Title: WIN/WIN NEGOTIATIONS
1WIN/WIN NEGOTIATIONS
- BOTH SIDES FEEL AS IF THEY HAVE BEEN TREATED
FAIRLY WHILE GIVING AND RECEIVING CONCESSION OF
EQUAL VALUE
2NEGOTIATION STRATEGIES AND TACITCS
3SURPRISE
- NEW, UNEXPECTED INFORMATION
- PURPOSE - TO DESTABILIZE AND CREATE PRESSURE
- COUNTER - KEEP A COOL HEAD AND EVALUATE THE
SITUATION
4AGENT OF LIMITED AUTHORITY
- UNABLE TO MAKE DECISION OR CONCESSION
- PURPOSE - TO BUY TIME AND GET MORE INPUT
- SEE THIRD PARTY - BECOME AGENT YOURSELF
5ULTIMATUM
- ACCEPT ONLY ONE OUTCOME
- PURPOSE - TO FORCE A QUICK DECISION
- PROVIDE REAL OPTIONS TO STATED POSITION
6REDUCTION TO THE RIDICULOUS
- USE OF MANIPULATIONS OR GIMMICKS TO MAKE
SITUATION LOOK DIFFERENT - PURPOSE - TO MAKE POSITION APPEAR TO BE MORE
REASONABLE - ANALYZE ALL ITEMS USING THE SAME CRITERIA
7POLICY OR PROCEDURE
- INDICATE POSITION IS ACCEPTED PRACTICE
- PURPOSE - TO MAKE A POINT NON-NEGOTIABLE
- CHALLENGE STANDARD/GIVE EXAMPLE
8WALKOUT
- LEAVING NEGOTIATIONS
- PURPOSE - TO FORCE THE OTHER PARTY TO ACT
- WAIT/MAKE A CONCESSION
9GOOD GUY/BAD GUY
- NEGOTIATORS ASSUME OPPOSITE ROLES
- PURPOSE - TO GET ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REVEALED
- INDICATE AWARENESS OF TACTIC
10ITEMIZATION
- REQUESTING BREAKDOWN OF COSTS
- PURPOSE - TO LOWER THE PRICE ITEM BY ITEM
- PROVIDE REASONG FOR NO BREAKDOWN
11REFERENCE
- USE FEEL/FELT/FOUND STATEMENTS
- PURPOSE - TO PROVIDE THIRD-ARTY SUPPORT
- REALISTICALLY APPRAISE THE REFERENCE
12TRY IT, YOULL LIKE IT
- PERMIT TRIAL WITHOUT COMMITMENT
- PURPOSE - TO DEMONSTRATE VALUE OF THE PRODUCT
- ATTEMPT TO ALSO TRY THE ALTERNATIVES
13FLINCHING
- DRAMATIC, NEGATIVE REACTION TO OFFER
- PURPOSE - TO LOWER THE EXPECTATIONS OF THE OTHER
PARTY - REFUSE TO BE INFLUENCED
14BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
- USING EXTERNAL, NON-NEGOTIABLE LIMIT
- PURPOSE- TO ESTABLISH RANGE/FORCE CONCESSIONS
- CHALLENGE THE LIMITS/CHANGE THE LOOK OF THE
PAYMENTS
15DISBELIEF
- YOUVE GOT TO DO BETTER THAN THAT
- TO FORCE A BETTER OFFER
- HOW MUCH BETTER
16PLAYING DUMB
- PRETEND TO HAVE LIMITED KNOWLEDGE
- PURPOSE - TO DISARMOTHER PARTY/GAIN FACTS
- OFFER ONLY THE INFORMATION CALLED FOR
17MEASURED APPROACH
- REACHING DECISIONS ITEM BY ITEM
- PURPOSE - TO REVEAL AGENDA ITEMS ONE AT A TIME
- ASK FOR THE ENTIRE AGENDA
18QUICK CLOSE
- ADDING ITEMS WHEN A DECISION IS CLOSE
- PURPOSE - TO MAKE AN OFFER MORE APPEALING/CLOSE
- ASSESS THE REAL VALUE OF THE EXTRA ITEM
19CHANGING LEVELS
- APPROACHING A HIGHER OR A LOWER LEVEL
- PURPOSE - TO CONTINUE THE NEGOTIATIONS
- ENSURE THAT NO ADVANTAGE IS GAINED BY THE ACTION
20REASONS FOR ASKING QUESTIONS
- TO GET INFORMATION
- TO LEAD OR MOLD THINKING WHAT IF..?
