Independence Is Not a Strategy for Health Systems

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/leadership/independence-not-strategy-health-systems?spMailingID=11725844&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1221639238&spReportId=MTIyMTYzOTIzOAS2#

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There are ways to keep going it alone in the face of massive consolidation, says one health system’s CEO. It’s not a strategy, but a means to end, he says.

Afraid your hospital or health system can’t compete because you lack size and scale?

A merger might help, but it’s not the only possible answer to your problems. Freehold, NJ-based CentraState Healthcare System’s top leader is certain it’s not the best solution for his organization.

Consolidation continues to upend the acute and post-acute healthcare industry. In fact, in a recent HealthLeaders Media survey, some 87% of respondents said that their organization is exploring potential deals, completing deals already under way, or both.

But CentraState isn’t among them, says John Gribbin, its president and CEO.

On a continuum basis, CentraState is already diversified. That’s one of the potential selling points of an M&A deal.

Anchored by the 248-bed CentraState Medical Center in Freehold, NJ, the 2,300-employee organization also contains three senior care facilities—one assisted living, one skilled-nursing facility, and a continuing care retirement community.

It can be argued that CentraState may not possess the scale to compete with multifacility, multistate large health systems that can take advantage of a hub-and-spoke strategy for referrals. Nor may it be able to afford expensive interconnected IT systems.

But there ways other than mergers to achieve scale and collaboration, says Gribbin.

Means to an End

Gribbin insists that he and CentraState’s board, which supports and encourages independence, are not dogmatic about it.

“Independence is not a strategy,” he says. “It’s a means to an end. The moment that ceases to be worthwhile is the moment we’ll consider another way to achieve our mission.”

Change is part of that strategy, he says, adding that healthcare in 2017 needs to be far more collaborative, not only with patients and family, but with other healthcare organizations. That’s a big difference from previous generations.

“Our real strategy is scale and relevancy,” he says.

And there are ways to create scale short of taking on all the legacy costs and “baggage,” as Gribbin calls it, inherent in any merger.

“There’s a lot of costs involved in merging… and while mergers work in some instances, they don’t work in all, and in many communities, they are increasing costs to the consumer,” he says.

In addition to the commonly stated goals of improving the community’s health and wellness, patient costs are extremely important in fulfilling CentraState’s mission, Gribbin argues.

Many mergers involve replacing hospitals and adding patient towers and high-cost equipment. That adds to their cost structure means they have to extract higher pricing, says Gribben.

“That’s the vicious circle you find yourself in. I prefer to create scale in a different manner.”

Focus on the Mission

Gribbin, who has led CentraState for 17 years, prefers to solve that challenge in part through a strong network of physicians unburdened by excessive administrative overhead.

He says the health system has to increasingly take on value-based contracting and financial risk. To be successful under such value-based reimbursement, partnerships with physicians are increasingly important, as is a redefinition of the relationship with the patient.

“We used to look at our relationship with the patient as a typical hospital stay,” says Gribbin. “What we’re preaching now is that hospital stay is a temporary interruption in our relationship. What happens before or after defines the relationship’s success.”

With its physician alliance and clinically integrated network in place, CentraState, unlike many hospitals, has been able to avoid, in large part, expensive physician practice acquisitions that can be a financial challenge.

“I’ve done it in the past, and may do it again, but we’ve tried to avoid it,” he says. Instead, contracts define the relationships and incentives.

As an example of those relationships, CentraState partners with a major patient-centered medical home primary care practice on four performance and three utilization measures.

As a result of the shared savings generated in the first year, which came largely from hospital-based savings, the physicians in that group referred 59% of their patients to CentraState.

This year they’ve referred 71% of their patients to CentraState because of its low costs, which help drive financial reward for both parties under the contract.

“On one hand, we’re keeping people appropriately out of acute care, but on the other hand, they’re sending [more] people here. So we’re experiencing higher but more appropriate volume. In this scenario, everyone wins,” Gribbin says.

A New Deal with Physicians

In order to avoid the need to acquire physician practices, Gribbin says it helps to have a suite of services to offer them as a starting point.

“Most don’t want to sell their practice, but they feel like they have to, he says. “If you give them the opportunity to stay independent, they’ll take it.”

Helping them with access to better revenue cycle management, malpractice insurance, and risk management, and helping them create the ability to enter into risk-based contracts is another big help with defining a new relationship based on shared goals with physicians that ultimately benefit the patient, he says.

Physicians can establish a relationship with CentraState through its independent practice association, or a physician hospital association, and avoid surrendering their autonomy, he says.

