The new physician entrepreneur--friend or foe?
Cappel, Sam D. ; Waiker, Avi ; Tucci, Jack E. 等
ABSTRACT
The Physician Entrepreneur--a double edged sword? Is the new
physician entrepreneur good for healthcare in the United States or
simply another force contributing to the escalating costs of our
healthcare system? Regardless of opinions, today's entrepreneurial
physicians are steadily becoming a rival to established healthcare
providers. Physician owned healthcare services and physician owned
specialty hospitals are increasingly capturing a large portion of
healthcare dollars, especially in the high profit areas. Depending upon
the perspective taken, physician entrepreneurs can be seen as both
friend and foe. This study examines some of the positive and negative
impacts of the new physician entrepreneur, and examines the role of the
physician entrepreneur in shaping healthcare delivery systems of the
future.
INTRODUCTION
While physicians have a long history as entrepreneurs, recently the
number of physicians participating in entrepreneurial ventures has been
growing at an unprecedented rate. The principal factors contributing to
this growth among physician entrepreneurs appears to be downward
pressures on physician incomes resulting from increased expenses
associated with the operation of medical practices, advances in
technology resulting in the practice of "scientific medicine",
and pressures from third-party payers to reduce payments for medical
services The first consideration is increasing costs associated with
operating a medical practice.
Physician's practice incomes are eroding today due to lower
reimbursements, higher costs for malpractice insurance, administrative
burdens, delayed payments for services and complex reimbursement procedures from insurers that require increased professional and
clerical man hours, and frequently delay reimbursements (Kalogredis,
2004). One specific example of reimbursement pressure on physician
incomes is an initial reimbursement reduction of 4.3% for Medicare Part
B charges in 2006, which under current law will continue over a six year
period, during which reimbursement reductions for Medicare Part B
charges will total 26% (Sloan, 2005). Compounding the pressure of
reduced reimbursement is the expectation that physicians will become
more efficient as they see more patients in less time--due to population
increases combined with a physician shortage. Adding to incomes
pressures for physicians created by increases in practice costs are
income reductions tied to a shift to more outpatient procedures and
reduced length of stay for inpatient procedures. Much of this is a
result of scientific and technological advances in medicine.
Scientific and technological advances in the practice of medicine
have virtually eliminated the need for "exploratory surgery".
New medical diagnostic equipment, tests, and advances in medical and
surgical equipment and processes have resulted in many procedures
previously requiring lengthy hospital stays, being performed on an
outpatient basis. Scientific and technological advances have also led to
shorter lengths of stay for patients requiring in-patient hospital
services. While scientific medicine has vastly improved the quality of
care, it has also contributed to downward pressures on physician
incomes. In addition to income pressures resulting from the increased
utilization of science and technology in the practice of medicine, third
party payers have also contributed to pressures on physician income
levels (Broxterman, 2005).
As healthcare competition heats up along with escalating costs,
hospitals, health systems, and physicians are under more pressure than
ever to accept risk in the form of various capitation agreements. Under
these plans primary healthcare providers are paid a fixed fee based on
the number of plan members under their care, or by diagnosis, rather
than on the basis of services rendered. According to Johnson and Egger
(2000) the major failure of capitation programs to reduce the costs
associated with healthcare delivery has been a failure to put physician
specialists at risk in the same way that hospitals and primary care
physicians are put at risk. New capitation agreements are designed to
reimburse specialists based on the number or percentage of plan members
under their care, or by diagnosis, rather than basing reimbursement on
the number of procedures performed by the specialist as has been common
practice for quite some time. This system re-designed is intended to
encourage specialists to practice less costly (less profitable)
medicine. Given that practice costs are increasing, technology has
reduced length of stay, and payers are adopting more comprehensive
capitation systems--physicians are seeking ways to protect their income
levels.
In order to alleviate income pressures resulting from advances in
the application of "scientific medicine" and pressures from
third party payers the primary areas of physician investment have been
freestanding surgical centers, specialty hospitals and diagnostic
centers. In response to this movement, many universities are now
offering MD-MBA programs, preparing entrepreneurial physicians to seize
new business opportunities. While this may create new opportunities for
some, does it also contribute to escalating costs of healthcare
delivery, as more physicians are now involved in many new and evolving
business opportunities?