- TO STALL
- WHY DO YOU SAY THAT?
- TO DETERMINE POSTIONS
- IF YOU COULD, WOULD YOU..?
21 - TO MAKE A STATEMENT
- ISNT THAT WHAT WE BOTH WANT TO ACHIEVE?
22GOOD NEGOTATING QUESTIONS
- WHAT DO YOU HAVE IN MIND?
- DO I KNOW EVERYTHING I SHOULD ABOUT THIS?
- WHAT WOULD IT TAK TO..?
- WHAT ELSE?
- WHAT IF I COULD..?
23 - YOUVE TOLD ME WHAT YOU WANT. WHAT DO YOU NEED?
- WHATS IN IT FOR ME?
- WHERE WILL YOU COMPROMICE?
- COULD YOU REPEAT THAT OFFER?
24ALTERNATIVE WHEN ASKED A QUESTION
- WHY DO YOU ASK THAT?
- BEFORE I ANSWER THAT, TELL ME
- WHAT I HEAR YOU SAYING IS
- WHAT EXACTLY DO YOU MEAN?
- REMAIN SILENT - WHEN THE OTER PARTY BECOMES
UNCOMFORTABLE, HE OR SHE WILL BEGIN TALKING AGAIN.
25Managed Care
26Health Maintenance Organizations - HMOs
- Staff Model
- Group Practice Model
- Network Model
- IPA Model
- Direct Contracting Model
- Provider Sponsored Organization
27STAFF MODEL
- Closed Panel
- MDs As Employees
- Greater Degree of Control Over Practice Patterns
- Convenience of One-Stop Shopping
- More Costly to Develop and Implement
- Limited Choice of Participating Physicians
28STAFF MODEL (cont)
- Productivity Problems
- Examples
- FHP
- KAISER
29GROUP MODEL
- Multispecialty Physician Group
- Captive Group
- Independent Group
- Greater Degree of Control of Physicians
- Lower Capital Needs Than Staff Model
30Group Model (cont)
- Limited Choice of Physicians
- Marketing Difficulties
- Lack of Accessibility
- Examples
- MacGregor
- University Medical Group
- Kelsey
31Network Model
- Contracts With More Than One Group Practice
- Either Closed or Open Panel Plans
- Overcomes Marketing Disadvantage
- More Limited Physician Panel Than IPA or Direct
Contracting Model
32IPA MODEL
- Hospital Based IPA Model
- All Inclusive Capitation
- Requires Less Capital
- Broad Choice of Participating Physicians
- Creates an Organization Forum for Physicians to
Negotiate with HMOs
33IPA MODEL (cont)
- More Difficult Utilization Management
- Examples
- North American Medical Management
- FPA
- Heritage
34DIRECT CONTRACTING
- Requires Less Capital
- Broad Choice of Participating Physicians
- Does Not Create an Organization Forum for
Physicians to Negotiate - HMO Assumes Additional Financial Risk Relative to
IPA
35DIRECT CONTRACTING
- More Difficult to Recruit Physicians
- Utilization Management More Difficulty
36Preferred Provider Organization
- Select Provider Panel
- Negotiated Payment Rates
- Rapid Payment Terms
- Utilization Management
- Consumer Choice
37OPEN ACCESS HMO
- 30 States Currently Have
- Specialty Capitation
- Impact On Utilization
- Consumer Choice
- Texas - OB/GYN
38EXCLUSIVE PROVIDER ORGANIZATION
- Limited Choice
- Gatekeeper
- ERISA Regulated
39POINT OF SERVICE PLAN
- PCP Capitation
- Withholds
- Gatekeeper
- Limited Out of Network Coverage
40INDEMNITY COVERAGE
- High Deductibles
- High CoInsurance
- 65 -84 Steerage of Patients
- MSAs
41SELF INSURED PLANS
- ERISA Exemption
- Administrative Service Organization ASO
- Third Party Administrator TPA
42SPECIALTY HMOs
- Mental Health/Chemical Dependence
- Dental
- TCH HMO
43MANAGED CARE OVERLAYS TO INDEMNITY
- Utilization Management
- Specialty Utilization Management
- Catastrophic Case Management
- Workers Compensation Utilization Management
44PRIMARY CARE NETWORK
45RISK CONTRACTING
- A basis for all insurance
- Aligns responsibility and accountability
- A way of sharing risks across a population rather
than individual by individual - The cap rate is a function of both the predicted
frequency and predicted unit cost of services
46Risk Contracting (cont)
- Providers risk loss if costs are higher than
predicted and stand to make if costs are lower
than predicted - The higher the volume of patients the better the
chance of predictable expenses and average spread
of risk - PCP requires at least 150 enrollees and global
capitation requires at least 10,000
47CAPITATION
- A fixed amount is paid to the provider each month
for the care of a specified number of patients.