“The physicians got paid better, the payer saved money even including the bonus, the hospital won because it’s high value care, and the patient’s winning too,” he says. “It’s a microcosm of what we’re trying to accomplish.”

As a small organization, both Gribbin and the board worry about being frozen out of narrow networks. Much of the energy they’ve expended in being a low-cost organization is wasted, he says, if they can’t get the big payers to include them in contracting.

“As long as the market isn’t rigged against us, we’re OK, because we’re a high-value organization.”

SK&A ranks top 25 health systems by number of physicians

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-physician-relationships/sk-a-ranks-top-25-health-systems-by-number-of-physicians.html

Hospital-Physician Relationships

SK&A has identified the top health systems in the nation based on number of employed and affiliated physicians.

Becker’s obtained the information from SK&A via email. Here are the top 25 integrated health systems based on the number of employed and affiliated MDs and DOs, according to SK&A.

1. Kaiser Permanente (Oakland, Calif.) — 8,780 total MDs and DOs
2. Ascension Health (St. Louis) — 5,366
3. Trinity Health (Livonia, Mich.) — 4,190
4. Community Health Systems (Franklin, Tenn.) — 3,794
5. HCA (Nashville, Tenn.) — 3,670
6. Partners HealthCare System (Boston) — 3,405
7. Sutter Health (Sacramento, Calif.) — 2,976
8. Carolinas Healthcare System (Charlotte, N.C.) — 2,659
9. University of Texas Health System (Austin) — 2,615
10. Tenet Healthcare (Dallas) — 2,576
11. Cleveland Clinic Health System — 2,530
12. Mayo Clinic (Rochester, Minn.) — 2,527
13. NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare (New York City) — 2,448
14. UPMC (Pittsburgh) — 2,413
15. Mercy Health System (Chesterfield, Mo.) — 1,971
16. Baylor Scott & White Health (Dallas) — 1,950
17. Mount Sinai Health System (New York City) — 1,915
18. Providence Health & Services (Renton, Wash.) — 1,849
19. Northwell Health (New Hyde Park, N.Y.) — 1,835
20. Catholic Health Initiatives (Englewood, Colo.) — 1,792
21. Indiana University Health (Indianapolis) — 1,716
22. Henry Ford Health System (Detroit) — 1,689
23. Banner Health (Phoenix) — 1,532
24. SSM Health Care System (St. Louis) — 1,509
25. MedStar Health (Columbia, Md.) — 1,506

UCSF, John Muir dramatically expand, rename Bay Area health network

http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/news/2016/07/27/exclusive-ucsf-john-muir-bay-area-healthcare.html?ana=twt

UCSF Health and John Muir Health have dramatically expanded — and renamed — their year-old Bay Area accountable care network, adding seven new hospitals and three new medical groups to the enterprise.

The hope is that the network will be competitive with giants like Kaiser Permanente and Sutter Health. The network’s new brand name — Canopy Health — is intended to reach out to the broad Bay Area community, network CEO Joel Criste told the Business Times Wednesday.

“We’re off and running,” UCSF Health CEO Mark Laret added, in a Wednesday afternoon interview. Laret called Canopy Health’s recent growth spurt “the beginning of something that could be very big,” potentially a model for hospitals and medical groups nationally to use as a template, and a strong, multi-hospital and medical group alternative to Kaiser Permanente, in particular.

Hill Physicians Medical Group, one of Northern California’s largest independent practice associations, the East Bay’s Muir Medical Group IPA and the North Bay’s Meritage Medical Network have quietly joined in recent months, as shareholders and participating providers in the venture, officials told the Business Times.

The two founding organizations still hold the largest stakes and are clearly running the show, however.

The new additions give the network more than 4,000 affiliated doctors in the Bay Area, which in turn gives more clout when competing with regional rivals like Kaiser and Sutter.

“It’s an important step that allows them to position themselves as a system to compete with Kaiser, Sutter and Stanford Health Care,” among others, said Walter Kopp, a longtime Bay Area hospital and medical group consultant.

Mercy Health invests in $135 million joint venture

http://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2015/12/01/mercy-health-invests-in-135-million-venture.html?ana=e_cinci_hc&s=newsletter&ed=2015-12-01&u=FAuoHGaGEPdmk4X6khnaiw045b16af&t=1450289589

Dr. Brent Asplin, chief clinical officer at Mercy Health, will remain co-president of Mercy Health Select but add the title of president of Advanced Health Select.

Trinity Health, Heritage Provider Network Announce Joint Venture

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/LED-312095/Trinity-Health-Heritage-Provider-Network-Announce-Joint-Venture

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