CONCERNS
There are many concerns regarding physician investments in health
care related services and facilities. A 1992 study in Florida found that
at least 40 percent of physicians in that state who were involved in
direct patient care, had investments in a health care agency to which
they might refer patients. (Mitchell & Scott, 1992). Areas of
physician and physician group investments include both diagnostic and
therapeutic services often related to the primary practice of the
physician or physicians. Specific diagnostic areas where physician
investments are common include freestanding laboratories, diagnostic
imaging centers (CT scanners, MRI units, ultrasound units and radiology centers) mobile heart catheterization laboratories, and endoscopy centers. Physicians also frequently invest in therapeutic services such
as ambulatory surgery centers, minor emergency rooms, dialysis centers,
alcohol and drug abuse treatment centers, physical therapy and
rehabilitation services, prenatal nutritional centers and radiation
therapy centers. Other investments which are common among physicians
include home health agencies, durable medical equipment suppliers,
outpatient infusion therapy services, and nursing homes (Anonymous,
2004).
The current healthcare system in the United States funds much
uncompensated and charity care through a process referred to as cost
shifting. Under this system payments received for medical services from
insured and private pay patients also cover many of the expenses
associated with the delivery of uncompensated and under-compensated
care. Thus, by increasing the number of healthy patients with adequate
health care coverage and minimizing the number of very sick and indigent patients a medical facility can substantially increase operating
profits.
One concern, especially tied to investments by physicians in
freestanding outpatient surgical centers and specialty hospitals is the
erosion of community based full service hospitals ability to provide
charity care. The Texas Healthcare Association's "Report on
Limited Service Providers" illustrates the disparity in services
provided by full service community hospitals and limited service health
care centers. This study found that limited service doctor-owned
businesses selectively admit healthier and better reimbursed patients--a
process commonly referred to as "cherry picking". Patients who
are less healthy and in addition to the primary diagnosis associated
with admission present with co-morbidity factors such as coronary
problems, morbid obesity, respiratory problems, and diabetes are more
likely to be admitted to full-service community based facilities. Under
the current system which often involves capitation, a single fixed rate
often reimbursed by primary diagnosis, so it more profitable for
healthcare facilities to avoid admitting patients who are "high
risk". The primary care of these patients is more costly to deliver
and the potential liability risk is greater for less healthy patients.
Thus "cherry picking" by admitting physicians could increase
profits for limited service facilities at the expense of full service
community hospitals. In addition to shifting profits to physician owned
specialty facilities by patient selection, the offering of limited or no
emergency room services also may increase the profitability of specialty
facilities at the expense of full service community based hospitals..
Because the emergency room provides a gateway to health care for
the indigent, much of the uncompensated in-patient care delivered by
full service community hospitals is originated by emergency room
admissions. A study conducted by the American Health Standards Group
found that limited service healthcare centers deliver significantly less
emergency care and access to the emergency department by offering a
limited range of emergency services, or in some cases no emergency
department. Full-service hospitals within the American Health Standards
Group study had an average of 14,760 emergency room visits per year or
40.4 visits per day, compared to an average 480 emergency room visits
per year or 1.3 visits per day for physician-owned limited service
hospitals that offer some level of emergency services (Speak Out on
Doctor Owned Services,1995). While physician investments in freestanding
surgical centers, specialty hospitals, diagnostic and therapeutic
services are understandable attempts to protect and increase income
levels among physicians, these entrepreneurial practices also raise
numbers of questions. For example, a study by the American Health
Standards Group (Speak Out on Doctor Owned Services,1995) determined
that there was an increase in orders for services of over 40% when the
physician entrepreneur held a financial stake in the service being
administered. The question here is whether tests are ordered more
frequently by physicians with personal financial interest in the
facility providing these services because of financial interests, or is
a higher level of care being administered because tests in these
facilities are more easily scheduled, feedback is received more rapidly,
or because patient inconvenience is minimized? Regardless of the
motivation of physician entrepreneurs, the question remains as to the
appropriate response by traditional providers.
RESPONSE TO THE PHYSICIAN ENTREPRENEUR
Traditional healthcare providers are using both cooperative and
competitive strategies in response to entrepreneurial physicians.
