Our Valued ME-P Sponsors and Vendors

Dear ME-P Advocates and Colleagues

Many thanks for reaching out to us.

Ann Miller; RN, MHAd-h-m-ed

Advertise with Us

If you want the opportunity to reach a personalized daily/weekly audience of health care industry insiders, innovators and watchers, the Medical Executive-Post may be right for you?

Movers-Shakers

We are discussed, read and viewed by medical students, physicians, dentists, podiatrists, optometrists and industry analysts; as well as healthcare administrators, financial advisors and planners, accountants, lawyers, office managers, CXOs, CFOs, investors, Wall Street insiders and nurse-executives from health systems around the country. Advertise with us and you’ll put your brand name in front of a smart & tightly focused demographic; one at the forefront of our emerging healthcare marketplace of collaboratively informed, thought-leaders and professional “movers and shakers.”

 

Get our Free Blog Widget

And, you may place our blog widget on your website or blog, for free.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/widget-for-the-me-p/

Contact Us

And so, please feel free to contact us for additional sponsorship and/or advertising information.

www.HealthcareFinancials.wordpress.com

Thank you

Ann Miller

Executive Director

MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. It’s free. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

This Time the Hospital Financial Crisis is Different

Oh Really … No so Fast!

Submitted by J. Wayne Firebaugh, Jr; CPA, CFP®, CMP™ho-journal2

Dr. Malcolm T. MacEachern, Director of Hospital Activities for the American College of Surgeons, presciently observed that:

… Our hospitals are now involved in the worst financial crisis they have ever experienced. It is absolutely necessary to all of us to put our heads together and try to find some solution. If we are to have effective results we must have concerted and coordinated immediate action. … Repeated adjustments of expenses to income have been made. Never before has there been such a careful analysis of hospital accounting and study of financial policies. It is entirely possible for us to inaugurate improvements in business methods which will lead to greater ways and means of financing hospitals in the future … It is true that all hospitals have already trimmed their sales to better meet the financial conditions of their respective communities. This has been chiefly through economies of administration. There has been more or less universal reduction in personnel and salaries; many economies have been affected. Everything possible has been done to reduce expenditures but this has not been sufficient to bring about immediate relief in the majority of instances. The continuance of the present economic conditions will force hospitals generally to further action. The time has come when this problem must be given even greater thought, both from its community and from its national aspect…

Source:  Steinberg, C. Overview of the US Healthcare System; American Hospital Association 2003.

Many hospital CXOs, healthcare administrators and physician executives would agree that Dr. MacEachern accurately describes today’s healthcare funding environment. However, they might be startled to learn that Dr. MacEachern made these observations in 1932! There is the old truism that there is nothing new under the sun.

American Hospital Association Statistics

Healthcare statistics suggested that the financial crisis is much the same today as it was for hospitals during the Great Depression. The American Hospital Association’s (AHA) reported gloomy statistics for hospitals include:

  • In 2001, 29% of hospitals had negative total margins.
  • Approximately $101.3 billion of uncompensated care was provided between 1997 and 2001 with an average annual increase of 16% during that time period.
  • Emergency departments in 62% of all hospitals report operating at, or over, capacity.
  • Technology costs are soaring as traditional technologies such as X-Ray machines, for $175,000, are being replaced by contemporary technologies such as CAT Scanners at $1 million that are in turn being replaced by CT Functional Imaging with PET Scans costing $2.3 million. Even such a “simple” instrument as a scalpel that costs $20, is being replaced by equipment for electrocautery costing $12,000, that is then being replaced by harmonic scalpels costing $30,000.
  • Between 2000 and 2002, 33% of hospitals reported increases in liability premiums of more than 100%.
  • The average age of hospital plants has increased 21% from 7.9 years to 9.6 years in just one decade.
  • In the four years ending 2002, hospital bond downgrades have outpaced hospital bond upgrades by almost 5 to 1.

