Establishing Your Medical Practice’s Fair Market Value

Part One of Medical Practice Valuation

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By Dr. David Edward Marcinko, MBA, CMP

www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

In recent years, the physician practice market has experienced a noticeable increase in practice merging and acquisitions. Medicalpractices are being acquired by health systems in anticipation of Accountable Care Organization (ACO) delivery models.

For physicians, the decision to buy, sell, or merge a medical practice is more complicated than ever, and determining a medical practice’s worth is crucial to this process. Over the next two months, we’ll review the why, when, and how of the contemporary medical practice valuation.

Value Isn’t an Absolute Number

A medical practice’s tangible and intangible assets can be grouped into two broad categories:

  • Physical assets: Examples are real estate, medical records, leaseholds, medical equipment and furnishings, and accounts receivable (A/R).
  • Non-physical assets: These include goodwill, restrictive covenants, buy/sell agreements, managed care contracts, and an assembled workforce.

Estimates of value differ markedly, depending on the purpose of the appraisal, the acumen of the appraiser, etc. To help determine the value, some important questions to consider are:

  • What is the value of the practice for purchase or sale?
  • What is the value of a practice for merger?
  • What is the value of practice assets for joint venture with a corporate partner?
  • What is the value to establish buy-in or buy-out arrangements for partners?
  • What is the value of practice assets for purchase or sale, apart from ongoing operations?

To answer these questions, physicians (buyers and sellers) must understand how practices are valuated—beginning with the following informal, and then more formal, definitions:

Informal Terms of Valuation

  • The “asking price” is often arbitrary and difficult to substantiate, and typically is reduced 25-50 percent after negotiations.
  • The “creative price” is derived by way of creative financing. For example, the practice may provide the down payment.
  • The “emotional price” may involve either a motivated buyer or seller, who pays an under- or overinflated price for the practice.
  • The “friendly price” is reserved for associates, partners, or other colleagues.
  • The “realistic price” is one that both buyer and seller believe is fair.

Formal Terms of Valuation

  • Most appraisers use “fair market value” (FMV) as the standard to derive a reasonable value for a practice. FMV means an arm’s length transaction between an unpressured, informed buyer and an unpressured, informed seller.
  • The “business enterprise value” of a practice equals a combination of all assets (tangible and intangible), and the working capital, of a continuing business.
  • The value of “owner’s equity” equals the combined values of all practice assets (tangible and intangible), less all practice liabilities (booked and contingent).
  • The “working capital value” equals the excess of current assets (cash, A/R, supplies, inventory, prepaid expenses, etc.) over current liabilities (accounts payable, accrued liabilities, etc.).

Realizing that there is no absolute sales price is the essence of FMV. When determining valuation, look for a price range with a reasonable floor and ceiling.

Understand The Lingo

If you are a practice buyer or seller, make sure you understand terms and appraisal definitions.

That’s a lesson George Farmer, a primary care physician inFlorida, learned the hard way. He asked his accountant to appraise his business. When he was ready to sell, his attorney (who also happens to be his brother-in-law) drew up the sales contract. Farmer was pleased that the practice sold quickly for its full asking price.

What he didn’t know (but would discover) is that accounting or “book” value—the figure his accountant gave him—is far different than the FMV that he could have received.

Was the CPA wrong? Not really. Was the doctor incorrect? No. But each was operating under a different set of terms and definitions, without knowledge of each other’s perspectives.

How to Begin Valuation

The following steps should occur before the practice appraisal process begins:

  • Retain an appraiser (for each side) who understands the changing health care industry.
  • Aggregate historic practice business information and consolidated financial statements, operating statistics, payer mix, CPT® utilization, acuity rates, etc.
  • Eliminate one-time, non-recurring expenses, adjusted or normalized for excessive or below normal expenses.
  • Understand key assumptions used in financial projections.

To determine value, appraisers should follow the American Society of Appraisers’ Principles of Appraisal Practice and Code of Ethics. The IRS issued guidelines in 1995 further suggesting that appraisers use the general methods of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practices (USPAP), which recognize three approaches to medical practice valuation.

1. Income Methods

There are two methods to value a practice by income:

(a) Capitalization Method: The excess earnings or capitalization method estimates value by dividing normalized historical or current income by an appropriate rate of return for the buyer. This method does not require assumptions.

