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Month: June 2006

HOSPITALS/POLICY: MY 2 cents on the non-profit conundrum….incentives matter more than labels

Here’s my follow up to Maggie’s interesting piece and it’s the editorial in FierceHealthcare later today

The non-profit hospital world has been in the news lately, and this week a study of all the studies ever done on the non-profit/for-profit contrast came out in Health Affairs. The story is pretty well known and the study confirmed that non-profit hospitals offer a little more charity care, and have slightly lower costs than for-profits. But then again, there are three factors that make those results a little less than great. First is that location matters and the non-profit category includes a great number of hospitals that are in unfavorable locations, like inner city areas and poor rural counties. Second, the behavior of their for-profit competitors over the years has tended to center on the border between scandalous and criminal. And far too many non-profits have been imitating that behavior, such as New Jersey’s St. Barnabas, which settled with the government for as much as it could afford for apparently over-charging Medicare by over $500m. Third, for-profits have stayed at around 15% of hospital beds for decades and aren’t expanding their market share much. So the main issue is how do hospitals overall behave.

The truth is that whatever the label put on an organization, in an environment where doing more and charging more brings more profit/margin, there will always be institutions and people within them that will fall temptation to taking the easy (and fraudulent) way to more money. Proponents of self-reform may point to the improvements in quality brought about with no financial incentives which were reported by IHI last week, but until we create incentives for organizations to do well by doing the right thing, the label will be largely irrelevant.

QUALITY: Improving health care from within, by Eric Novack

Eric Novack sees hope in the IHI’s 100K lives program which announced impressive results this week, and being Eric, he thinks that there’s a political message in there too. There’ll be more on his show this Sunday.
The Institute for Health Improvement’s ‘100,000 Lives Campaign’ (www.ihi.org) just released the results for the first 18 months:  participation of over 3000 hospitals and an estimated 122,000 lives saved.
 
In a word, astounding.
 
What is more astounding is HOW they did it.  First, the ‘they’ are the organizers of the program and the THOUSANDS OF DOCTORS, PHARMACISTS, AND NURSES who implemented some simple changes in hospitals all over the country.
 
Did they focus on hundreds of best practices and brow-beat institutions into submission?
Did they threaten to not compensate anyone for trying to provide care?
Did they threaten lawsuits?
 
No, No, No.
 
The 100,000 lives campaign focused on 6 simple steps that are essentially universally accepted to be good practices to get the right care, at the right time, in the right place, and to reduce infections along the way.
 
With success breeding more success, more hospitals are continuing to sign up for the programs and looking to expand their involvement in the program further.
 
Most remarkably absent, however, was new federal legislation and government regulation.  May I repeat: no federal bureaucracy was and is required to make improvements to our healthcare system.
 
This, no doubt, is like fingernails on the blackboard for many denizens of The Health Care Blog-osphere.
 
I was fortunate to interview Alexi Nazem, National field coordinator for the IHI’s 100,000 Lives Campaign for my show this weekend.  You definitely want to find time at 3pm west coast time this Sunday to tune in at www.ericnovack.com to hear the whole interview- and to better understand both the IOM ‘To Err is Human’ report and get an insider’s view of patient safety efforts.

QUALITY: Book reviewer?

There’s an article out called “How We Die in America” which is from a new book called UNPLUGGED: Reclaiming our Right to Die in America, by William Colby.

The publisher is looking for a reviewer, so if you’re interested in reviewing a copy and having your review on THCB let me know by email

PHYSICIANS/POLICY: Brian Klepper on the end of life as we know it, or something like that

Brian Klepper was recently up at Medscape bemoaning the lack of physician leadership in righting the troubled ship of our health care system, and challenging physicians to do better.

He got lots of feedback, not all of it as negative as you’d think, and he had his own response. All well worth reading.