If actual costs exceed the total sum, no
additional Moines are paid. If actual costs are
less than the total sum paid, the provider keeps
the surplus Moines. - Capitation requires a specific population
48CAPITATION
- When a provider or group of providers is
capitated for care, all patients are required to
use that provider or group. No coverage is
provided if patients go out of the network.
49PREMUIM SPLIT
- HMO
- Marketing
- Employer Billing
- Eligibility
- Out of Area Coverage
- Transplant/AIDS Pool
50PREMIUM SPLIT (cont)
- IPA or Physician Group
- All physicians services, inpatient and outpatient
- Outpatient diagnostic services and treatment
51PREMIUM SPLIT (cont)
- Hospital
- All inpatient hospital services
- Home Health
- Ambulatory Surgery
- Skilled Nursing Facility
- Durable Medical Equipment
- ER facility fees
52ACTUARIAL CONCEPTS
- Premium rate is set by first calculating the
medical expense components - 1. Assumptions are made of the expected
utilization of specific areas of care - 2. Average rate per each service is determined.
- 3. After multiplying the above 2 factors, the
copayment amount is then adjusted
53ACTURIAL CONCEPTS
- 4. This equals the net PMPM amount in the
premium for the specific area of care - The full premium equals the total medical expense
plus and administrative load. - A specified area or service, I.e., PCP services,
can be separated out to develop a capitation
figure.
54PCP Capitation
55PCP Capitation
- Base Medical Cost 13.31
- 15 Office Visit CoPay 3.77
- Primary Care Cap 9.54
56GATEKEEPERS
- PCPs FP,GP,IM,PED, GYN
- Eye Care - Optometrist
- Workers Comp - Physiatrist
- Dental Care - General Dentists
- MH/CD - MSWs
57CAPITATION DONT
- Dont enter into capitation contracts without
getting advice from experienced managers - Dont accept a cap rate unless you know you can
live with it - Dont enter a capiation contract unless you are
committed and able to monitor the utilization and
have confidence in sub-contractors.
58CAPITATION DONTS
- Dont accept risk for costs you or the group
cannot control such as tertiary care or new
technologies - Dont tolerate an adversarial relationship with
the payor.
59CHALLENGES TO PROVIDERS
- Competitive costs
- Capability to accept/manage risk
- Creation of a balanced delivery system
- Lower administrative costs
- Information Management
- Negotiation Skills
60KEYS TO CAPITATION ANALYSIS
- 1. What services are covered under the
capitation rate? - 2. Are there limits to the risk?
- Reinsurance- specific, aggregate
- Low enrollment guarantee
61KEYS (cont)
- 3. What utilization and cost targets were
utilized in building the capitation rate? Are
these comparable to your experience? - 4. How does the capitation compare to
fee-for-service charges? - 5. What are the underwriting or UM guidelines?
62KEYS (cont)
- 6. What are the incentives for effective
performance? - 7. Is the payment structure to providers
appropriate to live within the capitation?