Editor’s Assessment

As editor’s of the premium subscription, two volume, 1,200 pages, institutional print-guide Healthcare Organizations [Financial Management Strategies], we prefer engaged readers and contributors like Mr. Firebaugh, who demand and create compelling content like the above. Please review these links for same.

www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Info: http://www.stpub.com/pubs/ho.htm

TOC: http://www.stpub.com/pdfs/toc_ho.pdf

Purchase: Call 1-800-251-0381 or email orders@stpub.com

Conclusion

Always beware the words: “this time it’s different;” as it rarely is. And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Please opine and subscribe to the ME-P here; it’s 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 Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

Get our Widget: Get this widget!

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

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

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

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

Product Details  Product Details

Frank Gehry, Health Reform and the Cleveland Clinic

Join Our Mailing List

Las Vegas Hospital Uses Celebrity Architecture to Fight Disease?

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP

[Publisher-in-Chief]

dr-david-marcinko6According to the Las Vegas Sun Newspaper on March 2, 2009, the Cleveland Clinic is the newest top-tier player in Sin-City with an emerging health care system that will shake up the status quo, supposedly creating a multitude of direct and residual benefits for patients throughout the region.

Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health

In its role as partner with the Cleveland Clinic’s Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health, the hospital — ranked fourth best nationally by U.S. News & World Report — is projected to influence medical care in Nevada on the strength of its immense organization. And, it is being designed by, none other than esteemed architect, Frank Gehry.

A Huge Project

And, if you believe numerous websites, the behemoth project will include office towers, a park, a 60-story tower for jewelry trading, a hotel conceived by celebrity chef Charlie Palmer, thousands of apartments and a $360 million performing arts center. Of course, in typically flamboyant Gehry fashion, the highly embellished main facility is said to model curvy metallic shapes and “folds of the brain.” Other nescient drawings of the Ruvo Center show it divided in two sections. Offices and examination rooms will be housed in stacked rectangular blocks set slightly off kilter, like a fortress wall built by children.

The Architect

Gehry used this method to design his world famous Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain (1997) and his Peter B. Lewis Building for the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University in 2002. His style is well known.

Misplaced Priorities

But, with an estimated 40 million uninsured citizens, one only can wonder if this facility could have been built more cost effectively and/or more utilitarian?

Assessment

Moreover, some Clevelanders are grumbling about the clinic’s involvement in such a glamorous project far away, and imagine that the project will drain local resources just as sun-parched Western states have fantasized about tapping the Great Lakes.

Industry Indignation Index: 70

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:

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

Product Details  Product Details

Product DetailsProduct Details

A Physician by Any Other Name

Join Our Mailing List

Enter the Weekendalists and Laborists

[By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA]

Publisher-in-Chief

dr-david-marcinko5More than a decade ago, in another career, I wrote a few articles for Richard L. Reece MD when he edited a print and emerging electronic trade publication for medical professionals. All very “fly”, at the time.

The Laborists

Now – according to Dr. Reece who cites the Boston Globe, in “The Birth of a Notion”, a Cape Cod and some other Massachusetts hospitals are hiring “laborists”; aka board-certified obstetricians to work regular shifts for the sole purpose of delivering babies.

www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com

New Causitive Drivers

What drives these new-wave specialists? The answer, of course, is the next-generation of physicians and their emerging new medical business and practice models. Much like my 12 year old daughter, it is a way of professionally breaking away from past generations, and asserting some independence and leadership. And, as Martha Stewart might say; “that’s a good thing.”

Many Reasonsbiz-book2

But, according to Reece, the real drivers are a combination of other things – the desire of doctors for regular hours, the shortage of specialists, physician burnout, the search for a safer hospital environment, the need for consistent, immediately available physician services, fear of dreaded malpractice suits, and consolidation of hospital-physicians services due to regulatory and economic pressures; etc.