On the other hand, HSC says that in real terms we’re paying physicians substantially less than in 1995. I suspect that most of that pay "cut" was in the 1990s, and things seem to be picking up again, but — as one reader asked me — there is not that much good data on physician incomes, and in real terms they did very well between 1960 and 1990.

TECH: Lost in the memory hole at McKesson

I’ve given my view on RelayHealth before—Nice product but apparently no physician or actual patient demand for it, well not enough that would have sustained a real business that didn’t get unbelievably lucky with its financing in the dotcom days. Now McKesson has bought it to roll it into their health management side that includes the old Access Health and a whole lot of other stuff. If you wnt to read more take a look at this Modern Healthcare article which by its title, McKesson deal gives docs new PHR purveyor, seems to think that RelayHealth is a PHR (stop laughing you at the back).

But what fascinates me is how this stuff happens in Corporate America. In 2000 McKesson purcahsed a company called Medivation. Medivation was tossed into its iMckesson subsidiary and obviously didn’t make it out alive. But the key point is that Medivation’s technology—at last when they bought it—did exactly what RelayHealth’s (the then Healinx) did. Given that neither of them has established much in the way of what you’d recognize as market share or profitability—cue yet more angry emails from Relay Health’s lovely marketing people—I assume McKesson is buying RelayHealth for the technology not to double up on market share. So that means whatever Medivation had has since been lost. And those of us who remember iMckesson may find this line from the story strangely familiar.

In addition to RelayHealth, McKesson’s personal health systems include in-home patient monitoring, web portal technology, triage software and personal emergency response systems. The full suite will include products and services from recently acquired HealthCom Partners, LLC, which provides patient billing solutions designed to simplify and enhance financial interactions between healthcare providers and their patients.

Longtime McKesson observers may not be too surprised —after all I don’t use their products, I just get my cues on their lack of interoperability that from HISTalk. But what I’d like to know is who’s getting fired for buying the same thing twice? For that matter when’s Charlie McCall finally going on trial for screwing up McKesson in the first place? It’s 7 years since that happened? Answers on a post card….

Coda: My best guess is that RelayHealth had c. $40m in funding in rounds C, D & E, so perhaps $45m overall. Now that no one’s feelings can get hurt, and now that the health care Internet is sexy again, I wonder whether their investors got out whole. I assume that we’ll find out in the next 10Q. Any guesses in the comments?

BLOGS: Peter Rost fired again?

After writing a post questioning the scoring of comments at his blog home the Huffington Post, inDti_1370373e which he exposed a "troll" as being the Huff Post’s technology manager, Rost was fired from writing at the Huff Po this morning. At least this one didn’t lose him a $500K paycheck! But what the hell is the Huff Po thinking?

Isn’t this shooting the messenger? I’m a big Arianna fan, after all we both went to Girton College, Cambridge, and I gave money to and volunteered for her failed 2003 gubnetorial campaign—but what are they/she thinking in firing one of their featured bloggers who exposes that one of their own employees is up to no good.  Even if it’s all a storm in a teapot, the rest of the blogging world (which regards HuffPo as a celebrity driven interloper) will have a field day.

PHYSICIANS/TECH/POLICY/POLITICS: Hard to generate savings when you spend more, eh?

The real medical story of the day is of course Michael Owen’s torn ACL, which leaves the idiot Swede’s decision to take only one fully fit striker plus a kid he won’t play to Germany as dumb as they come. But you lot don’t care about that. Instead let me tell you about my conversation with a consulting firm looking into home monitoring. The people interviewing me, once they’d got past my somewhat cynical notions about how technologies get reimbursed by Medicare and whether private insurers actually give a rats arse about saving money, kept harping on about reimbursement and how to get home monitoring reimbursed.