63CONTACT CAPITATION
- Customer based fixed payment for services over a
specified time period. - Referral based count the number of unique
patients in a given time period PERIOD. - Diagnosis/Point based referral based but
modified by acuity, severity..Points or weights
assigned to specific diagnosis - Other case rates, DRGs, ASC rates
64TYPICAL CAPITATIONMONTHLY PREMIUM 120
- Inpatient Hospital 34
- Outpatient Hospital 14
- Specialty Care 28
- Primary Care 12
- Other Medical 15
- Administrative/Profit 17
65PHYSICIAN CAPITATION
- Provide or arrange for medical services 24 hours
a day - Patient management Consultations
- Hospital Nursing home visits
- Pediatric and adult immunizations
- Initial child care/well care
- Outpatient diagnostic services
66PHYSICIAN CAPITATION
- Office surgery
- In area urgent and emergent care
- Anesthesia
- Health education
- Telephone consultation
- Physical, speech occupational therapy
67HOSPITAL CAPITATION
- Hospital facility costs
- Skilled nursing services
- Home Health
- Surgery facility costs
- Prosthetics/durable medical equipment
- Ambulance
- Chemo/radiation therapy agents
68OTHER MEDICAL POOL
- Prescription drugs
- Vision services
- Dental services
- Mental Health substance abuse services
- Out-of area emergency urgent care
- Kidney dialysis
69OTHER MEDICAL POOL
- Transplants
- Expenses above stop/loss levels
70ADMINISTRATIVE POOL
- Marketing
- Membership maintenance/servicing
- Claims administration
- Provider servicing
- UR/QA management
- Finance/Reporting/Systems Management
- Retention
71RESOURCES NEEDS CHANGE
- Drop inpatient days to 200 - 225 commercial,
1,100- 1,200 for Medicare - Reduce Specialist Referrals by 25
- Reduce average length of stay to 2.9 days
- Increase physician visits by 15
- Employ weekend social workers to expedite
discharge
72RESOURCE CHANGES
- PCPs stay in office and see patients - stop
hospital work- employ physician extenders - Employ full-time physicians on-site at hospital
to manage all enrollee care - Medical Intensivist - Employ mental health gatekeepers to reduce
psychiatric admissions
73RESOURCE CHANGES
- Conduct physician house calls to avoid inpatient
stays - Reduce ER non-emergency visits, telephone triage,
fast track ER, telemedicine - Chronic disease management -- Asthma, CHF,
Diabetes - Improve access to care
74Models of Integration
- Physician Hospital Organization
- Management Service Organization
- Group Practice Without Walls
- Integrated Provider
- Medical Foundation
75Physician Hospital Organization
- A legal entity owned by both a hospital and a
group of physicians. Its primary purpose is
obtaining payor contracts.
76PHO
- Payor requirements of the PHO
- Strong PCP base
- Strong utilization management
- Inclusion of only select specialists with a track
record of efficient, quality care
77PHO
- Determinations to make before setting up a PHO
- What are we selling?
- To whom are we selling?
- What is the likelihood we will sell enough to
survive?
78PHO Advantages
- Serves as an excellent first stage model
- Requires less capital investment
- May create a vehicle for global capitation
79PHO Disadvantages
- Less integration than a Medical Foundation or
Integrated Medical Group - Since it is not fully integrated, creates
antitrust risk - Potential for working inefficiency with super
majority requirement
80PHO Physician Strategies
- PHO Risk
- Willing to take risk
- Not willing to take risk
- PHO Capabilities
- Contract a subset
- Grant power of attorney
81PHO Physician Strategies
- Market to self insured employers
- Market to managed care
- Market to other networks
- Physicians only take risk
- Both physicians and hospital take risk
- Develop an IPA subset of PHO
82IPA
- Multi-specialty
- Single Specialty
- Specialty
- Workers Comp
- Ethnic
- Other
83IPA
- Ownership
- Physicians
- Management Company
- Physicians and third party (hospitals, management
company, venture capitalist) - Funding
- Physicians Only
- Physicians and third party
84MSOs
- Provided by hospitals
- Provided by third party payors
- Provided by other outside entities
- Provided by the physician group itself
85MSO Purposes
- To fund the IPA
- To use as PR tool for physicians recruitment
- To act as precursor to group practice without
walls - To reduce the administrative cost for the group
86Group Practice Without Walls
- A formal legal organization that bills under one
provider number (75 of revenue through a common
billing number) and provides certain core
administrative and management services to
physicians who maintain separate individual
offices
87GPWW
- Purpose Allow independent physicians access to
benefits of group practice without full
integration. - Ownership Independent physicians ownership
88GPWW
- Focus of activity
- Geographic dispersed physician network
- Provide for adequate physician compensation and
retirement benefits - Reduce physician cost of business
- Use as base for accomplishing medical staff
development goals - Ownership of some ancillary services
89GPWW
- Functions
- Managed Care Contracting
- Joint Ventures
- Physician Support Services
- Group Practice Development
- Practice Management
- Ancillary Services
90GPWW
- Structure
- Owned by participating physicians and can be
organized as a professional medical corporation
or as a medical partnership. It is operated for
profit. Legal requirements - Incorporation
- Stock structure and bylaws
- Legal arrangement between the GPWW and physicians
joining the group
91GPWW
- Legal Issues
- Common Billing
- Merging of practice not purchase of assets
- Retirement Plan Sec. 414 IRS Code
92GPWW
- Types
- United - The new group practice owns and manages
the hard assets of the practice along with all
business operations. Physicians are employees
and shareholders in the newly formed group
practice.