Blended Generations

Dick is correct, of course, because it is not uncommon today to have three generations represented in healthcare. We have the Baby-boomers, Gen X and now, Gen Y. The Baby Boomer generation is saying with some sense of sadness that, “Medicine sure isn’t want it used to be!”, while Generation Xers are saying “It’s about time things changed!”, and the latest generation to enter the medical workforce, Gen Y’s, are saying “Ready or not, we’re here”.

http://www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com

The Leadership Evolution

Each generation is extraordinarily complex, bringing various skills, expertise and expectations to the modern medical work environment. Determining the best method to unite such diverse thinking is one of the many challenges faced by physician executives and healthcare leaders. Is it any wonder that many medical leaders and executive in the Baby Boomer generation find themselves at a loss? The days of functional leadership are gone and suddenly, no one cares about the expertise of the Baby Boomers or how they climbed the corporate ladder, in medicine or elsewhere. Leadership in the era of Health 2.0 is no longer about command-control or dictating with intense focus on the bottom line; it is about collaboration, empowerment and communication. And, it is not about titles and nomenclature.

cmpLinguistic Evolution

As the linguistic evolution of terms progresses, the nomenclature of hospitalist was followed by that of intensivist, proceduralist, nocturalists, in-situ physician and even weekendalists. Think I’m kidding?

Link: http://medinnovationblog.blogspot.com/2009/02/hospital-based-doctorists.html

Assessment

I still like the causative analogy of my pre-teen daughter; it’s much simpler to understand. What do you think?  

References

1. Wachter, R and Goldman, R: “The Emerging Role of ‘Hospitalists’ in the American Health System’. In, New England Journal of Medicine; 335, 514-517, 1996

2. Kowalczyk, L: The Birth of a Notion: Hospitals Turning to Laborarists. Boston Globe, February 23, 2009

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:

***

[PHYSICIAN FOCUSED FINANCIAL PLANNING AND RISK MANAGEMENT COMPANION TEXTBOOK SET]

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

[Dr. Cappiello PhD MBA] *** [Foreword Dr. Krieger MD MBA]

***

Introducing Douglas B. Sherlock MBA CFA

About Our Newest Thought-Leader

By Ann Miller; RN, MHAcap-and-gown

Douglas B. Sherlock CFA is President of Sherlock Company which assists health plans, their business partners and their investors in the treasury and control functions of finance.

Resume

Prior to the founding of Sherlock Company, Mr. Sherlock was Vice President of Financial Analysis of U.S. Healthcare, Inc. where he directed the company’s merger and joint venture activity, its investor relations program and its HMO product for Medicare beneficiaries. Sherlock was formerly Vice President of Salomon Brothers, Inc where he specialized in the financial research of prepaid health plans and hospital systems, and assisted in the capital formation and merger activities of health care companies. He was the Greenwich Survey First Place HMO Analyst and a runner-up in the Institutional Investor polls. 

Professional Associations and Memberships

Mr. Sherlock is a Chartered Financial Analyst. He has been a member of the Financial Accounting Policy Committee of the CFA Institute. He has served on the Editorial Board of Inquiry, a journal of health care organization, provision and financing published by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, and is a reviewer for Chartered Financial Analyst. He has been a member of the Financial Accounting Policy Committee. Sherlock is a frequent speaker before health care groups including the American Association of Health Plans, the HealthCare Financial Management Association, and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. The research of Sherlock Company has recently been cited in such periodicals as The New York Times, Forbes, Investor’s Business Daily, Modern Healthcare, Hospitals, The Wall Street Journal, HMO Managers Letter, Business Week and The Medical Business Journal.

Educational Background

Mr. Sherlock holds an M.B.A. in finance from Loyola College in Maryland. He received his bachelor’s degree in economics from Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Conclusion

We look forward to his contributions and now professionally welcome him warmly, as our newest ME-P thought-leader. 

Subscribe Now:Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest Medical E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

About the Hospital Debt Justice Project

Aggressive Debt Collectors Take to the Web

By Staff Reportersradar2

Thousands of patients face crippling debt to hospitals and healthcare systems across the country; even though they may have qualified for free care.

www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Yale-New Haven Health System

Now, the Yale-New Haven Health System, Yale-New Haven Hospital and Bridgeport Hospitals are pursuing aggressive debt-collection practices—including liens, wage garnishments and foreclosures—even though they have millions of dollars set aside for free care for patients who can’t pay. Others have colossal endowments as well, and often pay their CEOs handsomely.