I made a point that will be all too familiar to THCB readers that if (and it’s not a tiny “if”) remote monitoring of the chronically ill, and all the DM processes that go along with it, is to be done routinely, then someone somewhere will have to give up some of their income to pay for it. In other words, if catching bad things happening to patients before they crash is the end result of home monitoring, there’ll be less money spent on the ones who crash. The optimists among us believe that the amount of that money not spent will exceed the amount spent on the home monitoring and DM, but that’s a subsidiary point. Instead the key issue is that under our current diversified system the people not getting the money for the patients (e.g. doctors and hospitals) who no longer crash are going to be different from the people who get the money for the monitoring (e.g. tech companies and DM service providers).

So if DM programs based around tech use, like the Medicare Health Support pilots or BeWell Mobile’s asthma DM program, are to be successful then they’ll either need additional funding from payors, or redirected funding from payors. When you have a global budget, like the VA, then it may well make sense to bring in this type of program, which is why Health Hero Network is having success with the VA, but struggled to get wide adoption outside it before. But, and you all know this, the VA, Kaiser et al are exceptions.

While leads me to the second part of the equation; how willing is the rest of the system (those doctors and hospitals) to accept less money for any reason—let alone subsidizing the adoption of new technology that will benefit someone else? Well you know the answer to that one, and yesterday came more proof, as apparently the AMA has beaten the Republicans to a bloody pulp and will not have to deal with the draconian fee cuts that were coming their way.

So I remain a skeptic that we’re going to spend more to spend less; I just think that we’re going to (slowly) just spend more.

Do Non-Profit Hospitals Deserve Their Tax Breaks?

By MAGGIE MAHAR

Mahar_1Monday, The New York Times reported that the IRS, Congress and state officials have begun taking a close look at nonprofit hospitals, all asking one charged question: Do they really deserve their tax-exempt status?

Some 16% of U.S. hospitals are for-profit—and they pay taxes. Nonprofits, by contrast, have traditionally been tax-exempt.  But now investigators are asking: “Are they really that different from the
for-profits?  Do they provide enough charity care and community service to justify the break?

The short answer is this: To understand the economics of the hospital industry,  you first need to understand that it is in many ways very much like the real estate industry: what matters most is “Location, Location, Location.”

A hospital located in an affluent area will draw well-insured patients. By definition, then, it will provide less charity care because it well see fewer uninsured patients.

This is why for-profit hospitals tend to provide less charitable care: If you’re a corporation you don’t a build a for-profit hospital in a market where you expect that half of your customers won’t be able to pay.  For-profits don’t close their doors to the poor, but they purposefully try to locate areas where they won’t see as many of them.  As well they should: a for-profit corporation’s first obligation is to generate profits for its shareholders.

Non-profit hospitals, on the other hand, began as charitable institutions—often with a religious affiliation—and to this day, many are located in inner cities or poor rural areas where they serve a large uninsured or underinsured population. Traditionally, nonprofit hospitals have operated with a sense of “mission”—to serve the health needs of their community. This is argument  giving them a break on their taxes.

Yet, it’s  worth noting that all nonprofit hospitals are exempt from corporate income taxes as well as state and local property taxes—wherever they are located. Perversely, that exemption is most valuable to those located in the most affluent areas because their income is higher and their property is worth more. As David A. Hyman and William M. Sage point out in the current issue of Health Affairs:

“All else being equal, a hospital that provides little charity care and is located in a “desirable” location (in terms of property values) will receive a much greater financial benefit when its income and property go untaxed than a hospital that provides lots of charity care and is located in an “undesirable” location. Thus, in important respects, current subsidies are ‘upside down’ in the sense that they are worth the most to institutions that are likely to” [provide the least charity care. ]

This brings us directly to the question Congress and the IRS are posing: should nonprofit hospitals be exempt from taxes based simply on their status as nonprofits, or should tax-exempt status be dependent on what they actually do to serve their community?

Here, it’s important to remember that caring for the poor is not the only way that a hospital can contribute to its community. Under the law, a nonprofit can  receive a federal tax exemption, if it is organized and operated exclusively to promote one of the specific purposes set forth in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code—which includes charitable, religions, educational and scientific ends.

