportedly one of the top contenders for the chief executive role at the Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase healthcare venture, said he will remain at the Danville, Pa.-based health system, CNBC reports.

People close to the hiring process told CNBC Dr. Feinberg was at one time highly considered for the position. However, Dr. Feinberg confirmed to the publication through a spokesperson he would not be leaving the health system.

“I appreciate being part of the conversation, which I believe reflects the accomplishments of the entire Geisinger team. I personally remain 100 percent committed to Geisinger and remain excited about the work we are doing and the opportunities ahead as we continue to deliver exceptional care to our patients, our members and our communities,” he said.

Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett told CNBC June 7 the companies have selected a CEO for the venture and will publicly name the individual within two weeks. Sources familiar with the matter told CNBC the organizations did not announced the appointment June 7 because Dr. Feinberg declined the job.

Sources said the top 10 candidates for the position were asked to write a white paper detailing how they would fix the healthcare system, according to the report. From there, the companies narrowed down the candidate pool to three individuals. All three reportedly spoke with Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan, who referred his top two choices to Mr. Buffett, who passed along his top choice to Amazon Chairman, Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos.

One of the three finalists was Owen Tripp, co-founder and CEO of healthcare company Grand Rounds.

Sources told CNBC Dr. Feinberg had been advising the group since the companies announced the venture in January, and emerged as a top contender for the role. He has led the 13-hospital Geisinger Health System since 2015.

Berkshire Hathaway Investment Manager Todd Combs has been the lead recruiter on the venture, CNBCpreviously reported. Other candidates who have been approached for the role include former CMS Acting Administrator Andy Slavitt, former U.S. Chief Technology Officer Todd Park, and Gary Loveman, former senior vice president of Aetna.

To access the CNBC report, click here.

Viewpoint: Small hospitals should be hopeful and wary of national health systems

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/viewpoint-small-hospitals-should-be-hopeful-and-wary-of-national-health-systems.html

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With Cleveland Clinic eyeing acquisitions at two locations on Florida’s Treasure Coast — Indian River Medical Center in Vero Beach and Martin Health System in Stuart — residents and hospital workers should be wary but hopeful, according to the local TC Palm.

That a national power in the healthcare industry wants to snap up two independent nonprofit hospitals in Florida is no surprise. The area’s patient population has the trifecta of demographics: aging, wealthy and insured, TC Palm‘s Gil Smart wrote. In an era of increasing expenses, declining reimbursements and growing powers, finding a partner system can give small hospitals more weight in negotiations and help fund capital for investments in growth and change.

Yet as examples have shown, allowing bigger players to come into local markets means change, and not all of it is good, Mr. Smart noted. Unions will have it tougher at the negotiation table and control will change hands.

“Bottom line: There will be a loss of local control. There always is, where the bigger, faraway healthcare system gulps down the local guy,” Mr. Smart wrote. “Yet we shouldn’t let the drawbacks overshadow the potential benefits of having a globally renowned healthcare ‘brand’ set up shop in our backyards.”

The benefits, such as easier, better and more coordinated care, are a lot to be hopeful for. Read the full column here.

https://www.tcpalm.com/story/opinion/editorials/2018/06/04/cleveland-clinic-mean-better-health-care-here/668585002/

 

 

 

Ascension’s latest ad campaign touts online scheduling

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/healthcare-information-technology/ascension-s-latest-ad-campaign-touts-online-scheduling.html

Image result for ascension health online scheduling

St. Louis-based Ascension rolled out a national ad campaign June 4 across television, radio, billboards and direct mail to promote its online scheduling capabilities, which are available in all 22 Ascension markets.

The campaign is aimed at raising brand awareness and communicating patient scheduling options, even for last-minute or same-day appointments.

“Most of us use technology daily to simplify our lives, and the process of getting the care we need, when and where we need it, should be no different. Online scheduling allows consumers to view available appointments at their preferred location and select a time that fits their busy schedules,” Joseph Cacchione, MD, president of Ascension Medical Group, said in a press release. “As we work to improve access to compassionate, personalized care, we must also ensure we are letting consumers know about the new and innovative ways in which we are making the healthcare delivery process easier for them.”

Ascension currently offers online scheduling across 1,200 providers in primary care, urgent care and emergency department care. It has plans to add online scheduling capabilities for specialists and diagnostic and imaging services in the future.

 

 

‘No profit, no mission’ — Why this CEO believes every healthcare leader needs a strong understanding of finance

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/no-profit-no-mission-why-this-ceo-believes-every-healthcare-leader-needs-a-strong-understanding-of-finance.html

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In this special Speaker Series, Becker’s Healthcare caught up with Mark R. Anderson, CEO of AC Group, a healthcare technology and advisory research firm based in Montgomery, Texas.

