Title: Risk Theory and Capitation
1Risk Theory and Capitation
- Thomas Cox, RN, BA, BSN, MS, MSW
- Doctoral student
- Virginia Commonwealth University
- School of Nursing
- October 16, 2000
2The pump don't work 'Cause the vandals took the
handles
- SUBTERRANEAN HOMESICK BLUES
- Words and Music by Bob Dylan 1965
- Warner Brothers Inc.
- Renewed 1993 Special Rider Music
3Introduction
- Understanding capitation is critical for a health
care providers financial health - Small providers MDs, NPs, group practices,
community hospitals, and nursing homes face a
variety of risks when they enter into capitation
agreements - As a providers patient profile shifts from fee
for service to more capitated patients, the
greater the diversity of special considerations,
paperwork, and risk and the more unpredictable
their financial outcomes
4Topics of Discussion
- Historical issues
- How insurance works
- How reinsurance and capitation compare
- Different types of risk
- When to seek such contracts
- When to refuse such contracts
- Conclusions
5In the beginning there was growth, refinement and
the dawning of a new era...
6EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
MODERN HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT 1
- Social Darwinism--the application of the theory
of biological evolution to social relationships
attributed to Herbert Spencer. Social Darwinism
sees life as an unrelenting struggle for The
survival of the fittest. - That is, evolution was seen as scientific
justification for the doctrine of "every man for
himself." - The view is consonant with Thomas Jeffersons
view of limited roles for government. It also
implies that government not only should not, but
must not attempt to ameliorate hardship or
protect people against economic hazards for fear
of frustrating the "natural" evolution of society.
7EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
MODERN HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT 2
- 1860s First private health insurance plans in the
US - 1883 German national compulsory health insurance
program1902 First U.S. workmen's compensation
law enacted 1906 American Association for Labor
Legislation (AALL) - 1908 Workmen's compensation for Federal
employees1911 British National Health Insurance
program1912 Social insurance, including health
insurance, endorsed in platform of Progressive
Party (candidate Theodore Roosevelt) - 1916 AMA Social Insurance Committee, recommends
compulsory, State-run health insurance.
8EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
MODERN HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT 3
- 1929 a group of schoolteachers contracted with
Baylor Hospital in Dallas, Texas, to provide
room, board and specified medical services at a
predetermined monthly rate. - 1930s Kaiser Industries creates first managed
care organization providing healthcare to
employees by using salaried staff physicians at
company-owned medical facilities. - 1950. Social Security Act amendments include
grants to States for "vendor payments" for
welfare recipients. - 1956 Military Medicare" program enacted,
providing Government health insurance protection
for Armed Forces dependents. - 1960 Kerr-Mills bill signed into law.
- 1965 Medicare (as part of the Social Security
Amendments of 1965) signed into law by President
Johnson.
9EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
MODERN HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT 4
- By the 1960s most commercial health insurance
policies included hospital care, surgical fees
and related physicians' services (major medical)
coverage. - During the next three decades, public and
private health insurance plans for the elderly
(Medicare) and the poor (Medicaid) extended
coverage to ever increasing numbers of citizens.
10EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
MODERN HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT 5
- Managed care plans (MCP), grew steadily from the
1930s. - MCPs increased dramatically in the 1970s.
- The 1973 Health Maintenance Organization Act set
federal standards for HMOs and removed many
restrictive state laws. The act provided grants
for HMOs in diverse geographic areas and required
employers to offer federally qualified HMOs.
11EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
MODERN HEALTH CARE ENVIRONMENT 6
- By the end of the 1980s, healthcare inflation
had hit consumers and employers alike, and an
increasing number of Americans were joining the
ranks of the uninsured. - At the same time, the tightening of the
healthcare services belt had begun in earnest.
