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The Future of Physician Reimbursements in an Era of Reduced Payments by Nearly Everyone

Bundled Payments Robert W. Kottman, MD, FACEP. The Future of Physician Reimbursements in an Era of Reduced Payments by Nearly Everyone. Reason for Bundled Payments. Bundled payments Global payments for a given episode of care

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The Future of Physician Reimbursements in an Era of Reduced Payments by Nearly Everyone

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  1. Bundled Payments Robert W. Kottman, MD, FACEP The Future of Physician Reimbursements in an Era of Reduced Payments by Nearly Everyone

  2. Reason for Bundled Payments • Bundled payments • Global payments for a given episode of care • Allows for “gainsharing” of savings among Payer, Patient, Hospital & Physicians (Providers) • Alleged reason “To provide more efficient, higher quality care” • Real reason Save money for third party payers

  3. Medicare ACE Demonstration • Jan. 2009 CMS announces 3 year “acute care episode” demonstration project • 5 sites in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Colorado • Global payments (to Hospital) for certain cardiovascular and orthopedic services • Hospital responsible to pay physicians and other providers

  4. Selected Hospitals for ACE • Texas—Baptist Health System –San Antonio • Colorado—Exempla Saint Joseph Hospital—Denver • Oklahoma—Hillcrest Medical Center-Tulsa • New Mexico—Lovelace Health System--Albuquerque

  5. Details of ACE Project • Hospitals and physicians jointly develop ”protocols” that reward efficiency and quality while standardizing care and reducing costs • ACE Demonstration Project covers “acute care” while future demonstration projects to include “post-acute care”, i.e. rehab, physician office visits, etc.

  6. ACE Project • Hospitals convince physicians to “partner” with Hospital in achieving Medicare quality and cost goals • Development of “care protocols” is key • Medicare receives 50% of any “cost savings” while other 50% is divided according to an agreement between hospital and physicians

  7. ACE Project • Example from Hillcrest Medical Center in Tulsa • Physicians receive a “bonus payment” of up to 25% of their fee-for-service payment rates if they follow “clinical protocol” in at least 98% of their cases • Physicians still receive their standard payment from Medicare—but Hospital is Payer rather than Medicare

  8. Specifics of ACE • Competitive bidding by hospitals • 28 Cardiac and 9 orthopedic DRGs • “Gainsharing” to incentivize providers • Medicare receives 50% of “savings” • Medicare beneficiaries to receive 50% of Medicare portion of “savings” • Other half of “savings” goes to hospital to distribute to “providers” as well as hospital

  9. Example of “Gainsharing” • DRG 470 Major Joint Replacement of Lower Extremity (Medicare Payments) • Before ACE: • Surgeon: (Includes 20% Co-Pay) $1500 • Hospital: $10,400 • Patient: $0

  10. “Gainsharing” -- DRG 470 • With ACE: • Surgeon: $1500 + up to $ 375 (25%) from lower cost • Hospital: $10,400 –($600 to CMS) + rest of cost savings after MD share • Patient: $300 (up to 50% of CMS savings) • Medicare: $300 (50 % of Medicare savings)

  11. Example of Gainsharing • $2,000 in cost savings achieved • CMS gets $1,000 • Patient receives up to $500 out of CMS share • Hospital splits $1,000 with surgeon according to agreement (25% to Doc and 75% to Hospital) • Doc gets $250 and Hospital gets $750.

  12. Physician Benefits • Exempla Saint Joseph Hospital in Denver encourages physicians to participate in ACE project through: • Bonus payments—agreed upon by both parties • Hospital pays physician claims within 15 days vs. average 45 days for Medicare

  13. Ways to Save $ in ACE • Hospitals working with physicians to reduce costs through: • Use of “clinical protocols” • Reducing Length of Stay • Reducing costs of “devices”, i.e., orthopedic prosthetics, cardiac stents, etc. • Reduce surgical supply costs of other products

  14. Ultimate Cost Reduction Goal • In second demonstration project, cost savings to be achieved not only from reduced hospital and physician costs but by “Better coordinating care across multiple providers and sites” • Coordination of Care requires an “Integrated Delivery System”—in which data from acute care and post-acute care providers is key

  15. Integrated Care Delivery • Promoted by “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” (Obamacare) • PPACA desires “arrangements that hold providers accountable for managing care of an entire population”

  16. ObamaCare • Creates a 5 year Medicare pilot to test bundled payments for a wider array of services than just orthopedic and cardiovascular “selected services” • Includes acute care and post-acute care • Providers must bid to participate—offering Medicare percentage discounts from fee-for-service pricing • Pilot to begin January, 2013

  17. Bundled Payments and Hospital-Based Physicians • In the future, bundled payments will likely involve all hospital –based physicians as well as inpatient physicians • Possible bundled payments for hospital outpatient services alone • Commercial insurance companies expected to experiment with bundled payments

  18. Keys for Emergency Physicians • In order to negotiate successfully with hospitals under a “bundled payment” system: • Doctors must know their costs • Costs of physician services, costs of lab tests, imaging studies and pharmaceuticals • ED physician groups must have someone designated to help develop “clinical protocols” in coordination with hospitals and also skilled in payment negotiation—i.e. possessing financial “savvy” and knowing costs for your services

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