Thus an academic medical center which  loses money educating  medical students while also investing in the expensive technologies that it needs to do important scientific research might well be able to justify its tax exempt status even if it treated only a small number of indigent patients. Some hospitals also provide educational  services in their communities—running support groups for diabetic patients for instance, teaching them how to monitor their disease.

How a nonprofit uses any money left over after covering the costs of operation is also important.

A for-profit might distribute those earnings to its shareholders, or invest in something that would generate greater profits going forward: valet parking, for example, might attract more well-insured patients. But to qualify as a non-profit, Hyman and Sage note, a hospital must:
“retain its net earnings and use them to promote the purposes for which the nonprofit was created. “ In other words, a non-profit must plough any surplus back into its “mission.”

Yet in today’s fiercely competitive market, non-profit hospitals sometimes spend their capital in ways that seem to have little to do with mission—and much to do with struggling to take market share away from neighboring hospitals.

In Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Healthcare Costs So Much ( Harper/Collins, May 2006).  I quote the director of a Phoenix-based health foundation describing how resources are allocated in his hometown as local hospitals chase affluent newcomers moving into the city’s “Valley of the
Sun”:

   
“By expanding and modernizing, acute care hospitals are looking to compete with a recent surge in physician-owned hospitals and specialty surgical centers,” he explains. Acute care hospitals fear that these specialty centers will “skim” lucrative business like heart surgery, leaving the general hospitals with the least profitable businesses—burn units, for example, level 3 trauma units or ERS.
   

Fighting to offset potential losses, the nonprofit acute care hospitals are rushing to add beds in the Sun Valley area where a new young, well-educated and well-insured work force is moving in. The foundation director describes a new facility: “It’s like a luxury hotel.”

Every hospital feels that it  must stake their claim in this newly affluent area, he adds, and “the land-rush mentality doesn’t always take into account planning for the community’s needs . . .  When it comes to breaking down the health needs of the population by age and chronic disease in order to try to decide what mix of ambulatory, inpatient and home health care will be required . . . This,” he observes, “Is not the game that hospital executives are in.”

Meanwhile nationwide, nonprofits like those in Phoenix may be overbuilding—or at least investing their capital in the wrong areas. As they view for well-heeled customers, they may be putting too much emphasis on cosmetics and bleeding-edge unproven technologies, while investing too little in less visible areas like palliative care, or the information technology that could reduce hospital errors.  

In many regions, nonprofit suburban hospitals are trying to take high-margin business away from big city hospitals. “What we have to do to maintain our position in the market is to keep adding services,” a Westchester hospital CEO explained to New York Magazine a couple of years ago. “That’s the whole reason we’re doing liver transplants.”

“Liver transplants”??

Do the residents of Westchester County need a local hospital doing liver transplants? Just how many would the hospital do? Would patients be better off at a high-volume medical center in Manhattan, where the carpeting might not be as nice, but, research shows, “practice makes perfect”?

These questions didn’t seem to come up. Transplants would raise the nonprofit hospital’s image.
 
And when it comes to enhancing a brand name, sometimes nonprofits seem littler different from for-profits. In Money-Driven Medicine, I quote from a 2005 study in the Archives of Internal Medicine which describes how even academic medical centers trawl for customers with ads like “We Do Botox!” or “FDA Approves Deep Brain Stimulation Therapy for Parkinson’s Disease”
The study pointed out that many of the ads (38%) risked “raising false hopes” by thumping the tub for unproven procedures like “deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s,” while another 28% were advertising cosmetic procedures. Such ad spending has little to with improving the health of the community, much to do with growing market share.

Yet, with the number of uninsured patients and unpaid bills rising, many nonprofit hospitals find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place. If they can’t bring in the patients willing to pay for private rooms with Jacuzzis in the maternity ward–patients who will be impressed by a waterfall in the lobby and chutney for dinner–they won’t have the money they need to keep the trauma unit open–and serve the larger community. “No [profit] Margin, No Mission” is a favorite saying among hospital CEOs.

