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Published byEustace Hampton Modified over 6 years ago
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How Did My Practice Change by Becoming Hospital-Employed
James B Hermiller, MD, FACC, FSCAI St Vincent Medical Group St Vincent Heart Center Indianapolis, IN
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Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest
Within the past 12 months, I or my spouse/partner have had a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with the organization(s) listed below. Affiliation/Financial Relationship Company Consulting Fees/Honoraria Speaker Bureau Abbott, BSC, and St Jude Lilly
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Indiana Heart Institute
Tom Linnemeier Cass Pinkerton Merged Groups Late 1990s
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California
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Can Traditional Private Practice Survive? Trends toward employment
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Why join a hospital?
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Why consider integration? Regulatory complexity becoming burdensome
Pre-Approval for Nuclear Stress Test
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Regulatory complexity becoming burdensome
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Desire to reduce stress and pressure of management
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Strength and leverage in size and alignment with hospital entitiy
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Declining Reimbusement Increasing Practice Costs
Why -- The Squeeze Declining Reimbusement Increasing Practice Costs
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Why consider integration?
In 2009, CMS reduced the relative value units assigned to specific cardiology-related procedures. The cuts ranged from between 10% to 40%, depending on the procedure, with nuclear imaging witnessing a 41% decline in reimbursement. This decrease continued the trend of the last decade. According to the American College of Cardiology (ACC), the value of RVU payments to physicians is just 50% of what it was in 1995.
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Why consider integration?
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Medical Home and ACOs
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Accountable Care Organizations
Components Patient population Government or private payer – well defined & long-term agreement Integrated providers: PCP’s, Specialists, Hospital Aligned suppliers (devices, pharmacy) Establish participation criteria
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Payment Models Overuse vs Underuse
Bundled payments/Episodic Treatment Compromise between fee for service and capitation CABG/PCI: one fee for facility/MD/inpatient/outpatient evaluation and follow up Multiple disciplines involved in care and decision making so underuseage should be limited
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Disadvantages of integration
You can’t force people to follow directions they deem arbitrary
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Disadvantages of integration
Loss of control Physician autonomy may be compromised Now we would have a boss We would be accountable to a corporate culture that may, or may not, have similar values Hospital bureaucracy may/would be frustrating
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Who’s your partner?
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Shotgun Wedding?
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Agreed on a Philosophy We asked: does hospital have a similar vision
Think of it as a first date What is their culture? What do they want out of the transaction? Are they looking for a partner, or a group of employees.
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Negotiations What is the market position of the practice? Market competition? What is the age of the physicians in the practice? How is the practice performing – quality and financially? Do you practice at one or multiple hospitals?
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Negotiations
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Negotiated Governance
How will the integrated group governed? Wholly owned subsidiary Straight employment Lease model How will the new entity report in the organization? How will decisions be made – operational and financial?
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Money Matters
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Valuations Practice valuation Compensation valuation
Agree on who will perform the valuations One side provides a list, the other side picks from the list Don’t be afraid to interview the potential valuation companies – what other transactions have they done? Understand the concept of Fair Market Value (FMV)
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Negotiate other terms What are the terms of the agreement
What happens after the agreement expires What happens if compensation migrates from a production basis in the future Is employment for the physicians guaranteed? For how long? What happens to the employees of the practice? Are there key employees? Call coverage
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Negotiate other terms Non-compete clauses?
What happens if the market changes and productivity declines due to no-fault of the physicians? What other responsibilities does the acquired practice have? What happens to AR? Old debt obligations? Malpractice claims? Does either party maintain “reserve powers”
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Dr Lemming
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How has practice changed?
Day to day – not a bit of difference Fewer headaches – primarily practicing medicine with less administration Strategic view – physicians more willing to take on a loss-leader for the good of the entire enterprise Decisions however take time to make and especially implement
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Pulling on rope in similar direction
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It’s Early
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Final Thoughts – Eye on Ball
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Thanks for your attention!
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