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Financial Management Thomas J. Dilts MT(ASCP),MBPA Vice Chair of Administration and Operations Department of Pathology Virginia Commonwealth University Healthsystem Medical College of Virginia Hospitals and Physicians
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Financial Management Why is this important? Economics - A major driver of health care. Needed to understand your opportunities and fate of your profession Requirement Personal and Professional use
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History Medicare Medicaid Managed Care Insurance
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Profit/Loss = Revenue - Expenses
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BUDGET (Cut the Budget!!!!!)
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Planning is the process of deciding in advance what is to be done and how. Most organizations operate in an environment of change. With a more dynamic environment the planning function becomes critical.
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Planning Strategic Long Range Budget
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Revenue (pay check)$4,000.00 Expenses Rent/mortgage$950.00 Gas for car$200.00 Food$350.00 Savings/vacation(escrow) $200.00 Electric bill$185.00 Total expenses$1,885.00 Net income/profit$2,115.00
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Budget Net income/profit$2,115.00 What’s left after bills are paid Revenues - Expenses = Profit ( or Loss ) ($4,000.00-$1,885.00=$2,115.00)
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Hospital Lab Budget
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Hospital Lab Budget by Section
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Profit/Loss = Revenue - Expenses
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Revenue Billed Revenue = Lab Procedures X Current Fee Collected Revenue = Billed Revenue - Contractual Allowances
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Insurance Mix Medicare35% Medicaid10% Trigon (Blue Cross)25% Managed Care25% Other 5%
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Revenue Billed Revenue = Lab Procedures X Current Fee Collected Revenue = Billed Revenue - Contractual Allowances $40,500 = $54,000 - $13,500
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REVENUE PROBLEM 200 CBCs performed Current fee per CBC is $25 All patients have Blue Cross at 50% contractual adjustment for each test What is the billed revenue and the collected revenue?
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SOLUTION 200 X $25 = $5000( billed revenue ) $5000 X.5(50%) = $2500( col. Revenue )
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Costs (Expenses) Direct Costs are costs that can be directly identified with a given product or activity. Reagents Controls Tubes Indirect Costs cannot be identified with a given product or activity. Electricity Environmental services Management Computer support
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Direct Costs Variable Costs-- changes with a change in product volume
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Direct Costs Fixed Costs-- Do not change with change in product volume
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WHICH DIRECT EXPENSE IS THIS? Service contract for equipment Reagent for each test Quality control material Labor costs Pipet tips Purchase cost of equipment Rent of lab space
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Costs (Expenses) Direct Costs are costs that can be directly identified with a given product or activity. Reagents Controls Tubes Indirect Costs cannot be identified with a given product or activity. Electricity Environmental services Management Computer support
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Indirect costs Departmental –management –travel –telephone Global (Hospital) –administration –dietary –computer systems –plant facilities
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EXAMPLES OF INDIRECT COSTS
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Profit/Loss = Revenue Minus Expenses Profit/Loss = Collected Revenue (Net) - Total Expenses
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Month BudgetedActualVariance Revenue$332,000$325,000($7,000) Personnel Expenses$160,000$185,000 -$25,000 Supplies/Reagents$35,000$43,000-$8,000 Total Expenses$195,000$228,000-$33,000
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Profit/Loss = Revenue minus Expenses $97,000 = $325,000 - $228,000 (gross revenue) ($58,000) = $170,000 - $228,000 (net revenue) ($160,000) = $170,000 - $330,000 (plus indirect expense) ____________________________________________ Insurance cont.= $155,000 indirect exp = $102,000
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PROBLEM Gross revenue is $100,000 Contractual adjustments are $40,000 Direct variable expenses are $15,000 Direct fixed expenses are $5,000 All indirect expenses are $10,000 What is the net revenue(profit)