93GPWW
- Administrative
- Physicians retain their assets and ownership in
their practices, but pay monthly dues for core
group of services provided by and administrative
services office. These services include group
purchasing, collections, billings, payroll, and
personnel.
94GPWW
- Advantages
- Greater autonomy to physicians
- Less capital investment required of physicians
- Potential cost savings through economies of scale
- Physicians able to retain certain benefits of
multi-specialty group practice
95GPWW
- Advantages
- Provides vehicle of succession for various
medical practices within the GPWW - Physicians maintain their individual locations
and facilities - Good transitional form between individual
practice and fully integrated group practice - Provides opportunity for revenue enhancement
96GPWW
- Disadvantages
- May raise issues under Sec 414 of IRS Code
- Practices remain compartmentalized
97Antitrust issues
98MANAGED CARE
99RESOURCE PLANNING
- The acquisition and allocation of
- Fixed Capital
- Equipment Capital
- Human Capital
- Operating Capital
100THE SHIFTING OF ATTENTION
- From the hospital to
- Ambulatory Care
- Skilled Nursing Facilities
- Home Health
- Physician Office
101FINANCIAL PLANNING
102STRATEGIC PLANNING
- The process of setting long-term objectives for
the future - Focus on the budget as its main planning tool,
management-oriented cost accounting
103KEY MANAGEMENT SKILLS
- Organizational Skills
- Delegating Skills
- Recruitment and Training of Professional Health
Workers
104HEALTHCARE REFORM
- Drivers of Federal Health Policy
- Federal Budget
- The Public Debt
- Medicare Trust Fund
- State Budgets
- Business Profits and Growth
- The Public Perception of Change
105MEDICARE PAYMENT POLICIES
- Fragmented at-risk payment methods
- Medicare-managed care contracting policies
106FEE FOR SERVICE TO CAPITATION
- 1970 - Cost Limits
- 1980 - HMO and CMP
- Risk Contracting
- Hospital DRGs
- Small Skilled Nursing Facility PPS
1071990s
- RBRVS Fee Schedule
- CABG Package Pricing Contract
- Skilled Nursing Facility PPS
- Home Health Agency PPS
- Ambulatory Surgery Center PPS
1082002
- Open Access
- Four Tiered Pricing of Drugs
- Medicare Select
- Managed Care Reform
- Prompt Pay
- Limited Risk
109MEDICAID MANAGED CARE PAYMENT POLICIES
1101970s
- Limits on Cost-Based Fee for Service
1111980s
- Freedom of choice waivers
- Home and community-based services
- Boren Amendment
- Rate-setting Flexibility
- Arizona Medicaid Demonstration
1121990s
- Prescription drug rebate program
- Medicaid managed care waivers expedited
- Primary Care Case Management Models - PCCM
- TennCare
- STAR PLUS
1132002
- Oversight review of Medicaid managed care
- Purchase co-ops demonstration risk pools
- Elimination of TennCare
114CAPITATION RATES
115PRIMARY CARE
- GROUP 10.50 - 12.30
- IPA 10.80 - 15.03
- HOSP 8.61 - 14.02
- PHO 11.90 - 14.94
116PRIMARY CARE
- MEDICARE 13.06 - 26.00
- MEDICAID 13.44 - 28.00
117PROFESSIONAL
- MEDICARE 138.12 - 171.32
- COMMERCIAL 29.06 - 55.84
118MENTAL HEALTH
119SPECIALTY COMMERCIAL
- ALLERGY .19 - 1.37
- ANESTHESIOLOGY 1.75 - 3.45
- CARDIOLOGY .66 - 1.28
- CARDILOGY INVASIVE .11 - .38
- NONINVASIVE CARDIO .60 - 1.27
- DERMATOLOGY .26 - .92
- ER .43 -.70
120SPECIALTY COMMERCIAL
- ENDOCRINOLOGY .05 - .26
- GI .28 - .99
