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Fairleigh Dickinson Executive MBA Health Systems Management

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Title: Fairleigh Dickinson Executive MBA Health Systems Management


1
Fairleigh DickinsonExecutive MBAHealth Systems
Management
  • Managed Care and Provider Reimbursement
  • Robert Eidus MD, MBA

2
Todays Objectives
  • Brief Review of Prior Session
  • Discussion of Readings
  • Review of Health Benefits Plans
  • Management of Health Care Expenditures through
    Provider Reimbursement Strategies
  • Case Study-Oxford Health Plan
  • Debate on Physician Accepting Risk
  • Network Contracting Issues- Any Willing Provider,
    Profiling
  • Other Legislative Issues and Managed Care
  • Finish Contracting Issues

3
Key Points from Last Week
  • Managed Care in not the same as HMOs
  • Managed Care has been an evolution
  • US Healthcare system is a mixture of capitalism
    and governmental social support
  • Early managed care activities were in response to
    access
  • In the last 30 yrs., managed care activities have
    been in response to the need to control health
    care expenditures
  • Managed care strategies exist primarily a
    capitalistic, competitive sphere, where cost is
    king
  • Managed care must respond to customers demands
    to control cost- however
  • Societys demands for access are inserted,
    primarily through legislation, regulation, and
    political pressure
  • Cost and access tend to be inversely proportional
  • Quality tends not to vary until one gets to the
    extremes of utilization

4
Appropriate Quotes
  • Democracy is the worst form of government, except
    all the rest Winston Churchill
  • I got upset because he was getting awfully close
    to my price Abraham Lincoln
  • I am not a member of any organized political
    party. Im a democrat. Will Rogers
  • A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon you
    are talking real money Everett Dirkson
  • 100 of providers have patient populations that
    are sicker than average Bob Eidus

5
Questions About Todays Readings
6
Discussion About Your Health Benefits Plans
  • What type of plan do you have?
  • What is the cost to you?
  • What is the cost to the employer?
  • What are the major exclusions?
  • Any limited benefits?
  • How is your insurance company managing health
    care costs?
  • How is your employer managing health care costs?

7
Containing Health Care Costs Through Benefits
Variations
  • Virtually all of benefits variations involves
    shifting costs from the payer to the insured
    (member, employee, patient)
  • There is good evidence that cost shifting reduces
    demand and thereby contains costs

8
Common Types of Cost Shifting
  • Deductible
  • Copay
  • Coinsurance
  • Restrictions
  • Limitations
  • Exclusions

9
Deductibles
  • Pros
  • Easy to administer in a FFS environment
  • Easy to understand
  • Can be offered as an option
  • Reduces utilization
  • Cons
  • Difficult for provider to know whether the
    patient has met the deductible
  • May cause patients to defer necessary services or
    lump health expenditures into a single year
  • Preventive services at risk
  • Once the deductible is met, this deterrence goes
    away

A hallmark of virtually all indemnity plans. Also
used in PPO and some POS. May be used for
selective services in HMO benefits (e.g.
infertility)
10
Co-insurance
  • Pros
  • Restores accountability between provider and
    patient on each episode of service
  • Incentive does not extinguish unless out of
    pocket maximum is met
  • Cons
  • Complicated billing and statements
  • Requires balance billing the patient
  • Increased billing costs
  • May reduce necessary services if the coinsurance
    is too high
  • Can affect poor people more severely

Examples Used in virtually all indemnity
policies, out-of network POS, and PPO
11
Copays
  • Pros
  • Smaller hit to patients
  • Easy for patients to understand
  • Simplified billing and collection
  • Cons
  • If copay is too low, may not serve as a deterrent
  • Provider is not accountable to patient for
    intensity of services
  • Therefore, will not affect upcoding and excess
    utilization

Used in virtually all HMO and POS (in-network)
products, including mental health, and pharmacy
12
ExclusionsA service is not covered, independent
of whether it is medically necessary
  • Pros
  • Fixes problem for payer
  • Little administration needed except for appeals,
    grievances, and lawsuits
  • May provide political coverage for employers,
    at the expense of the insurer
  • Cons
  • May engender consumer, political backlash
  • Essentially converts people to uninsured for
    these services
  • May appear to be unfair or arbitrary
  • May stimulate legal or legislative action
    (mandated benefits)

