Title: A Health Economists Perspective on the Medical Arms Race
1A Health Economists Perspective on the Medical
Arms Race
National Institute of Health Policy Webinar,
September 29, 2006
2Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC)
- Local and national changes in financing and
delivery of health care - Surveys of households, physicians, employers
- Site visits to 12 representative metropolitan
areas - Active dissemination program
- Following in policy world, industry, researchers,
educators - www.hschange.org
- Principally funded by The Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation - Other foundations and government agencies
3Notion of a Medical Arms Race
- Providers invest in facilities beyond what is
needed to meet demands for services - Presence of facilities leads to excess use of
services - Cost of underused capacity is passed on to payers
and ultimately purchasers of health care
4MAR in 1970s and 1980s
- Little competition among providers on basis of
price - Insurance benefit structures did not promote
consumer sensitivity - Passive reimbursement systems for hospitals and
other facilities - Reimbursement of costs
- Payment of charges
- But hospitals competed for doctors allegiance
- Not a normal market
- Facilities and technology a key tool available
- Higher costs in more competitive markets
5MAR in Era of Managed Care
- Concerns about MAR greatly diminished
- Greater health plan influence over utilization of
services - Authorization requirements
- Substantial excess capacity caused by declining
utilization rates discouraged expansions - Hospital revenues were highly constrained
- Medicare prospective payment
- Health plan negotiation of payment rates
- Costs of excess capacity could not be passed on
to payers
6Return of Medical Arms Race
- Health care construction boom in recent years
- Focused on specialty services
- Specialty hospitals in some communities
- Physician-owned outpatient facilities
- Migration of high-tech services into physician
offices
7Environment in 2006
- Providers more responsive to market signals
- Specializing in what is profitable
- Providers more entrepreneurial
- Constraints on physician fees for professional
services - Advances in medical technology permit more
services to be offered outside of hospital
settings - Innovations in capital markets to fund new
competitors - Capital costs generally low
8Specialty Hospitals
- Focused on services that are most profitable
- And patients that are most profitable
- Potential for innovating on delivery as a focused
factory - Physician-owners involved in management
- Processes more oriented to supporting physician
productivity - Potential to increase efficiency through
physician involvement - Community hospitals face more obstacles in
involving physicians - Gain sharing restrictions
9Hospital Specialty Lines Strategy (1)
- Identify service lines that are profitable and
can be expanded - Develop brand for the service line
- Name (ABC Heart Institute), recognized leaders,
marketing - Range of organizational structures
- Separate physical area, hospital within a
hospital, specialty hospital - Often employ top specialists to draw referrals
10Hospital Specialty Lines Strategy (2)
- Ubiquity of service line strategy
- All 12 CTS markets
- In 33 interviewed hospital systems
- 33 heart service lines
- 24 cancer
- 18 orthopedics
- The norm in hospital management
- I became the CEO, started the service lines, got
the ship profitable. - in response to question on capital spending
priorities I line up the services according to
profitability and go down the list until the
capital budget is exhausted.
11Physician-Owned Facilities
- Ambulatory surgical centers
- Same motivations and issues as with specialty
hospitals - Equipment in physician offices
- Technology permits viable smaller scale
operations - Mergers of single specialty groups to achieve
scale needed for equipment ownership to be viable - Self-referral incentives
- More ordering of tests
- Shift services from hospital facilities
12Hospital Responses to Threats from Physicians
- Loss of most profitable services a major threat
- Loss of margin
- More limited ability to provide cross subsidies
- More difficulty covering the ED
- Joint ventures with physicians
- Economic credentialing
- Increasing employment of specialists
13Health Plan Perspectives
- More competitors and greater capacity should be
basis for lower prices--but - Hospital ability to negotiate its network
participation for all services - Increase in volume more than offsets the lower
prices achieved
14Why Are Some Services More Profitable than
Others? (1)
- Medicare goals for payment structure
- Fairness
- Neutral incentives for providers
- Prospective payment systems dependence on charge
data - Hospital profitability varies systematically due
to - Market-driven differences in markups
- Productivity trends impact
15Why Are Some Services More Profitable than
Others? (2)
- Problems in physician RVS when equipment involved
- Assumptions on rates of use and interest rates
- Private payers either follow Medicare or pay
discounted charges - Similar distortions in private payment structures
- Little private payer innovation in reimbursement
- Some steps to limit sites where high-end imaging
will be paid for
16Policy Options to Address MAR More Accurate
Payment Structure (1)
- Conservatives and liberals can come together on
this level playing field - Implementing this not as easy
- Very limited funding for these activities
- Political sway of losers
- Urgency typically not high
- But major threat to academic medical centers or
community hospitals can galvanize action - Medicare inpatient hospital payment
- MedPAC findings about systematic variation in
profitability - Motivation by specialty hospital issue
17Policy Options to Address MAR More Accurate
Payment Structure (2)
- General hospitals gain in the aggregate at
expense of specialty hospitals - But general hospitals urged delay and phase in
- Winners and losers among general hospitals
- Many have not faced threats from specialty
hospitals - Device makers concerned about payment rates for
DRGs where devices used
18Policy Options to Address MAR Restrictions on
Self-Referral
- Physicians offices excluded from self-referral
restrictions - Traditionally, increased service volume limited
by physician time - But increasingly, self referral incentives apply
to more services, including some that are very
costly, e.g. high end imaging
19Policy Options to Address MAR Limits on Capital
Spending
- Medicare moratorium on specialty hospital
construction - States considering reviving Certificate of Need
laws - Spearheaded by general hospitals
- Support by payers
20Summary MAR in 2006 vs. 1970s
- More focused on responding to market incentives
- Specializing in profitable services
- Physician groups are major players now
- More potential to expand capacity
- More services influenced by self-referral
incentives