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SOLUTION Gross revenue $100,000 Contractual adjust. - $40,000 _________ Collected revenue $60,000 Direct expenses - $20,000 Indirect expenses - $10,000 __________ Net revenue(profit) $30,000
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Monitoring the Budget Usually monthly Action plan –(how to get back on budget) Your involvement as lab staff
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Setting the Test Fee A. Must identify all direct costs to do procedure: –labor –supplies –reagents –equipment(depreciation) –service and maintenance –collecting and processing specimen –ordering supplies - request slip B. Must add indirect costs. C. Must consider collection rate for billing. D. Mark up (% profit)
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Depreciation Cost of item divided by useful life Useful life is usually five years for lab equipment $100,000/5years = $20,000
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SETTING THE TEST FEE EXAMPLE Labor 10min x $0.50/min = $5.00 Supplies $0.80 Reagents $1.20 Equipment($200,000/40,000) $0.50 Service/maintenance $0.12 Specimen collection/process. $1.00 _____ Total $8.62
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SETTING TEST FEE EXAMPLE Direct costs $8.62 Indirect costs(20% of dir) $1.72 _______ $10.34 Collection rate(40%) $10.34/.4 = $25.85 Mark up (profit) 10%= $25.85+$2.59 = $28.44
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COST ACCOUNTING
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COST ACCOUNTING EXAMPLE Labor 10min x $0.50/min = $5.00 Supplies $0.80 Reagents $1.20 Equipment $0.50 Service/maintenance $0.12 Specimen collection/process. $1.00 Indirect costs $1.72 Total $10.43
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Contribution Margin Price(fee) – Variable cost/test = Contribution Margin Contribution Margin contributes to fixed costs and to profits
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Break Even Analysis Break even volume = Fixed costs divided by the Contribution Margin Break even volume(analysis) = What is the number of tests I must perform to recover my costs
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Price - Variable cost per test= Contribution Margin $30.00 - $10.00 = $20.00 Break Even Volume = Fixed Costs Contribution Margin 500 Tests = $10,000.00 $20.00
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Volume = 1,000 tests Price= $20 each Costs –equipment$50 –reagents$1000 ($1.00 each test) –controls$100 ($0.10 each test) –supplies$50 ($0.05 each test) –salary$12,500 (0.50 FTE) Total$13,700 Revenue1,000 X $20 = $20,000 Costs = $13,700 Profit= $20,000 - $13,700 = $6,300
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Change the fee to $15.00 What is the profit?
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$15.00 per test $15,000 - $13,700 = $1,300 profit
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PROBLEM Test volume is now 5,000 Assume that no additional labor is needed for the increased test volume What is the final profit for this volume?
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5,000 tests is volume Revenue = 5,000 X $20 = $100,000 Costs –equipment$50 –reagents $5000($1.00 x 5000) –controls $500($0.10 x 5000) –supplies $250($0.05 x 5000) –salary$12,500 Total Costs$18,300 Profit = $100,000 - $18,300 = $81,700
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Let’s take a break
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Capital Costs Operational Costs Capital Costs Where do Capital dollars come from?
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Profit/Loss = Revenue - Expenses
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Capital Equipment Purchase Lease Reagent Rental Cost per Billable Test
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Return On Investment ROI (operating margin divided by capital investment) Pay back period ( Capital investment divided by operating margin x 12 months)
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ROI $150,000 X 100 = 300% $50,000 $40,000 X 100 = 80% $50,000 $18,000 X 100 = 18.5% $97,000
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Return On Investment ROI (operating margin divided by capital investment) Pay back period ( Capital investment divided by operating margin x 12 months)
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Pay Back Period $50,000 X 12 = 4 months $150,000 $50,000 X 12 = 15 months $40,000 $97,000 X 12 = 64.6 months (5.4 years) $18,000
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ROI PROBLEM The operating margin for this test is $300,000 Equipment purchase will cost $100,000 What is the return on investment(ROI)?
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ROI SOLUTION $300,000/$100,000 x 100 = 300%
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PAY BACK PERIOD PROBLEM The operating margin for this test is $300,000 Equipment purchase will cost $100,000 What is the payback period?
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PAYBACK PERIOD SOLUTION $100,000/$300,000 x 12 = 3.99 or 4 months
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QUESTIONS
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