Mr. Anderson will speak on a panel at Becker’s Hospital Review 7th Annual CEO + CFO Roundtable titled “The CEO paradox: Can you really have volume and value?” at 12:00 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 12. Learn more about the event and register to attend in Chicago.

Question: What keeps you excited and motivated to come to work each day?

Mark Anderson: The knowledge that we are finally moving away from fee-for-service billing to value-based reimbursement. For example, at AC Group, we have been able to cut medical costs for diabetic patients by 38 percent just by tracking blood sugar levels at home. Pay for results — don’t pay for just seeing the patient.

Q: What major challenges, financial or otherwise, are affecting hospitals in the markets you serve? How is your hospital responding?

MA: With hospital bankruptcies on the rise, we need to change how we deliver cost effective care and how we are paid. Because of high deductible health plans, the patient portion of the bill has increased from 9.4 percent in 2019 to 26.9 percent in 2017. How do we collect from the patient? How can we share clinical information about the patient with all providers without hurting our financial position?

Q: What initially piqued your interest in healthcare?

MA: It was my high school graduation present from my father. I wanted a trip to Hawaii and all I got was a letter stating, “Congratulations for finishing in the top 4 percent of your high school class. For your reward, you start work on Monday as the statistician for the hospital CEO.” Forty-five years and 250 hospitals later, I am still in hospital executive management.

Q: What is one of the most interesting healthcare industry changes you’ve observed in recent years?

MA: To name a few: Moving to electronic billing in 1985, moving from spending 2.1 percent on IT in 2005 to over 6.5 percent today (was it worth it?), forcing physicians to become data entry clerks so we can maximize coding with very little improvement in “health,” and moving to value-based reimbursement from fee-for-service so we are finally paid on quality, outcomes and our ability to lower costs through care coordination and remote patient monitoring. The four walls of the hospital are not the only care delivery system. Ninety-five percent of healthcare is delivered in the home.

Q: What is one piece of professional advice you would give to your younger self?

MA: Don’t enter the healthcare market without a strong financial knowledge base. Healthcare is a business. As the nuns told me back in 1976, no profit — no mission to help the poor and disadvantaged.

 

 

 

Do Most Hospitals Benefit from Directly Employing Physicians?

https://hbr.org/2018/05/do-most-hospitals-benefit-from-directly-employing-physicians

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How can hospitals and health systems generate a return on their investment in their physician enterprises? According to the most recent figures, from the American Medical Association, over 25% of U.S. physicians practiced in groups wholly or partly owned by hospitals in 2016 and another 7% were direct hospital employees. Yet, according to the Medical Group Management Association, hospitals’ multi-specialty physician groups lost almost $196,000 per employed physician.

As a result, some larger health systems’ physician operations are generating nine-figure operating losses, which are major contributors to the deterioration in hospital earnings.  It is time for hospitals or health systems to rethink their strategy for their physician enterprises.

Let’s first revisit why independent physicians were receptive to becoming employees and why hospitals and health systems felt the need to hire them.

The surge in hospital employment of physicians predated Obamacare by at least six years, and had two key drivers. The first was independent baby-boomer physicians — particularly those in primary care — found themselves unable to recruit new partners. Newer physicians, heavily burdened by student debt, were not inclined either to take on entrepreneurial risk or the 60-hour work weeks independent practice entailed.

The second was cuts in Medicare payments for office-based imaging. Thanks to the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, specialties such as cardiology, orthopedics, and medical oncology that relied on the revenue that imaging generated were hit hard. As a result, many found it advantageous to be employed by hospitals. Under Medicare rules, in addition to professional fees, hospitals can charge a Part B technical fee for their services and therefore can pay practitioners more than they could earn in private practice.

Then, beginning in 2009, the Obama administration’s policies increased the exodus of physicians from private practices to health systems. The “meaningful use” provisions of the HITECH Act of 2009 provided both incentives and penalties for physicians to adopt electronic records, but hospitals and very corporate enterprises had more resources to comply with meaningful-use requirements.

The value-based-payment schemes created by the Affordable Care Act also markedly increased documentation requirements and, as a result, the overhead of practices, driving more physicians into hospital employment models.

There have been a number of reasons hospitals have been hiring physicians. Some, particularly those in rural areas, had no choice but to turn physicians into employees. Retiring independent physicians were leaving large gaps in care in their economically challenged communities. Consequently, hospitals that did not step in to fill the gaps were in danger of closing.

Separately, some hospitals or systems sought to grab business from their competitors by acquiring physicians who hospitalized their patients at competing facilities. These physicians’ inpatient and, particularly, outpatient imaging and laboratory volume generated additional revenues for the acquiring hospital or system.