Medicare (preventive health, Rx), experimental
services, alternative medicine, services which
are not accepted as standard, birth control pills
(some employers)
13
LimitationsA service is covered, however the
coverage is limited (e.g. 20 visits, 1000, etc)
  • Pros
  • Good for services that are difficult to manage
    otherwise (e.g.- chiropractic care)
  • Limits financial exposure
  • Some providers like it, because it allows them to
    bill the patient when benefits are exhausted
  • Cons
  • Reduces desire to manage utilization
  • May appear arbitrary to the public
  • May spur regulatory or legislative action

Mental health, chiropractic care, physical
therapy, acupuncture
14
RestrictionsA service is covered, but only with
a specific provider, or when prior treatments
have been tried first
  • Pros
  • Allows funneling patients to selected providers
  • May be used with deep discounting or capitation
  • Can improve quality
  • Cons
  • Access and availability may be compromised
  • May cause the payer to contract based only on
    cost
  • If provider becomes overwhelmed with volume,
    quality may decrease

15
Case Study Oxford Health Plans
  • Ilona

16
Containing Costs Through Variations in Provider
Contracting
  • Types of Provider Reimbursement
  • FFS
  • Discounted FFS Percent of Charges
  • Discounted FFS Fee schedule or fee max
  • Case rates
  • DRG
  • Capitation
  • Incentives

17
General Contracting Strategies
  • Like all industries Volume drives pricing power
    in negotiations
  • A basic Deming Principle is to limit your
    suppliers
  • If price were the only issue, insurers would
    contract with very few providers with no
    redundancy
  • Balancing this is the need for access

18
Managed Care 101
  • Total cost Quantity times unit price
  • Sounds very simple
  • But Managed health care is like squeezing a
    balloon- if you push on one side, it will bulge
    on the other
  • When one alters cost, one cannot assume that
    quantity will remain constant
  • Why? Insurers do not determine utilization,
    patients and providers do

19
Fee for Service
  • Business as usual
  • Providers determine fees Often based on what the
    market will bear
  • Providers depend on their own marketing power to
    drive volume
  • Consumers or Third Party Pays
  • Expenditures determined by cost and quantity
  • Example Memorial Sloan Kettering

20
Discounted Fee For ServicePhysician Accepts
Payment Based on Fixed Discount Off Charges
  • Pros
  • Easy to administer on both sides
  • Physician knows exactly how much s/he is giving
    up in return for access to participation. No
    reconciliation needed
  • Cons
  • Charges are arbitrary
  • Charges can be changed. Therefore no real control
    over price control
  • Inconsistent Payment between providers

Examples Occasionally used to pay hospitals when
it is difficult to contract with them any other
way. Was occasionally used as a reconciliation
method for physicians paid in other ways i.e. a
floor guarantee
21
Discounted FFS- Fee ScheduleProvider agrees to
accept insurer fee schedule as a fee max. in
return for network participation
  • Pros
  • Reasonably easy to administer
  • Uniform among providers
  • Easy to upgrade fee schedule uniformly
  • Easy for provider to understand percent of
    discount
  • Cons
  • Amount of discount will vary procedure to
    procedure
  • Does not control utilization and may aggravate it

Examples Many HMOs, Medicare, Medicaid
(Non-HMO) most specialist reimbursement
22
Discussion
  • Article on Medicare fee cut-backs
  • Why is this happening?
  • What are the ramifications?

23
Case Rates
  • A fixed fee for a particular service or episode
    of illness, regardless of intensity, frequency,
    or location of services.
  • Commonly used for surgery
  • Good for services where other strategies for
    managing costs are not always effective (e.g.
    chiropractic care)
  • Payment may be re-distributed by the entity
    accepting the case rate
  • Controls frequency and intensity of services
  • Examples ABMT, fracture care, centers of
    excellence, CABG
  • DRGs are actually a form of a case rate

24
Case rates
  • Pros
  • Transfers a fair amount of risk to the provider
  • Spurs the provider to be more efficient
  • May improve quality
  • Only the best and most efficient may be capable
    of accepting case rates
  • Cons
  • Potential underutilization
  • May have to create exceptions protocols
  • Can restrict access
  • Payer must be careful to screen quality and
    outcomes