Moreover, today’s hospitals are increasingly dependent on the bond market to raise capital. At one time, both government and philanthropists contributed a much larger share of the money hospitals needed to survive, but today, hospitals rely on borrowing by issuing bonds. And, quite understandably, a bondholder’s primary concern is not whether or not the hospital is serving its community, but whether or not he will receive the expected return on his investment. Thus, when bond rating agencies like Standard and Poor’s rate hospital bonds, they can’t give points for charitable care.      

Nevertheless, if we are going to give nonprofits enormous tax exemptions, somebody needs to be keeping an eye on how they are spending their capital.

Two years after the Westchester CEO bragged about his new “product line” (liver transplants) The New York Times reported that a state audit of the very same Westchester hospital showed  “mismanagement, sloppy accounting practices and wasteful spending” which “contributed to staggering financial losses.”  The audit also showed that former executives at the hospital were spending lavishly on things like restaurants, hotels and florists—with scant controls or documentation” even while  “the medical center’s finances were deteriorating.”But while some hospitals should lose their tax breaks, we don’t want to throw out the baby with the bath water by doing away with tax exemptions for all  non-profits.  They are different from for-profits-in ways that are essential to our health care system.   

In the most recent issue of Health Affairs Bradford Gray and Mark Schlesinger very carefully analyze some 162 studies comparing the real-world performance of nonprofit and for-profit hospitals, nursing homes and health plans on a  range of issues and discover that, while they may not be as different as one might expect, the fact is that, on average:

“for-profit organizations more aggressively mark up prices over costs and otherwise maximize revenue. This pattern has been documented among community general hospitals, nursing homes, psychiatric hospitals, drug treatment centers, rehabilitation facilities, and health plans.

“Second, nonprofit organizations appear more trustworthy in delivering services, being less likely to make misleading claims, to have complaints lodged against them by patients, and to treat vulnerable patients differently from other clientele.

“Third, nonprofits are typically the incubators of innovation, using philanthropy and cross-subsidies to finance the development of services for which there is not yet a market.

Moreover, while only about one-quarter of non-profit hospitals provide enough uncompensated care to the poor and uninsured to equal  their  tax benefits, “one  study found that the nonprofit hospitals that were the least involved in free or subsidized treatment were the most engaged in other forms of community” service.

The bottom line is that auditing nonprofits is a good idea, though federal investigators should turn to community experts to find out just how much service a nonprofit offers. Local GPs who work in low-cost clinics, for instance, will know how easy or difficult it is for a Medicaid or uninsured patient to get an appointment with a specialist at a hospital clinic.(And will that patient be seen by residents or a combination of teaching faculty and medical students?) Local educators will know which hospitals are making a contribution to health education in the schools.

Because the hospital industry is all about location, these audits must be done on a local basis, with the community weighing in on decisions. The many ways in which a hospital serves its community are not easy to quantify, and they vary, depending on the needs of the community.

At the same time, it is good for non-profit hospitals to know that they are accountable–and that if they forget their mission, they can (and should) lose that tax exemption.

THCB: Back and in one piece…oh and there’s football

BallI’m back from my vacation. My sister is married off and in Dubai on honeymoon, the Jerez region in southern Spain is full of cute bars serving Sherry and drunken policeman, and I’ve watched multo World Cup games, including perhaps one of the best goals of all time by Argentina against Serbia. My take on the World Cup is up over at Spot-on.

Many, many thanks to John Irvine for running the show in my absence, and to Maggie Mahar, Thomas Leith, The Industry Veteran, and Eric Novack for their thoughtful and (in certain cases extremely) provocative posts. (Remember if you’d like to become a contributor, just email me).

So please remember to buy Maggie’s book, listen to Eric’s show and support THCB’s sponsors.

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