A third apparent motivation was to corner the local physician market in order to obtain more favorable rates from health insurers. This seemed to have been a major rationale for St. Luke’s Health Systems acquisition of Seltzer Medical Group, Idaho’s largest independent, multi-specialty physician practice group, which led to an anti-trust action.

Yet another reason for making physicians employees was to position the organization for capitated, or value-based, payment. Hospitals believed that “salarying” physicians would help control clinical volumes and thus make it easier to perform in capitated contracts.

Finally, some hospital and system CEOs were tired of negotiating with local independent physician groups or national physician-staffing firms like MedNax and TeamHealth over incomes and coverage of the hospitals’ 24/7 services such as the emergency department, the intensive care unit (ICU), and diagnostic services like radiology and pathology. Building an in-house staff of physicians seemed like an attractive alternative.

Many health systems have gotten into trouble because their strategic rationale for hiring physicians became a moving target.  A hospital system we followed morphed from a ““grab market share” strategy to a “respond to competitive acquisitions” strategy to a “bailout” strategy for loyal independent physicians to a “increase bargaining power with payers” strategy to a “position for value-based care” strategy over a period of eight years. By the time it was done, it was the proud owner of a 700-plus physician group and losses of more than $100 million per year.

Hospitals lose money on their employed physicians because physicians’ compensation plus practice expenses and corporate overhead significantly exceed the collections of practices. These direct losses are, to a degree, an artifact of accounting, because hospitals frequently do not attribute any bonus for meeting “value-based’ contract targets, or incremental hospital surgical, imaging, and lab revenues to physician practice income.

However, even factoring in the accounting issues, much of the losses are attributable to “hosting,” rather than managing, practices effectively.  Many systems employing physicians have done so without developing a cohesive physician organization and lack standardized staffing and operational support functions, such as effective purchasing and supply chain operations, effective scheduling systems, and centralized office locations.

Managing up the return, rather than managing down the loss, is the key to a successful physician strategy. Here’s how to do that.

Establish a clear strategic goal and a target return on investment. Physicians reside at the core of any successful health system. Yet as the Cheshire Cat said in Alice in Wonderland, “If you don’t care where you are going, then it doesn’t matter which way you go!” If you establish strategic goals for the physician enterprise, then the physician organization can be sized and located appropriately. As a result, the physician group may end up either a lot smaller or with a more defensible specialty and/or geographic distribution. Management should then quantify and budget the expected return on the practice’s operational loss.

Strengthen operations. Effective management of the physician group then becomes the essential challenge. For example, revenue-cycle issues such as inconsistent coding or missing data often damage the profitability of the medical group. Are systems in place to assure that medical bills are defensible and correct, and that patients understand what they owe and agree to pay? Seeing that encounters are adequately documented and translated into a fair and timely bill that patients are willing to pay is not rocket science. The return on investment for getting the revenue cycle right is often 3X to 5X.

Revamp compensation and incentives. Medicare’s policy for paying employed physicians will likely come under fresh scrutiny during the Trump administration. It is possible that Medicare’s relatively favorable payment for hospital-employed physicians will be reined in. If that happens, it might require a painful revisiting of employment contracts when they come up for renewal.

Performance incentives in those contracts should also match the strategic goals established above. For example, compensating physicians through a production-based model that encourages them to increase visits, procedures, or hospital admissions, while value-based insurance contracts (like those for accountable care organizations) demand reducing them could damage the overall performance of the health system.

Pursue reality-based contracts with insurers. The Affordable Care Act ushered in a profusion of narrow network, performance-based contracts with private insurers, with significant front-end rate concessions by hospitals. These discounts often far exceeded the potential rewards from the “value based” incentives in the contracts! Larger health systems also rushed to assemble “clinically integrated networks” (CINs), comprising their employed and contracted physicians as well as private practitioners in their markets, to participate in these new contracts. Treating physician group losses and CIN expenses as loss leaders for value-based contracts and then losing yet more money on those contracts, as is happening in many places, doesn’t make sense.

Both enrollment and financial performance under these contracts have been disappointing in most markets. Reviewing and pruning back these contracts, or renegotiating them to provide more adequate rates or to compensate hospitals for patient non-payment is an essential element of an effective physician-enterprise strategy. Hospitals and health systems also should ask: “Is the CIN functioning as intended? Is it adding value that patients notice or is it just an additional layer of administrative expense without compensating benefits for clinicians or patients?

Motivate employed and independent physicians. Finally, hospitals and systems must understand the value they are creating not only for their employed clinical workforce but also for the two-thirds of their physicians who are not full-time employees — those who are contracted, independent participants in CIN’s or in part-time administrative roles. What would motivate all these physicians to want to work with the organization over the long term?