25
DRG (Diagnostic Related Groups)
  • The most common method of paying hospitals for
    in-patient services
  • Created via TEFRA (tax equity and fiscal
    responsibility act) of 1982
  • Hospitals paid a fixed amount, regardless of
    intensity of services provided within a
    hospitalization
  • Trim points (low and high) used to deal with
    exceptions

26
DRGs
  • Covers in-patient stays only
  • Factors in operating costs only
  • Capital requirements and Graduate Medical
    Education dealt with separately
  • Created effective internal utilization management
    capabilities (instead of occupancy, the critical
    measures became admission rate and length of
    stay)
  • Ambulatory surgery and emergency room care dealt
    with separately on a cost basis
  • Some regional variation in payment

27
DRGs
  • Pros
  • Created improved operating efficiency with
    shorter LOS
  • UM management shifted internally
  • Created ability for better comparisons
  • Created a common set of nomenclature
  • Made contracting easier
  • Cons
  • Did not address inefficiencies and inappropriate
    utilization in ambulatory care
  • Cases were shifted from in-patient to outpatient,
    where reimbursement was cost-based
  • Concerns about premature discharge

28
DRGs
  • Infrastructure to be successful if you are a
    hospital
  • Knowledge of what your true costs are
  • Effective UM, especially discharge planning
  • Capacity to take new admissions
  • Excellent coding capabilities
  • Cooperative medical staff

29
Per Diems
  • Alternatives to DRGs
  • Used by many MCOs
  • Fixed cost per day
  • Payment independent of intensity of service,
    although there is often a front loaded payment
  • DRGs above and below the trim points are often
    compensated by per diems

30
Per Diems
  • Pros
  • Fixed unit cost
  • Control for um shifted to hospitals except for
    LOS
  • Hospital not concerned about premature disch
  • Rewards hospitals that are efficient
  • Simple- no upcoding
  • Cons
  • Doesnt control LOS
  • Penalizes inefficient hospitals
  • U/M done externally

31
Infrastructure necessary for hospitals to be
successful with per diems
32
Next Week
  • Reading Kongsvelt, Chapter,17,26,15
  • Physician Integration, Pharmaceutical Benefits
    Management, Quality Management
  • Case Study Phycor, PPMCs- Tim
  • Case Study Small Area Variation in Utilization-
    John Wennberg MD- Lia
  • Web-site review doctorquality.com, ncqa.org

33
Debate and Discussion
  • Should physicians be at financial risk for the
    costs of health care rendered to their patients

34
Network Contracting Issues
  • Discounts are driven by the ability to drive
    business
  • Hospitals need to refuse the temptation to
    contract on the margin
  • Value to a hospital and a specialist is dependent
    on how exclusive the network is and how large the
    health plan is
  • Providers get concerned about being dependent on
    any one payer
  • Insurers need to balance cost and access

35
Any willing provider
  • Many states have enacted any will provider
    legislation
  • The laws basically state that any provider that
    meets the quality and credentialing standards of
    a health plan and is willing to agree to
    financial and other terms must be allowed to
    participate
  • Upheld in appelate courts
  • Recently unanimously upheld by the US Supreme
    Court

36
Discussion
  • Why cant health plans chose their vendors just
    like any other business?
  • Why did the Supreme Court uphold these
    constitutionality of these laws?

37
Other Legislative and Regulatory Issues Regarding
Managed Care
  • Gag rules
  • Termination cooling off periods
  • Prudent layperson laws
  • Mandated benefits
  • ABMT, drive through deliveries, wellness, mental
    health
  • Ability to sue health plans for malpractice
  • Provider significantly at risk

38
Physician Incentives
  • Purposes
  • Drive improved (lower) utilization
  • Drive improved quality
  • Provide buffers and protection for cost over-runs

39
Types of Incentives
  • Withholds
  • Bonuses
  • Quality Adjustments

40
Withholds
  • Can be based on individual or group performance
  • Usually is a combination of both. Usually
    maximizes at about 20
  • Withholds cover cost over-runs in personal,
    specialty, hospital, and ER budgets
  • Because the ability to influence magnitude of the
    withhold return, this is primarily a re-insurance
    mechanism for the health plan, rather than an
    inducement for providers to be efficient
  • Similar to national health plans in Europe

41
Bonuses
  • Really no different than withholds

42
Quality Incentives
  • Usually based on preventive health services and
    patient satisfaction
  • Often considered a balance to financial
    incentives
  • Some disease specific measures
  • Tend to closely parallel HEDIS measures
  • Some evidence that they might influence behavior
  • Examples Pt. sat., waiting time, mammography and
    immunization rates, beta blocker use after
    myocardial infarction

43
Mini Project for May 31
  • Accordant Health Services
  • What is their disease management strategy
  • Why do you think it is successful?
  • How do you think they are compensated by insurers?