- GENERAL SURGERY 1.10 - 2.03
- HOME HEALTH .53 - 2.12
- INFECTIOUS DISEASE .02 - .09
- LAB .36 - 1.13
- NEPHROLOGY .04 - .23
121SPECIALTY COMMERCIAL
- NEUROLOGY .20 - .45
- NEUROSURGERY .31 - .71
- OB/GYN 2.77 - 5.28
- ONCOLOGY .17 - 2.69
- OPHTHLMOLOGY .32 - 1.42
- ORTHOPEDICS .68 - 2.09
- OTOLARYNGOLOGY .63 - 1.65
122SPECIALTY COMMERCIAL
- PATHOLOGY .24 - 2.24
- PEDIATRICS 4.38 - 16.50
- PHARMACY 8.87 - 18.50
- PODIATRY .21 - .33
- PULMONOLOGY .16 - .41
- RHEUMATOLOGY .08 - .15
- UROLOGY .32 - .72
123SPECIALTY MEDICARE
- ALLERGY .05 - .38
- ANESTHESIOLOGY 4.01 - 5.50
- CARDIOLOGY 5.00 - 8.18
- CARDIOLOGY INVASIVE 2.09 - 3.06
- NONINVASIVE CARDIO 6.04 - 9.10
- DERMATOLOGY 1.50 - 4.22
- ENDOCRINOLOGY .19 - .28
124SPECIALTY MEDICARE
- GI .74 - 2.80
- GENERAL SURGERY 3.94 - 8.66
- HOME HEALTH 12.61 - 28.06
- LAB .48 - 2.15
- NEPHROLOGY .62 - .99
- NEUROLOGY .81 - 1.51
- NEUROSURGERY .80 - 1.46
125SPECIALTY MEDICARE
- OB/GYN .85 -2.16
- ONCOLOGY 3.19 -5.92
- OPHTHALMOLOGY 5.00 - 9.70
- ORTHOPEDICS 3.10 - 7.60
- OTHOLARYNGOLOGY .72 - 1.64
- PHARMACY 18.88 - 60
- PHYSICAL MEDICINE .53 - .85
126SPECIALTY MEDICARE
- PODIATRY .40 - 1.41
- PULMONOLOGY 1.10 - 1.40
- RHEUMATOLOGY .36 - .56
- UROLOGY 1.85 - 3.69
127ANECDOTES COMMERCIAL
- CHIROPRACTIC .07
- AMBULANCE .25
- NEONATOLOGY .18
- ORAL SURGERY .22
- GLOBAL MEDICAID 130.78
128DAYS PER 1,000
- COMMERCIAL 142 - 349
- MEDICARE 800 - 1811
129ADMITS PER 1,000
- COMMERCIAL 50 - 160
- MEDICARE 202 - 355
130LOS
- COMMERCIAL 2.30 - 4.50
- MEDICARE 4.10 - 7.00
131STOP LOSS
- MD 10,000 - 75,000
- HOSPITAL
- PER CASE 22,000 - 100,000
- AGGREGATE 30,000 - 200,000
- PREMIUMS
- MD .52 - 2.41
- HOSPITAL 1.00 - 2.37
132Finance
133Financial Statement
- Revenue
- Premium Revenue
- Other Revenue
- Operating Expenses
- Medical Expenses
- Administrative Expenses
- Retention
134Premium Revenue
- Primary Source of Revenue
- Generally 95 of Revenue
- Effective for a 12 month period
135Other Revenue
- PPO Access Fees
- COB Recoverable
- Reinsurance Recoverable
- Interest Income
136Medical Expenses
- Paid Claims
- IBNR Incurred But Not Reported
137IBNR Factors
- Significant changes in enrollment
- Unusual or large claims
- Changes in pricing or product design
- Seasonal utilization or reporting patterns
- Claim processing backlog
- Major changes to the provider network or
reimbursement methods
138Administrative Expenses
- Finance
- Sales
- Underwriting
- Member Services
- Provider Services
139Underwriting
140Underwriting Considers
- Health Status
- Ability to pay premium
- Other coverage
- Historical Persistency
141Health Status
- Physical Examinations
- Individual Medical Questionnaires
- Employer disclosure listing major health
conditions - Medical cost experience
- No Health Status Information Medicare and
Medicaid
142Ability to Pay
143Other Coverage
144Historical Persistency
- Frequent changes of carriers
145Base Rate Development
- Population
- Covered Services
- Cost-Sharing Provisions
- Provider Reimbursement arrangements
- Demographics
- Geographical Area
- Occupation/Industry
146Base Rate Development cont
- Health Status
- Degree of Health care management
- Coverage effective date
- Out-of-Network Usage
- Use of pre-existing condition clauses
- Underwriting Practices
- Claims administration practices
147Common Operational Problems