(b) Discounted Method: Discounted Cash Flow (DCF): Analysis requires assumptions to estimate practice value by discounting future net cash flows to their present worth based on market rates of return required by an investor. Understanding the key assumptions produces a meaningful estimate of practice value. These assumptions may include:

  • projections of future practice revenue, productivity, reimbursement trends, and shifts in payer mix
  • projections of practice cost structures and projected physician compensation
  • after-tax practice cash flows
  • reinvestments to replace equipment or other assets
  • residual practice value at the end of the forecast period
  • discount rate based on the practice specific weighted average cost of capital
  • practice efficiencies, operations, and competitive market conditions

The DCF analysis consistently produces higher values than other methods of estimating practice value because there may be supportable reasons to forecast improvements in future practice performance.

2. Marketplace Multiples

Market transaction multiples are ratios developed by correlating actual practice sale prices to key practice performance measurements. Common multiples include comparisons of sale price to revenue, sale price to earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT), sale price to earnings before interest, taxes, and depreciation allowance (EBITDA), gross revenue, net revenue, and the sale price to number of physicians.

Market transaction multiples are typically limited to serving as a benchmark for testing the reasonableness of the other approaches. They are becoming less common and less useful.

3. Cost Approach

The cost approach calls for identification and separate valuation of all the practice assets, including goodwill, depreciated over 15 years.

The cost approach is more labor intensive than using the enterprise analysis to estimate practice value; especially for a new practice, which typically includes the expenses to acquire space, office furnishings, equipment, marketing, advertising, staff development, and losses incurred during the startup period. This estimate of “replacement cost or cost avoidance” value represents an upper limit (or ceiling) of value, and generally is not considered useful in estimating the value of an established medical practice.

Net Income Statement Adjustments

When analyzing a set of financial statements to determine practice value, adjustments (normalizations) generally are needed to produce a clearer picture of likely future income and distributable cash flow. It also allows more of an “apples to apples” line item comparison. This normalization process usually consists of making three main adjustments to a medical practice’s net income (profit and loss) statement.

1. Non-Recurring Items: Estimates of future distributable cash flow should exclude non-recurring items. Proceeds from the settlement of litigation, one-time gains/losses from the selling of assets or equipment, and large write-offs that are not expected to reoccur, each represent potential nonrecurring items. The impact of nonrecurring events should be removed from the practice’s financial statements to produce a clearer picture of likely future income and cash flow.

2. Perquisites: The buyer of a medical practice may plan to spend more or less than the current doctor-owner for physician executive compensation, travel and entertainment expenses, and other perquisites of current management. When determining future distributable cash flow, income adjustments to the current level of expenditures should be made for these items.

3. Non-cash Expenses: Depreciation expense, amortization expense, and bad debt expense are all non-cash items which impact reported profitability. When determining distributable cash flow, you must analyze the link between non-cash expenses and expected cash expenditures.

The annual depreciation expense is a proxy for likely capital expenditures over time. When capital expenditures and depreciation are not similar over time, an adjustment to expected cash flow is necessary.

Some practices reduce income through the use of bad debt expense rather than direct write-offs. Bad debt expense is a non-cash expense that represents an estimate of the dollar volume of write-offs that are likely to occur during a year. If bad debt expense is understated, practice profitability will be overstated.

Balance Sheet Adjustments

Adjustments also can be made to a practice’s balance sheet to remove non-operating assets and liabilities, and to restate asset and liability value at market rates (rather than cost rates).

Assets and liabilities that are unrelated to the core practice being valued should be added to or subtracted from the value, depending on whether they are acquired by the buyer. Examples include the asset value less outstanding debt of a vacant parcel of land, and marketable securities that are not needed to operate the practice. Other non-operating assets, such as the cash surrender value of officer life insurance, generally are liquidated by the seller and are not part of the business transaction.

Assessment

With a basic understanding of practice valuation and the steps involved, buyers and sellers will be better prepared for next steps. So, next time in Part 2, we will discuss the art of the deal, and how to structure the practice sale.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

AdditionalReading:

Cimasi, Robert James: Valuation of Hospital in a Changing Reimbursement and Regulatory Environment. In,Marcinko,DE(Editor): Healthcare Organizations (Financial Management Strategies). Institute of Medical Business Advisors Inc.,Atlanta,Ga., 2011

Marcinko,DE: “Getting it Right,” How Much is a Plastic Surgery Practice Really worth? Plastic Surgery Products, August 2006.

Marcinko,DEand Hetico, HR: The Business of Medical Practice (third edition). Springer Publishing,New York,N.Y., 2011.

Marcinko,DEand Hetico; HR: Risk Management and Insurance Planning for Physicians and Advisors, Jones andBartlettPublishers,Sudbury,Mass., 2007.