Assessment

But, according to their website, the Hospital Debt Justice Project is only fighting for fair treatment and accountability from our community hospitals.

Link: http://www.hospitaldebtjustice.org

Industry Indignation Index: 85

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Isn’t it a charity hospital standard that not-for-profits typically charge the poor and indigent up to four times the UCR of insured patients? Your experiences are welcomed. 

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

Get our Widget: Get this widget!

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

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

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest ME-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details       

Economics of Medical Fraud

Join Our Mailing List

Healthcare Leads the Pack

[By Staff Reporters]mardi-gra-skulls

All Medical Executive-Post readers and subscribers are aware of the Federal False Claims Act. Since 1986, False Claims Act [FCA] judgments and settlements totaled over $20 billion dollars. 

Of Miscreants and Feasors

According to outside unverified resources, below are the top 20 alleged FCA recoveries to date. Notice that all twenty, of the top 20, are healthcare and big Pharma related.

The Top 20

  1. Tenet Heath Care – $900,000,000
  2. HCA – $731,400,000
  3. Merck – $650,000
  4. HCA – $631,000,000
  5. Serono – $567,000,000
  6. Taketa Abbott Pharmaceutical Products Inc – $559,483,560
  7. Schering Plough – $255,000,000
  8. Abbott Labs – $400,000,000
  9. Fresenius Medical Care (National Medical Care) – $385,000,000
  10. Cephalon – $375,000,000
  11. Bristol Myers Squib – $328,000,000
  12. SmithKline Beecham [DBA] GlaxoSmith Kline – $325,000,000
  13. HealthSouth – $325,000,000
  14. National Medical Enterprises – $324,200,000
  15. Gambro Healthcare – $310,000,000
  16. Schering-Plough – $292,969,482
  17. AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals – $266,127,844
  18. St. Barnabas Hospitals – $265,000,000
  19. Bayer Corporation – $257,200,000
  20. Schering Plough – $255,000,000

More: You can read all the details regarding these fraud judgments & settlements here 

Assessment

The above are the very companies that doctors, patients and many stakeholders rely upon. They bombard us every hour with TV advertisements and information on the latest drugs and newest procedures. They often promote cures for the exaggerated illnesses and nebulous ailments they seek to treat. Is this expense model just business-as-usual; or the cost-of-doing business?

Link: http://www.taf.org 

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

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:

Product DetailsProduct Details

Goodnight Willem J. Kolff MD

Join Our Mailing List

A Medical Inventor and Bio-Engineering Pioneer

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; FACFAS, MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chief]dr-david-marcinko19

OK; let’s get this right out into the open. Although I did a little reconstructive bone and traumatic joint surgery in my career, I am not a cardio-vascular surgeon, nor am I a cardiologist, or even a nephrologist. But, I did treat more than my share of diabetic, alcoholic or other patients on renal dialysis and was well aware of the immense contributions of Willem Kolff to the profession. Therefore, I was saddened to learn of his recent passing at age 97. You see, Dr. Kolff not only developed the well known blood cleansing process that is now portable; he was also originator of the artificial-heart.

About Willem Johan Kolff; MD

When Willem Johan Kolff began work on the artificial kidney, few believed it possible. To draw a patient’s blood, cleanse it of toxins and return it seemed beyond the expertise of the most sophisticated medical centers. In the beginning, Dr. Kolff had no resources to draw upon. He was the sole internist in a small-town hospital, in the middle of the occupied Netherlands, during wartime. Materials were in short supply. The first 15 patients to receive the treatment failed to recover, but Dr. Kolff persevered. The dialysis treatment he pioneered and since perfected saved the lives, and limbs, of hundreds of thousands of patients, all over the world.