148Undercapitalization
- New Plans require 10,000,000 in working capital
- Existing plans
- Sustained operating losses
- Acquisitions
149Unrealistic Projections
- Overestimates of enrollment
- Underprojecting medical expenses
150Pricing
- Predatory Pricing or Low Balling
- Overpricing
- Panic response to previous low-balling
- Excessive overhead
- Failure to control utilization properly
- Adverse selection
151Uncontrolled Growth
- Rapid growth
- Acquisition
- No competitor
- Results
- Rapid expansions in delivery system
- Service erosion
- Insufficient claims reserves
152Uncontrolled Growth
- Results
- Saturation of delivery system
- Inadequate reserves
153Failure to Manage a Reduction in Growth
- Failure to grow
- Failure to manage the consequences of a flattened
or negative growth
154Other Issues
- Failure to use underwriting
- Adverse Selection
- Improper Incurred Bur Not Reported Calculations
and Accrual Methods - Failure to Reconcile Accounts Receivable
- Overextended Management
155Other Issues
- Failure of Management to Produce or Understand
Reports - Failure to Track Correctly Medical Costs and
Utilization - Systems Inability to Manage the Business
- Failure to Educate and Reeducate Providers
- Failure to Deal with Difficult or Noncompliant
Providers
156Base Rate Development dont
- Distribution Method
- Other variables impacting medical costs
157Using Data in Medical Management
- Data Characteristics
- Integrity
- Consistency
- Same meaning from provider to provider
- Validity
- Meaningfulness
- Adequate Sample Size
158LEVELS
- Health Center, IPA, Provider Organization, or
Geographically Related Center - Individual Physician
- Service or Vendor Type
- Employer Group
159HOSPITAL UTILIZATION REPORTS
- Daily Log
- Monthly Summary
160OUTPATIENT UTILIZATION
- PCP Encounter rates
- Preventive Care
- Lab Utilization
- Radiology Utilization per visit
- Prescriptions
- Referral Utilization
- Out-of-Network
161OUTPATIENT CONT
- Ambulatory procedures
- Ancillary care
- PT
- Podiatry
- Eye Care
- Oral Surgery
- Other
162PROVIDER PROFILING
- Collection, collation, and analysis of data to
develop provider-specific profiles. - Initial focus - inpatient care
- Recent shift to outpatient care
163Episodes of Care
- Difficulty in determining who has responsibility.
164Adjusting for Severity and Case Mix
- Severity of Illness Indicators
- Statistical Manipulation
- Trimming
165Comparing the Results of Profiling
- Plan Average Results
- IPA, POD, or IDS
- Specialty or peer group
- Peer group adjusted for age, sex and case
mix/severity of illness - Budget
- Feedback
166Disease Management
- Success factors
- Implementation Speed to market
- Management Tools Reports, Provider Profiles
- Staff Adequate staffing ratios for nonphysician
practitioners - Organizational integration Roles and processes
defined
167Disease Management cont
- Marketing and Sales Regional and National
distribution - Targeting Tools Optimal use of data
- Stratification Tools Customized interventions
for optimal outcomes - Guideline Validity High quality of evidence
168Disease Management cont
- Member Behavior Change Method based on behavior
change models including learning
style,interventions targeted and tailored
maintenance strategy - Physician Behavior changed based on research