Marcinko,DEand Hetico; HR: Financial Planning for Physicians and Advisors, Jones andBartlettPublishers,Sudbury,Mass., 2007.

Marcinko,DEand Hetico, HR: Dictionary of Health Insurance and Managed Care, Springer Publishing,New York,N.Y., 2007.

Marcinko,DEand Hetico, HR: Dictionary of Health Economics and Finance, Springer Publishing,New York,N.Y., 2007.

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Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™8Comprehensive Financial Planning Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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PODCAST: How Doctors are Really Paid?

Learn the Incentives in Physician Compensation

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

RAND and Harvard University Researchers Recently Published a Study in the Journal of the American Medical Association Examining How Doctors are Paid by Hospital System-Owned Practices. The Study Found that only 9% of Primary Care Physician Compensation was Based on Value (Quality and Cost-Effectiveness) and only 5.3% of Specialist Compensation was Based on Value.

The Study Concluded: “The results of this cross-sectional study suggest that PCPs and specialists despite receiving value-based reimbursement incentives from payers, the compensation of health system PCPs and specialists was dominated by volume-based incentives designed to maximize health systems revenue.”

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MORE: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2020/09/19/what-doctors-must-do-to-file-an-aetna-claim-to-get-paid/?preview_id=237387&preview_nonce=44f9028974&preview=true

RELATED: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2008/09/12/how-doctors-get-paid/

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BUSINESS MEDICINE: https://www.amazon.com/Business-Medical-Practice-Transformational-Doctors/dp/0826105750/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1448163039&sr=8-9&keywords=david+marcinko

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HOSPITALS: https://www.amazon.com/Financial-Management-Strategies-Healthcare-Organizations/dp/1466558733/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1380743521&sr=8-3&keywords=david+marcinko

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CMS: MSSP ACO Growth 2012-2022

By Staff Reporters

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DEFINITION: An accountable care organization is a healthcare organization that ties provider reimbursements to quality metrics and reductions in the cost of care. ACOs in the United States are formed from a group of coordinated health-care practitioners. They use alternative payment models, normally, capitation.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource/Title/0826102549

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See the source image

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CMS MSSP ACO Growth 2012-2022

Performance YearACOsAssigned Beneficiaries
202248311.0 million
202147710.7 million
202051711.2 million
201948710.4 million
201856110.5 million
20174809.0 million
20164337.7 million
20154047.3 million
20143384.9 million
2012+20132203.2 million

Source: CMS 2022 Shared Savings Program Fast Facts – As of January 1, 202

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Doubting the Accountable Care Organization B-Model

New Healthcare Business Model or Edsel Model?

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By David Edward Marcinko MBA http://www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.org

[Publisher-in-Chief]

Dr. Marcinko with ME-P FansDefined by Professor Michael Porter at Harvard Business School, value is defined as a function of outcomes and costs. Therefore to achieve high value we must deliver the best possible outcomes in the most efficient way, outcomes which matter from the perspective of the individual receiving healthcare and not provider process measures or targets.

Sir Muir Gray expanded on the idea of technical value (outcomes/costs) to specifically describe ‘personal value’ and ‘allocative value’, encouraging us to focus also on shared decision making, individual preferences for care and ensuring that resources are allocated for maximum value.

Healthcare Value and ACOs

According to our Medical Executive-Post Health Dictionary Series of administrative terms http://www.HealthDictionarySeries.org  and health economist and colleague Robert James Cimasi MHA, ASA, AVA CMP™ of www.HealthCapital.com; an ACO is a healthcare organization in which a set of providers, usually large physician groups and hospitals, are held accountable for the cost and quality of care delivered to a specific local population.

ACOs aim to affect provider’s patient expenditures and outcomes by integrating clinical and administrative departments to coordinate care and share financial risk.

ACO Launch

Since their four-page introduction in the PP-ACA of 2010, ACOs have been implemented in both the Federal and commercial healthcare markets, with 32 Pioneer ACOs selected (on December 19, 2011), 116 Federal applications accepted (on April 10, 2012 and July 9, 2012), and at least 160 or more Commercial ACOs in existence today.

Federal Contracts

Federal ACO contracts are established between an ACO and CMS, and are regulated under the CMS Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) Final Rule, published November 2, 2011.  ACOs participating in the MSSP are accountable for the health outcomes, represented by 33 quality metrics, and Medicare beneficiary expenditures of a prospectively assigned population of Medicare beneficiaries.

If a Federal ACO achieves Medicare beneficiary expenditures below a CMS established benchmark (and meets quality targets), they are eligible to receive a portion of the achieved Medicare beneficiary expenditure savings, in the form of a shared savings payment.

