Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBrittany Lynch Modified over 9 years ago
1
Building Physician Support for Trauma Care Best Practices in Community Hospitals Greg Bishop, President Bishop+ Associates June 2004
2
Building Physician Support for Trauma Care Best Practices in Community Hospitals Problems, Factors & Principles Improving Trauma Medical Staff Value Cost-Effective Trauma Physician Support Arriving At Fair Trauma Physician Compensation Specialty Issues & Market Norms
3
Problems, Factors & Principles Problematic Physician Structures Multiple Contributing Factors Principles For Proceeding
4
Problematic Physician Structures Fragile, Complex Structures Serious Shortages, Few In Pipeline Costs, Closures, Weak & Unstable Structures Balkans of Hospital/Physician Relations
5
16 Trauma Center Specialists 24/7 Availability
6
Multiple Contributing Factors Increasing Burden of Uninsured Patients Incompatibility with Private Practice Undesirable Lifestyle Due to Trauma Call; Reductions in Resident Support Outpatient Surgery/Specialty Hospital Trends Increasing Physician Sub-Specialization
7
Multiple Contributing Factors Malpractice Market Turmoil Physician Payment Penalizes Trauma Managed Care Escapes Paying its Share Demise of Community ED Call Panels EMTALA Changes Encourage Dumping
8
Principles For Proceeding Value, Not Cost Is Key Issue Strengthen Structure For Decades Pursue Opportunities For Ideal Solutions Leadership Is Essential Patient Care Is A Core Physician Value Impact On Hospital Physician Relations
9
Improving Value In Trauma Care Strengthening Trauma Program Quality of Care; Responsiveness Maintaining Verification Status QA, CME, Protocols Cost effectiveness; Reduced LOS Community Outreach & Injury Prevention Public Advocate for Optimal Trauma Care
10
Improving Value In Trauma Care Strengthening Hospital Surgical Critical Care Program Ortho & Neuro Centers of Excellence Orthopedic Hospitalist Model Hospital/Physician Relations ED/OR/ICU Issues Trauma Center Halo Effect
11
Framework For Cost Effective Trauma Physician Support Effective Structure Hospital Support Optimal Franchise Trauma Physician Compensation Dealing With Leverage
12
Effective Structure Strong Trauma Medical Leadership Strong Trauma Service Make Trauma Call Less Burdensome Only Call in Specialty When Needed Have Patient Ready When Specialist Arrives Don’t Make Specialists Wait for Diagnostic Results Implement Tiered Call System; Facial Fracture Panels
13
Hospital Support OR Block Time ED Throughput Physician Assistants Nurse Practitioners Other
14
Optimize Franchise Trauma/SICU/Surgery Hospital Based Orthopedic Program Establishment of Centers of Excellence Halo Effect for both Physicians and Hospital
15
Trauma Physician Compensation Trauma Medical Director Compensation Payment on Uninsured Patients Call Stipends; In-house call versus on-call Response Fees/Complex Schemes Consolidated Trauma Physician Billing Support Net Annual Hospital Cost (NAHC)
16
Dealing With Leverage Balkans Revisited Stark Provides Constraint Do Not Form A Cartel Compliance Is A Serious Issue
17
Arriving At Fair Compensation Key Payment Factors Employment vs. Contracting Data and Market Norms Process is Key
18
Key Payment Factors Lack of Residency Volume of Uninsured Role versus Value Provided In-House Call versus On-Call Trauma Volume +/-
19
Employment vs. Contracting Contract With Group For Service/Employment Of Trauma Specialist Hospital Employment of Surgeons Contract with Individual Surgeons
20
Data & Market Norms Data Sources Comparison to Salary Data Specialty Outliers Payment on Uninsured
21
Dealing With Leverage Balkans Revisited Stark Provides Constraint Do Not Form A Cartel Compliance Is A Serious Issue
22
Process Is Key Do Not Ignore Requests Effective Hospital Leadership Benchmark Trauma Financial Performance Solicit Specialty Input Address Non-Financial Issues Define Fair Level of Compensation
23
Specialty Issues & Market Norms Trauma Surgery Neurosurgery Orthopedic Surgery Plastic Surgery Low Volume Specialties Hospital Based Specialties
24
Trauma Surgery Key Issues : Core of Trauma Center Highest impact specialty Frontline and patient care manager roles Franchise Value Market Norms Most Trauma Surgeons within Community Hospitals Receive Hospital Support In-House Call $1000-$2500 per day On-Call $500-$1500 per day
25
Neurosurgery Key Issues : High impact specialty due to shortage Quick response time to surgery required Relatively small professional fee franchise Relatively poor payer mix Market Norms About 40% of Neurosurgeons In Community Hospitals Receive Support $500-$2,500 per day
26
Orthopedic Surgery Key Issues: High volume trauma specialty Sub-specialization making surgeons uncomfortable with trauma Need To Reduce Number of Surgeons Taking Trauma Call Large professional fee franchise Market Norms 30% Orthopedic Surgeons In Community Hospitals Receive Hospital Support $500-$2,000 per day
27
Plastic Surgery Key Issues : Small volume specialty; ED call issues Call structure is critical for this specialty Declining number of surgeons taking call High paying, busy private practices (Cosmetic Surgery) Market Norms 10-15% Plastic Surgeons In Community Hospitals Receive Hospital Support $250-$1,000 per day
28
Low Volume Specialists Key Issues : Focus on Trauma Service making their life easier Can be most difficult issue Combined with ED call issues Market Norms Few are Compensated in Community Hospital Setting No Real Market Norms Payment on Uninsured Patients
29
Hospital Based Specialists Trauma is Part of Their Hospital Franchise Few Payment Examples In house Anesthesia is exception
30
Trauma Center Of The Future The emerging Hospitalist Model Carved out Trauma Physician Billing Trauma Specific CPT Codes and RVU’s Unfallkrankenhaus Lorenz Bohler
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.