44
Capitation
  • Definition
  • Prospective payment to providers for a defined
    period of time to provide defined services to a
    defined population of insured people
  • Usually paid and calculated on a PMPM basis

45
Varying Levels of Risk
  • Personal services only
  • Professional services (PCP and Specialist Care)
  • Full Risk (Professional services plus acute
    hospital and ER care /- Pharmacy /- long term
    care

46
Levels of Risk
  • If you are only at risk for your own services,
    you basically are at risk for your time
  • Risk increases dramatically when one accepts risk
    for others services
  • Providers should only accept risk for those
    things they can truly control
  • Otherwise, we have turned doctors into insurance
    companies

47
How to Calculate the Capitation Rate
  • Determine the affected population
  • Determine what services are included
  • Determine what the projected utilization rate is
    (A)
  • Determine what an acceptable level of
    compensation is for the unit of service (B)
  • Multiply AB and divide by 12 to get a PMPM

48
A Very Crude Capitation Determination
  • PCP cap
  • Females age 20-39
  • Average number of visits per year (3.0)
  • Reasonable reimbursement per visit (50)
  • Co-payment (10)
  • Cap is (503)- (103)/ 12 10PMPM
  • What is the cap rate if the copay is 20 per
    visit? (this is a trick question!)

49
Capitation Determination Refinement
  • Age/ Sex (common)
  • Case Mix (Number of diabetics/ hypertensives,
    etc.
  • Severity of Illness (Ambulatory Care Groupers)
  • Socioeconomic

50
Types of Capitation
  • PCP cap Common
  • Specialty cap Used in certain specialties
    especially in those where utilization is
    difficult to control (chiropractic, PT)
  • Special circumstances (Lab)
  • Global cap (used with IDS, PHO) In these
    situations, physicians risks are usually limited

51
Requirements to Accept Significant Capitation Risk
  • Clear definition of what is included in the cap
    rate (Prego commercial)
  • Ability to understand the burden of illness of
    the population
  • Large numbers
  • Relatively homogenous population in terms of
    utilization
  • Medical Management Infrastructure
  • Adequate reserves
  • (Doesnt this sound like an insurance company?

52
Ways to Even Out the Bumps
  • Carve outs (AIDS, Advanced Breast Cancer)
  • Catastrophic thresholds
  • Stop loss or re-insurance
  • Risk adjustors
  • Sub-capitation or other risk sharing methods

53
Why Did So Many Group Practices in Ca. Fail ?
  • They got greedy
  • They believed there own press clippings
  • Fundamental factors affected cost escalation were
    not taken into account
  • Lack of mechanisms to share risk
  • Health Plans Ratcheting Down

54
CapitationThe Perspective of the Provider
  • Pros
  • Steady cash flow
  • Predictable revenue
  • No billing costs
  • Opportunity to make more by improving capacity or
    improving utilization
  • Cons
  • Down-side risk
  • May put providers in adversarial position with
    their patients
  • Need to disclose incentives if at significant
    risk
  • Infrastructure required
  • Reconciliation to FFS equivalent payments may be
    complicated

55
CapitationThe Perspective of the Payer
  • Pros
  • Risk off loaded (helps convert them from a
    managed care to a money management company)
  • Less utilization review required
  • Less claims payment infrastructure
  • Cons
  • Upside may be taken away
  • Bad PR
  • Potential medicolegal issues (probably not
    different from FFS)

56
CapitationThe Perspective of the Patient
  • How would they know, since they are not
    informed?
  • But, are the incentives to under-utilize any
    worse than the incentives to overutilize?

57
Break-Even Analysis Exercise
58
To Maximize Profit
Capitation Minimize Intensity of Services
Minimize Frequency of Services
DRG Minimize Intensity of Services
Maximize Frequency of Services
Fee For Service Maximize Intensity of Services
Maximize Frequency of Services
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