Commercial Contracts

Commercial ACO contracts are not limited by any specific legislation, only by the contract between the ACO and a commercial payor.

In addition to shared savings models, Commercial ACOs may incentivize lower costs and improved patient outcomes through reimbursement models that share risk between the payor and the providers, i.e., pay for performance compensation arrangements and/or partial to full capitation.

Although commercial ACOs experience a greater degree of flexibility in their structure and reimbursement, the principals for success for both Federal ACOs and Commercial ACOs are similar.

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Eidsel

Dr. David E. Marcinko with 1960 Ford Edsel

[© iMBA, Inc. All rights reserved, USA.]

[The Edsel was an automobile marque that was planned, developed, and manufactured by the Ford Motor Company during the 1958, 1959, and 1960 model years. With the Edsel, Ford had expected to make significant inroads into the market share of both General Motors and Chrysler and close the gap between itself and GM in the domestic American automotive market. But, contrary to Ford’s internal plans and projections, the Edsel never gained popularity with contemporary American car buyers and sold poorly. The Ford Motor Company lost millions of dollars on the Edsel’s development, manufacturing and marketing].

More:

 

Update

Junking the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) would undoubtedly let the proverbial air out of the MACRA balloon, dealing a significant blow to the value-based reimbursement shift; right?

Assessment

Although nearly any healthcare enterprise can integrate and become an ACO, larger enterprises, may be best suited for ACO status.

Larger organizations are more able to accommodate the significant capital requirements of ACO development, implementation, and operation (e.g., healthcare information technology), and sustain the sufficient number of beneficiaries to have a significant impact on quality and cost metrics.

Conclusion

But, will this new B-Model work? Isn’t leading doctors in a shared collaborative effort a bit like herding cats? And, what about patients, HIEs, outcomes management, data analytics and … Population Health via our colleague David B. Nash MD MBA of Thomas Jefferson University, often considered the “father” of Pop Health?

OR, what about the developing IRS scandal and full PP-ACA launch in 2014? Will it affect federal funding, full roll-out, or even repeal of the entire Act?

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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Videos on Setting up an ACO

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Opposing Viewpoints in Context?

The Theory

In this first didactic video, Thomas Cassels, Executive Director of the Advisory Board Company’s Health Care Advisory Board, summarizes the forces driving accountable care, outlines the steps necessary for a hospital or health system to transition toward operating as an accountable care organization (ACO), and provides insight into the question of whether all providers must plan to become ACOs.

The Reality

The second video is a real world look at negotiation between a hospital administrator and a PCP over setting up an Accountable Care Organization [ACO].

Video links:

Assessment

True or not?

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Health Dictionary Series: http://www.springerpub.com/Search/marcinko

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/product/9780826105752

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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Health Plans and the Three Levers of Innovation for Affordable Care

Unlocking Affordable Care

Number 2 in a Series of 6

By Sam Muppalla – Vice President, McKesson Health Solutions, Network Performance Management (NPM)

Last week, for the ME-P, I wrote about the increasing Pressure to Deliver Affordable, High-Quality Care.

In the face of those pressures, many health plans have begun to explore innovative approaches to product, care model, and reimbursement designs. What are they doing?

In this second installment of our series about unlocking affordable care, I’d like to take look at how some of the pilots in these areas show promise.

Product Innovation

One path health plans are using to achieve affordable care is through the deployment of value-based insurance designs (VBID). At the heart of this approach is the utilization of member incentives to reduce barriers to high value Rx and services. Conversely, it also incorporates disincentives for low value services or Rx. Typical member incentives include premium reduction, co-pay/coinsurance waiver/reduction, and health reimbursement accounts (HRA). Co-pay increase or cost sharing are typical disincentives. Member steerage to high value providers is another typical goal of VBID. The design of the supporting networks is critical to the success of VBID products. The network design has to ensure that the composition, the quality and the value of the participating providers can fulfill the benefit design and match steerage goals of the member incentives. Furthermore, the network level provider reimbursement guidelines should be complimentary to the member incentives.

For example, member incentive for a preventive exam during a Primary Care Physician (PCP) office visit could be matched by a Pay for Performance (P4P) provider incentive (on top of regular capitation) to perform the examination. Without the incentive, the Per Member Per Month (PMPM) capitation might be a disincentive for the PCP to perform the preventative exam.

describe the image

Figure 1: Network steerage is a critical component of product innovation.