Link: http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/kol0int-1

Assessment

Dr. Kolff went on to design the heart-lung machine that made open-heart surgery possible. He pioneered artificial eyes, ears and arms, and for 25 years led the effort to develop the artificial heart. In 1982, a heart designed under his supervision was successfully implanted in Barney Clark, an event that captured the imagination of the world. All this was accomplished before such medical media stars as Dr. Robert Jarvik [Kolff’s student at the University of Utah in 1971] were lauded on TV, and then ignominiously dissed, for never having actually practiced medicine on real patients. In fact, Jarvik never pursued a medical internship, is not licensed to practice and can’t legally prescribe. Just imagine that!

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2008/02/14/the-jarvik-affair 

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

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:

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

Hospital Cafeteria Plan Elections

Join Our Mailing List

On Health and Dependent Care

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

[Publisher-in-Chief]

DEM 2013

I wrote a bit about hospital cafeteria plans in an earlier blog post.

Link: https://healthcarefinancials.wordpress.com/2008/04/02/hospital-cafeteria-plans/

Now, any hospital, or other employee given the opportunity to participate in a cafeteria plan should consider the following important two elections; health and dependent care.

Healthcare [Working Spouse]

If the employee is married and has a spouse who also works, and the employer-provided health benefits are better under the spouse’s plan, then the employee should elect to be covered by the spouse’s plan and choose another nontaxable benefit or a cash benefit that would be taxable under his or her own cafeteria plan, such as dependent-care coverage or group term insurance coverage. Switching health insurance requires planning to eliminate potential gaps in coverage created by insurance enrollment criteria. If the employee does not need the salary or cafeteria-plan benefits to meet current expenses, he or she should consider contributing the cash to a 401(k) plan and defer the tax liability.

Healthcare [Non-Working Souse]

If the employee has no working spouse and the employee’s plan is the only source for certain health benefits, the employee should consider what type of benefits he or she really needs for his or her family. In other words, can the employee get the necessary benefits under the company plan cheaper than he or she could individually, after taking into account that individual coverage will be paid with after-tax dollars, whereas under a cafeteria plan such benefits can be paid with before-tax dollars?

For example, if an employee who is in the 30% tax bracket is provided a $6,000 plan by her employer. He or she would have to be able to get a comparable plan independently for only  $3,741 to be in the same position on an after-tax basis. ($6,000 minus income taxes of $1,800 = $4,200, $4,200  minus $459 of avoided FICA

Dependent-Care

An employee who has a choice of including dependent-care costs may be entitled to an income-tax credit for such expenses if, the employer does not reimburse them. Thus, if a credit is worth the same or more than the payment under the cafeteria plan, the employee may choose to contribute those dollars toward additional health or life insurance.

Assessment

There is no doubt why healthcare and dependent care are the two most important cafeteria plan election determinants that clients seek in our advisory practice. The issues are that vital to all employees.

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:

Product Details  Product Details

Product Details

Defining Hospital Competitive Markets

Join Our Mailing List

Clarifying Often Nebulous and Contentious Terminology

[By Staff Reporters]

According to Robert James Cimasi; MHA, CMP™ of Health Capital Consultants LLC in St. Louis, MO; the definition of a hospital’s “market” is often nebulous.

Ambiguous Terms

Some entities are defined by terms as ambiguous as “acute care inpatient hospitals,” “specialty hospitals,” or “anchor hospitals.” This ambiguity occurs because healthcare is increasingly provided on an outpatient basis, and general acute care inpatient hospitals face competition from a range of allied healthcare providers for the medical services they deliver.

Link: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

US Supreme Court Explains

For example, none other than the US Supreme Court has explained that the determination of relevant hospital product and geographic markets is “a necessary predicate” to deciding whether a hospital merger contravenes the Clayton Act (antitrust).

Assessment

For additional information, please see United States v. Marine Ban Corporation Inc., 418 U.S. 602, 618 (1974) (citing United States v. E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co., 353 U.S. 586, 593 (1957); Brown Shoe Co. v. United States, 370 U.S. 294, 324 (1962).