12RECAP
- From the 1860s until the last few years, the
healthcare insurance/financing landscape was an
ever increasing, ever expanding, increasingly
extending collection of entitlements to service
and well-being. - More recently, due to increased costs and
increasingly micro-managed health care, the
picture has become ever more chaotic, increasing
numbers of people have less coverage and are more
vulnerable to the financial vicissitudes of
illness. - Patients are increasingly concerned about the
conflicts of interest of their providers,
providers are increasingly focused on the
financial advantages of not rendering care and
the general health and well being of the populace
seems to be in danger. - Why has this happened?
13It would be easy to imagine that what went wrong
was mere financial chaos coupled with poor
business practices. But the truth emerges as
patterns within patterns...
14MANAGED CARE DEFINITION
- Managed Care Organization (MCO) -- Business
entities (both for profit and not for profit)
providing systems which integrate the financing
and delivery of appropriate healthcare services
by contractual arrangements with medical
providers to furnish a comprehensive set of
healthcare services to members explicit
selection of healthcare providers formal
programs for ongoing quality assurance and
utilization review and financial incentives for
members to use providers and procedures approved
by the plan.
15CAPITATION DEFINITION
- Capitation
- A method of paying medical providers through a
pre-paid, flat monthly fee for each covered
person. This payment is independent of the number
of services delivered or the costs incurred by
the health professional in providing those
services.
16RISK DEFINITION
- Risk
- Uncertainty about future loss. The inability to
predict the occurrence or size of a loss.
17How to Appreciate Capitation
- What is the essence of a capitation agreement?
- What are the correlates of capitation?
- How do capitation agreements influence the health
care system? - Are there unseen risks and rewards?
- Can we understand capitation agreements in new
and different ways?
18CONVENTIONAL VIEWS OF CAPITATION
- Capitation contracts are
- Value neutral
- Unbiased
- Agreements between equals
- Environment Independent
- Fair
- Risk Free
- Health promoting
19The De-Mystification of Capitation
- Capitation contracts are
- Risk laden
- Between unequal participants
- Inherently unfair
- Against the public interest
- Win/Lose not Win/Win situations
- Destructive of professional-consumer
relationships - Health risks for consumers
- Business risks for professional contractors
20An actuary is a person, who passes as an expert
on the basis of a prolific ability to produce an
infinite variety of incomprehensible figures,
calculated with micrometric precision, from the
vaguest of assumptions, based on debatable
evidence, from inconclusive data, derived by
persons of questionable reliability, for the sole
purpose of confusing an already hopelessly
befuddled group of persons who never read the
statistics anyway! Kathleen Miller
21Risk, Profit and Insurance
- The essence of an insurance contract is that a
small entity (often a person) enters into a
contract with a larger entity (the insurer) and
for a fee, transfers their exposure to liability
for a large loss to the insurer who by combining
the premiums of many insureds can meet the losses
that do occur and even make a profit.
22Legitimating Assumptions
- Some, if not many, procedures performed are
unnecessary and can be better controlled by a
provider then by the insurer - Providers can enter such contracts knowing what
they are agreeing to - Capitation fees are adequate to meet the needs of
providers - No moral hazards or self-selection risks will
occur - Timing of payments is not a problem
- Contracting parties are equals
- No unexplained actuarial issues exist
23How does insurance work?
- A large, financially stable, company sells many
relatively small policies - Losses are relatively rare events
- Average costs are very predictable due to the law
of large numbers - Insurers accurately predict and limit their loss
and expense costs - Insurer can provide policies at relatively low
cost - Insured is willing to pay for policy to reduce
risk and because the cost is far lower then the
potential loss - By writing many policies across geographic
regions the insurer reduces the likelihood of
conflagration loss (many losses close in time or
space)
24How does insurance work?
- An insurer charges the average loss to the
policyholder expenses profits risk
incentive - The risk of loss is relatively low and the
average cost is small compared to the potential
uninsured loss assumed - Insurers that do not cover both their expected
costs and a risk premium go bankrupt eventually - Income precedes payment of losses often by many
years - Since money today is worth more than money
tomorrow insurer can make money just by the
passage of time
25How does re-insurance work?
