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WSHMMA. Rayburn Lewis MD Vice President for Medical Affairs Swedish Medical Center April 27, 2006. Historical influences. Original hospitals had few choices, and little revenue charity in kind volunteer revenue from those who could afford it.
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WSHMMA Rayburn Lewis MD Vice President for Medical Affairs Swedish Medical Center April 27, 2006
Historical influences • Original hospitals had few choices, and little revenue • charity • in kind • volunteer • revenue from those who could afford it
The open staff-workshop evolution: pre WW II • Physicians often dominated board of trustees. • fund raisers • still relatively few choices for supply and capital purchases • few “specialties”
Post War specialization • Surgeons differentiating • orthopedics • general surgery • eventually cardiac surgery • Choices increasing, although the boom was yet to come
Third party payers • Insurance was enhanced during the war • pay couldn’t be increased (wage freezes), but benefits could • beginning of cost plus revenue era for hospitals
Medicare • 1965, part of the social revolution of the ‘60’s, debate started at the turn of the century, enhanced by WWII • A whole class of high utilizers now have access to care • Until 1983, Medicare was a cost plus revenue source
Medicare reform, 1983 • The “buck$” stopped here • Prospective payments • risk and acuity weighting • budget restraints • regional rate determinations • Other insurers followed suit
Technology explosion • 1965, 1 hip • 2005, how many? • 1965, open heart surgery • 2005, catheter based PFO closure • defibrillators, drugs, RFA • LASIK • There is no specialty where technology has not touched, and the rate of expansion of new knowledge and its applications is increasing, including psychiatry
Business changes • Hospital consolidation • Hospital specialization • Regionalization • For profit hospitals
Financing Changes • HMO, PPO, Pay for performance, quality indicators, decreasing pass throughs • US highest per capita costs • highest number of uninsured in the 1st World • Is there a need for a national policy on health insurance? • Not in the top 10 in infant mortality rate
Physician Enterprises • Fewer independent practitioners • Larger multi- and single-specialty groups of physicians and allied health professionals
Why larger groups of physicians? • Administrative and management sophistication • IT • Finance--revenue and expense management • HR • Capital investment • REVENUE!
Physician ownership • OR • Cath labs • Diagnostic labs • Imaging • PT/OT • Durable medical equipment, pharmacies
Ownership leads to independence from hospital It also leads to a more intimate knowledge of revenue* and expense Consequences of Physician Ownership
What do our physicians want? • The best for their patient, not necessarily the best value, unlikely the least expensive • Familiarity with the equipment • Convenience and speed • Flexibility
What do they need to contribute to the process? • A champion • A promise to listen to all the voices • Clarity over the final decision process • If physicians own the business, you owe them the best information you can give to them, to make an informed decision • If they are stakeholders, respect their preferences, even if you ultimately disagree
Specifics • Caps cost $ • high price • inventory • …where is my favorite implant?…but I thought you said you would honor the selection, even if your favorite wouldn’t play? • Limited vendor choices • be clear about the real cost of physician loyalty
Managemant • Purchasing • Revenue enhancement • Payment • Inventory management • New Product request management • OR vendor management • Trunk stock • New Technology Assessment