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:

***

[HEALTH INSURANCE, MANAGED CARE, ECONOMICS, FINANCE AND HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY COMPANION DICTIONARY SET]

      Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

[Mike Stahl PhD MBA] *** [Foreword Dr.Mata MD CIS] *** [Dr. Getzen PhD]

***

Hospital Financial Capital Capacity

An Economic Risk Measurement

By Calvin Weise; MBA, CPAho-journal5

Hospital capital capacity is all about risk.

A Risk Measurement

Since capital investments have risks associated with them, capital capacity is a measurement of how much risk a hospital can bear. Capital capacity is not simple to determine. Capital investments introduce varying levels of risk, depending on the relative uncertainty of the benefits to be derived.

For example, one million dollars invested in an MRI at a hospital that has a two-month backlog for scheduling MRIs has much lower risk than $1 million invested in a new service like a PET scanner.

Profit Margins

Profit margins affect capital capacity. Larger profit margins create larger capacity for uncertainty which implies more risk and that means more capital capacity. Higher liquidity means more capital capacity. Lower debt leverage means more capital capacity. Liquidity and leverage are balance sheet ratios. Both imply capacity to absorb uncertain outcomes; both affect capital capacity.

Capital Determinations

Determining capital capacity is more art than science because of the variability in risk presented by various capital investments and the subjectivity associated with trying to measure that uncertainty.

That having been said, it is important to build models that estimate capital capacity. Most capital capacity models ignore the variability in risk presented by capital investments. They are typically built from published rating agency financial ratio medians. These models are based on the view that financial ratios of similar rating categories represent equivalent risks.

Of course, this is a simplistic view as it suggests that credit analysts simply categorize risk on the basis of financial ratios. It is not the case as the recent financial meltdown has demonstrated. Even the major credit rating agencies have been implicated as suspect; of late

Assessment

Published medians are the result of credit analysis, not the basis for credit analysis. Importantly, what is not usually published is the range or distribution around these medians. Models that estimate risk need to differentiate among risks presented by capital investments. Capital investments with little risk should consume less capital capacity than capital investments with a lot of risk.

Link: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. How does your practice, medical clinic or hospital measure and report capital risk; does it?

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

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

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

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

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details       

About Healthcare Financials.com

Healthcare Organizations [Financial Management Strategies]

By Hope Rachel Hetico; RN, MHA
Managing Editor
hetico3

This 2-volume, quarterly subscription print publication will reshape the hospital management landscape by following three important principles www.HealthcareFinancials.com

1. World Class Advisory Board

First, we have assembled a world-class editorial advisory board and independent team of contributors and asked them to draw on their experience in economic thought leadership and managerial decision making in the healthcare industrial complex. Like many readers, each struggles mightily with the decreasing revenues, increasing costs, and high consumer expectations in today’s competitive healthcare marketplace.  Yet, their practical experience and applied operating vision is a source of objective information, informed opinion, and crucial information for this manual and its quarterly updates.

2. Writing Style

Second, our writing style allows us to condense a great deal of information into each quarterly issue.  We integrate prose, applications and regulatory perspectives with real-world case models, as well as charts, tables, diagrams, sample contracts, and checklists.  The result is a comprehensive oeuvre of financial management and operation strategies, vital to all healthcare facility administrators, comptrollers, physician-executives, and consulting business advisors.

3. Compelling Content

Third, as editors, we prefer engaged readers who demand compelling content. According to conventional wisdom, printed manuals like this one should be a relic of the past, from an era before instant messaging and high-speed connectivity. Our experience shows just the opposite. Applied healthcare economics and management literature has grown exponentially in the past decade and the plethora of Internet information makes updates that sort through the clutter and provide strategic analysis all the more valuable. Oh, it should provide some personality and wit, too! Don’t forget, beneath the spreadsheets, profit and loss statements, and financial models are patients, colleagues and investors who depend on you.

Assessment

ho-journal1

Rest assured, Healthcare Organizations [Financial Management Strategies] will become an important peer-reviewed vehicle for the advancement of working knowledge and the dissemination of research information and best practices in our field. In the years ahead, we trust these principles will enhance utility and add value to both your print and this e-companion subscription.