- A re-insurer charges an amount it believes will
cover its losses, expenses and generate a profit - Re-insurer covers geographically isolated risks
- Re-insurer will generally have continuing
financial relationships and can recoup losses
over time - Re-insurer has the expertise to evaluate the
losses it assumes - Re-insurer will generally limit its liability or
charge extra premium for unpredictable loss
potential - Re-insurer generally has three times the assets
required to meet unpredictable extreme costs
26Re-insurance Capitation Contracts
- In both cases, the insurer is reducing the risks
of loss by negotiating a contract for another
entity to assume the liability for those risks. - Re-insurers however, know exactly what they are
doing, most health providers do not. - Re-insurers limit their liability. Few providers
do. - Re-insurers have abundant assets to withstand
losses, most providers do not.
27When a provider takes on a fraction 1/k of an
insurers clients it spreads its variability in
experience out by a factor of the square root of
k. While it still has a mean centered on the mean
of the insurer the probability of very high
losses increases.
28Why do capitated providers fail?
- Do not know their operating costs (ongoing
expense analyses as well as unusual loss
potential) - Have insufficient assets to buffet early or
extreme expenses - View new patients as income rather than expenses
- Need more staff, equipment, and supplies before
they get income from contract - Income streams are delayed until they perform
under the contract - Serving a small catchment area subjects providers
to conflagration losses even flu season may
qualify
29Why do capitated providers fail?
- Moral hazards exist if having insurance increases
the probability that the patient will use
services - Self-selection (customers choose high service
providers because they know they need services)
works against higher quality capitated providers - Small providers of service do not benefit from
economies of scale in the provision of services - Basic health service costs are not well met by
insurance but are borne by capitated providers
30Risks Faced by Capitated Providers
- Uncertainty regarding expenses
- Uncertainty regarding costs to service patients
- Unlimited potential for losses
- Uncertainty about timing of income, losses, and
expenses - Uncertainty about operating costs
- Additional costs incurred to borrow money to meet
expenses while waiting for income - Short contract periods mean extreme costs may not
be covered by future profitable contracts
31In truth, providers that enter into capitation
agreements without doing the preparatory work end
up in a vise caught between the needs of their
patients and their need to maintain solvency with
resources too limited to accomplish both...
32When is a capitation agreement sound?
- Excess human and equipment resources already
exist - Provider can very accurately predict the costs it
will incur with new patients - Assets readily exist to mediate loss risk and
financial risks associated mis-timed payments - Providers can manage multiple contract benefit
scenarios efficiently - Marginal costs for serving extra clients are less
than marginal income to be earned
33When is a capitation agreement unsound?
- Provider will need to hire new staff, and
purchase new equipment before contract begins - Providers marginal costs will rise with new
clients - Provider needs additional revenue to meet
expenses - Provider will have to borrow money to gear up and
perform under contract - Providers are unable to distinguish covered from
uncovered services efficiently - Provider has no plan for dealing with income
delays
34Why are capitation agreements generally unsound?
- Market forces drive insurer pricing to a minimum
to cover losses (90 for some insurers),
expenses, and ever smaller profit margins - The loss part of the insurers premium is
adequate to cover past service costs, but may not
cover future costs - The insurer cannot pay out more than its loss
costs in capitation payments to providers - Benefits of the Law of Large Numbers are lost
when a relatively small cohort is transferred to
provider group - If the insurer maintains expense costs and
profitability there is no extra risk premium for
the provider group
35Conclusions
- From the standpoint of insurance regulation
risk transfers to smaller, less solvent, and less
stable re-insurers from larger, more solvent and
more stable insurers are deemed to be against the
public interest. - Capitation agreements transfer risk in exactly
the wrong direction, inevitably leading to
financial strains, reduced profitability, delayed
and denied services, defaults and lower levels of
service quality and quantity. - All of this was predictable before the first
capitation agreement was signed.
36Capitation contracts, like spider webs capture
the unwary