Care Model Innovation

Innovative care models provide another approach to the delivery of affordable, high-quality health services. Population management-based care model designs, such as Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) and Accountable Care Organization (ACO) designs, are an important advancement towards affordable care. These designs deploy a care team-based approach rather than a traditional siloed services approach to ensure a continuity of care.

The PCMH care model results in continuity of care via a physician who leads the medical team that coordinates all aspects of preventive, acute and chronic needs of patients using the best available evidence and appropriate technology. The emphasis for PCMH is about collaboration to manage a population’s health.

Another example of a care model with a team-based approach is the ACO care model. In this care model, the emphasis is on accountability for providing the required healthcare services for a defined population. Health plans are rolling out ACO pilots across the nation.

For example, the Pension System (of the California Public Employees’ Retirement System) formed a partnership with the Blue Shield of California Health Maintenance Organization, Catholic Healthcare West, and Hill Physicians Medical Group with the goal of improving quality of care while reducing costs. Some of the early findings are showing positive results:

  • 17 percent reduction in patient re-admissions since the pilot began
  • Length of stay reduced by one half day
  • Almost a 14 percent drop in the total days patients spend in a facility
  • 50 percent reduction in the number of patients who stay in a hospital 20 or more days

These results show that it is possible to utilize care models to improve the quality of outcomes while reducing the cost of healthcare.

It is worth noting that health plans are not limited to adopting one care design innovation over another. Greater benefits can accrue to both consumer and provider by combining approaches—leveraging both collaborative and accountable care designs.

Adoption of population management is forcing a change from paying for individual providers’ services to paying for health management of a population across a team of providers. Supporting this requires the reimbursement systems to understand the structure of the care team, role of the various providers within the care team and the relationships between the providers in the care team.

In other words, it will need to understand the provider network structure to calculate the reimbursement. Another complexity is that providers participating in PCMH or ACO care models may also be directly contracted with the health plan. Selecting which payment arrangement to use in these scenarios will require an understanding of providers’ relationships with the plan.

Reimbursement Innovation

Along with innovations in product and care model designs, health plans are also innovating in the area of provider reimbursement. These innovation efforts primarily focus on enabling incentives for quality and performance, while controlling the rate of medical cost growth. These objectives reflect the need to move away from a healthcare system that bases provider reimbursement on volume to one that bases provider reimbursement on the value of the outcome. Within this approach, a variety of different models are evolving (see Figure 2). 

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Figure 2: Mixing and matching payment models.

Evolving in parallel with individual models is an understanding that the ability to mix and match different reimbursement designs will deliver greater value than the utilization of just one design. Health plans are mixing and matching different reimbursement methodologies to optimize provider performance. This implies that a provider is likely to have multiple valid payment arrangements at any given time. Picking the appropriate payment arrangement will require the reimbursement engine to understand the role of the provider in the network and the full context of all of the provider’s relationships.

Assessment

Next week, I’ll be discussing why the alignment between products, care models, provider reimbursement, and network design is so important when it comes to scaling these innovative approaches.

If you can’t wait that long for that discussion, you can read the entire Unlocking Affordable Care by Aligning Products white paper now; it’s available on our website.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Health Dictionary Series: http://www.springerpub.com/Search/marcinko

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/product/9780826105752

Physician Financial Planning: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/0763745790

Medical Risk Management: http://www.jbpub.com/catalog/9780763733421

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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Defining the Accountable [Health] Care Organization

ACO Glossary of Terms from CMS, etc

By Staff Reporters

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According to Wikipedia, an Accountable Care Organization, or ACO for short, is a health system model with the ability to provide and manage patients, in the continuum of care across different institutional settings, including at least ambulatory (outpatient) and inpatient hospital care and possibly post acute-care in some cases.

Payment is consolidated rather than ala’ carte’, and generally considered cost effective and “bundled”.

Budgetary Accountability

Furthermore, ACOs have the capability of planning budgets and resources and are of sufficient size to support comprehensive, valid, and reliable performance measurements.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accountable_care_organization

CMS Definition

Now, aaccording to the CMS Office of Legislation; Section #1899.

ACO Definition: accountable care organization

Medical Provider Market Power and the American Hospital Association

AHA definition: AHA – ACOs

Assessment

The ACO model is one of the latest designs for managing healthcare costs and especially Medicare costs, and is gaining traction among policymakers desperate to control costs and boost quality in healthcare.

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

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PRACTICES: www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com
HOSPITALS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466558731
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FINANCE: Financial Planning for Physicians and Advisors
INSURANCE: Risk Management and Insurance Strategies for Physicians and Advisors

 

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