Hospital cooperative VHA recently counseled its members to "build
barriers" to restrict physician entrepreneurs who compete with
them. These barriers can take many forms which include, threats of
revoking the admitting privileges of physician investors, lobbying for
tighter state control of permits for construction of new medical
facilities, convincing insurers that competitive pressures will require
higher reimbursement rates to offset volume declines, support of bills
that tax facilities providing little charity care to provide additional
funds for providers of charity care in the community, and initiating
large numbers of lawsuits against those who desire to construct new
facilities, are just a few examples of "barrier
building"(Anonymous,2004).
Cooperative strategies are emerging especially with regard to
hospital / physician joint-ventures. Typically these joint ventures
involve procedures that generate a technical fee, or facility use fee
from both public and private payers. Ambulatory surgery centers,
endoscopy suites and imaging centers are common examples of services
where hospitals joint venture with physicians. Hospitals participating
in these joint ventures realize that hospital revenues will be reduced,
but tend to participate based on the rationale that "half is better
than none"-assuming that physicians could move ahead alone or with
other partners if the hospital is unwilling to participate (Lifton &
Bryant, 2006).
DISCUSSION
There is little argument that the increasing cost of healthcare is
a major national problem. Under existing payment structures, much of the
costs associated with providing care for the uninsured and indigent are
shifted to existing payers. As costs of care and the number of uninsured
grow, health insurance costs rise. As health insurance costs rise, fewer
businesses can afford to provide medical coverage to employees, fewer
employees are able to afford their share of insurance premiums, and
fewer of the self employed are able to afford health insurance coverage.
The existing structure, which transfers costs for treating the indigent
and uninsured to private payers, is no longer working. Cost shifting now
acts to reduce the number of payers, provide financial incentives to
care providers that target profitable patient populations, and increase
the total number of uninsured. Rather than focusing on retaining a
system that is failing, perhaps developing a new model is the answer.
Can entrepreneurship in medicine provide the foundation for a more
successful system?
Perhaps, rather than trying to control the success of the new
physician entrepreneur, through additional taxes, legislation to limit
their growth, and building barriers to restrict their success, efforts
should be made to partner with them for mutual benefit. Providing
financial incentives to new physician entrepreneurs may serve to enlist
much needed intellectual capital in the quest to design a system that
delivers high quality and affordable health care to the population of
the United States. In developing solutions for a failing healthcare
system much research will be required.
Areas for continuing research should include the examination of
practice strategies employed by successful physician entrepreneurs and
an assessment of opportunities to transfer these skills to other
healthcare providers. Another area for future research is the evaluation
of current governmental regulations and controls, to determine which
regulations and controls support and which hinder efforts to provide
high quality / high value healthcare to our population. It is suggested
that research and cooperative efforts are central to the development of
a healthcare system capable of providing for the needs of all our
citizens now and in the future.
CONCLUSION
The emergence of the physician entrepreneur should not really call
the question of friend or foe, as has been the case in most of the
academic, professional, and healthcare industry literature. Research
demonstrates that physician owned facilities tend to be well run
facilities with short lengths of stay and good patient outcomes. Having
pressured physicians to reduce patient lengths of stay, integrate more
technology in the practice of medicine, accept capitation of payments,
while facing increasing costs associated with operating their practices;
should it be surprising when physicians seek ways to protect and
increase their incomes? The economy in the United States is based on the
philosophy that open competition and free market forces result in the
delivery of higher quality / higher value products and services to
consumers.
New physician entrepreneurs are challenging the established health
care delivery system in this country. There are basically two
alternatives available which are; enlist the aid of entrepreneurial
physicians in designing a more effective and efficient heath care
system, or seek to protect the current system that is currently in
crisis. Regardless of the alternative chosen, the new entrepreneurial
physicians will pay a pivotal role in shaping the health care delivery
of the future in this country. The likelihood of significant improvement
in the current health care delivery system may well depend on our view
of the new entrepreneurial physicians as friends or foes.
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Sam D. Cappel, Southeastern Louisiana University
Avi Waiker, Southeastern Louisiana University
Jack E. Tucci, Mississippi State University, Meridian