Hospital and systems need a unified physician strategy and operating model that encompasses all these diverse arrangements. Beyond that, they must  engage their physicians in planning and organizing care. Physician are complex, highly trained professionals. They cannot be mere employees; they must be owners of the organization’s goals and strategies.

 

 

 

Top Three Trends in Mergers, Acquisitions, and Partnerships

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Learn how MAP activity is reshaping the healthcare landscape with these three key findings.

Mergers, acquisitions, and partnerships (MAP) show no sign of slowing down, and their momentum is expected to increase in the coming years, according to the HealthLeaders Media report Mergers, Acquisitions, and Partnerships: Examining Financial and Operational Impacts. MAP activity is “driven by the move to value-based care and provider needs for greater scale and geographic coverage,” says Jonathan Bees, senior research analyst at HealthLeaders Media.

The report also includes findings from a HealthLeaders Media survey, which polled 190 senior executives on recent and future MAP activity. The majority of respondents (71%) say their organizations plan to increase MAP activity in the next three years, with 68% exploring potential deals and completing deals underway over the next 12–18 months.

Here are three key findings from the latest wave of MAP activity.

1. MAPs lead to positive clinical and financial results

When healthcare organizations commit to a MAP activity, they are equally focused on meeting financial and care delivery objectives. Organizations cite a variety of financial reasons for pursuing MAP planning or activity, including to improve financial stability (63%), to improve operational cost efficiencies (61%), to increase market share in their geographical area (60%), and to improve position for payer negotiations (59%).

The results show that larger organizations are more interested in expanding geographic reach compared to smaller entities, which are more focused on meeting financial goals. Respondents say their top care delivery objectives include improving their position for care delivery efficiencies (65%), improving clinical integration (55%), and improving their position for population health management (54%).

Respondents are generally positive about MAP financial and clinical results. Nearly half (46%) say their net patient revenue increased following a recent MAP activity, while 28% report it remained the same. Only 6% experienced a decrease. Moreover, 73% of respondents expect the cumulative total dollar value of their organization’s MAP activity to increase within the next three years. Clinical markers are up as well, with 35% reporting quality outcomes increased after a MAP activity and 40% saying they remained the same. Patient readmission results were mixed. Forty percent mention they stayed the same, while 18% saw a decrease, and 11% experienced an increase.

2. New partnership deals are emerging

The majority of recent MAP activities don’t fall under a merger or acquisition category, technically. Twenty-nine percent of survey respondents report their most recent MAP activity was a contractual relationship that wasn’t an M&A. “The use of non-M&A partnerships is expected to grow because this type of agreement is typically less expensive than traditional M&A and usually doesn’t require an exchange of assets or a change of local governance,” according to the  report.

In the broader healthcare environment, transformative developments are also taking place, says Brent McDonald, head of Healthcare Strategic Advisory Services, managing director at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “The U.S. healthcare landscape is certainly undergoing changes that are beyond the more traditional horizontal (hospital-to-hospital) mergers,” he says, pointing to Amazon’s announcement that it will enter the healthcare space, United/Optum’s acquisition of DaVita Medical Group, and the contemplated merger between CVS and Aetna.

3. Why most deals fall apart

As a MAP comes together, the due diligence period begins, and so does the potential for derailment. Financial liabilities and cultural issues are the leading causes for shutting down a MAP deal. The top three financial reasons MAPs are abandoned before or during due diligence are concerns about assumption of liabilities (21%), costs to support the transaction were too high (19%), and concerns about price (19%).

The operational reasons for backing out of a MAP include incompatible cultures (30%), concerns about governance (24%), and concerns about the operational transition plan (21%). Cultural clashes can occur at every level of the organization. “Oftentimes, you have cultural compatibility at the senior level (those who are consummating the deal), but find that culture throughout the remaining levels of the organization is not as conducive to a merger,” says Pamela Stoyanoff, MBA, CPA, FACHE, executive vice president, chief operating officer at Dallas-based Methodist Health System, and lead advisor for the HealthLeaders Media MAP survey. “That is something you don’t necessarily see until later, after the deal is done.”

Don’t lose sight of your key stakeholders

In this period of heightened MAP activity and an uncertain future, it’s important that healthcare organizations focus on building sustainable consumer-centered care models. It is critical to set strategic goals that strengthen an organization’s relevance with and attractiveness to employers and payers, as well as increase patient convenience and connectivity, says McDonald. “It would be prudent to keep a keen focus on positioning health systems with their key stakeholders in mind and on becoming/continuing as the healthcare delivery network of choice and a ‘must have.’ ”