Conclusion

Most importantly, we hope to increase your return on investment. If you have any comments or would like to contribute material or suggest topics for a future update, please contact us.

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

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

Healthcare and the Recession

Join Our Mailing List

Physician and Hospital Pricing Pressure

[By Staff Reporters]life-preserver

As reported in Modern Physician Online, by Dan Bowman, new metadata coming from the federal government suggests that the current financial meltdown and domestic recession has impacted hospital and physician charges, as implicated by their revenues.

USBLS on Physician Charges

According to data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics [USBLS], retail prices charged by doctors rose 2.9 percent in 2008, compared with 4.1 percent the year before. Wholesale prices for physicians were up 1.2 percent last year, compared with 4 percent in 2007.

USBLS on Hospital Charges

Hospitals meanwhile, were up 5.9 percent in 2008, compared with 8.3 percent the year before. Wholesale prices for hospital services, for their part, were up 1.5 percent last year, falling from a 3.8 percent increase in 2007.

Assessment

Link: www.ModernHealthcare.com

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:

DICTIONARIES: http://www.springerpub.com/Search/marcinko
PHYSICIANS: www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com
PRACTICES: www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com
HOSPITALS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466558731
CLINICS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781439879900
BLOG: www.MedicalExecutivePost.com
FINANCE: Financial Planning for Physicians and Advisors
INSURANCE: Risk Management and Insurance Strategies for Physicians and Advisors

Product Details  Product Details

Weighted Role of Commercial Health Insurance

Understanding Disproportional Influence

By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA,

ho-journal4Most domestic health care is paid for by some type of insurance, whether private or governmental. Most private health insurance is purchased through employers who, to a great degree, make most of the buying decisions. Employer coalitions have emerged but, in general, most command leverage on price rather than quality or value. This often leaves healthcare providers as the only advocates for the quality, choice and access concerns of consumers.

Business Impact

According to Robert James Cimasi, writing and opining in the print journal: Healthcare Organizations [Financial Management Strateges] www.HealthCareFinancials.com, despite the fact that businesses bear less of the total U.S. healthcare premium dollar (approximately 25%) than government or individuals; corporate buyers and their coalitions and associations have asserted substantial, if disproportionate, influence over healthcare companies.

Best Community Interest Debate

Whether or not this is necessarily always in the best interests of consumers or the community at large is a matter of heated debate. What is generally acknowledged is that the relative bargaining position of buyers and providers in a given market has a dramatic impact on healthcare provider financial performance.

Healthcare is Different

Much like F. Scott Fitzgerald’s different-rich; keep in mind that healthcare differs in several respects from other industry sectors, in that:

  • There is more than one class of buyers: there are patients, families (proxies), insurance companies, and employers, each with different objectives.
  • The single largest payer, the government, both dictates a large portion of the healthcare pricing structure and strongly influences the rest.
  • There is a crucial divide or (“disconnect”) between consumer and payer.
  • A lack of information regarding consumer needs and quality of providers impedes the purchasers of health insurance from selecting the optimal plan.

Assessment

Of course, the impact of the Obama administration on this topic has yet to be seen. 

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Is this commercial influence on health insurance good or bad; please share your experiences with us.

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

Our Other Print Books and Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

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

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

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

 

Hospital Industry Summary

Statistical Results for 2007
Staff Writers

red-cross4

 

 

 

 

In 2006, 52.4% of the 4,956 short-term, acute-care, nonfederal hospitals in the U.S. were affiliated with medical healthcare systems [MHSs], up from 51.8% of the 4,911 in 2005. Some other statistics are:

  • The average number of hospital days per 1,000 members of HMOs not owned by MHSs grew 6.6% in 2006, to 302.2 from 283.6 in 2005, the fifth consecutive annual increase.
  • In 2006, total hospital outpatient revenue was $103.6 million, up 9.9% from $94.3 million in 2005. As a consequence, the outpatient revenue percentage of total hospital revenue increased to 38.1% from 37.4% the prior year.
  • The average number of prescriptions dispensed to non-Medicare members of MHS-owned HMOs decreased slightly in 2006, to 8.5 from 8.7 the previous year.
  • Between 2005 (11,485.8) and 2006 (11,292.9), the average number of admissions fell at hospitals in MHSs that owned HMOs, the first such decline in this measure since 2001 (9,799.7).
  • Between 2005 and 2006, the ratio of FTE registered nurses (RNs) to occupied beds rose both at hospitals in MHSs that owned HMOs (to 2.08 from 2.05) and at hospitals in MHSs that did not own HMOs (to 2.02 from 2.00).
  • In 2006, total costs per occupied bed were just over $1.0 million at hospitals that were part of MHSs that owned HMOs, up 4.7% from $987,827 in 2005. Since 2001 ($821,194), these costs have risen by more than one-quarter (26.0%).
  • Non-MHS hospitals averaged 164.7 outpatient visits per day, up 5.2% from 156.6 in 2005, the fourth consecutive annual rise.
  • After rising notably between 2004 (60.2%) and 2005 (66.4%), the average intensive care unit (ICU) occupancy rate forMHS hospitals fell slightly in 2006, to 65.3%.
  • Pharmaceutical expenses per discharge at hospitals tied to government-run MHSs fell 27.9% in 2006, to $1,380 from $1,915 in 2005, reversing two straight years of double-digit growth.

*Acknowledgements

The editors and author acknowledges Verispan LLC, Yardley, Pa., as the research and reporting source for this data, reprinted with permission and based on information gathered by mail and telephone surveys gathered and effective as of December 31, 2008, unless otherwise noted.  It was commissioned, sponsored and underwritten in an arm’s length fashion by the Managed Care Digest Series of sanofi-aventis, Bridgewater, NJ, and developed and produced by Forte Information Resources, LLC, Denver, Colorado.

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

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Medical Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

Hospitals Financially Ailing

Economic Slowdown Cited as Causative

Staff Reporters

According to the Associated Press, November 20, 2008, the current dismal economy has American hospitals ailing. New data shows declines in overall admissions and elective procedures, plus a significant jump in patients who can’t pay for care.

AHA Study

According to a survey by the American Hospital Association [AHA], hospitals also have been hurt by losses on their investments due to the turmoil on Wall Street. Many are finding it more expensive to borrow money, while some of the hardest-hit hospitals began reducing staffing and services as early as last spring and more will follow.

Assessment

The AHA survey also found that 67 percent of hospitals saw some drop in elective procedures, with 6 percent seeing a significant drop; 63 percent saw some decline in overall admissions, with 9 percent seeing a bigger drop; while inpatient and outpatient surgeries and emergency department visits were all down roughly 1 percent in the third quarter.

More info: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Conclusion

As always, your thoughts and comments on this Executive-Post are appreciated.

Related Information Sources:

Practice Management: http://www.springerpub.com/prod.aspx?prod_id=23759

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

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

Healthcare Organizations: www.HealthcareFinancials.com

Health Administration Terms: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com

Physician Advisors: www.CertifiedMedicalPlanner.com

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

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

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

 

 

 

Hospital Revenue Cycle Management

Join Our Mailing List

Augmentation thru Technology Adoption

[By Karen White PhD, and Staff ]

Several major hospitals, or healthcare systems, have filed bankruptcy this fiscal quarter. These include a two-hospital system in Honolulu; one in Pontiac, MI; Trinity Hospital in Erin, Tennessee; Century City Doctors Hospital in Beverly Hills, and four hospital system Hospital Partners of America, in Charlotte. 

And so, since cash flow is the life blood of any healthcare revenue cycle management initiative, it is important for physician executives and healthcare administrators to appreciate the impact of modern health information technology systems on this vital function.

Functional Area Targets

Technology plays a key role across all health entity revenue cycle operations. By functional area, the following are key targets:

Patient Access

This is the front-end of a hospital’s revenue cycle. It is made up of all the pre-registration, registration, scheduling, pre-admitting, and admitting functions. Enhancing revenue cycles in this area requires the following:

  • a call center environment with auto dialing, faxing, and Internet connectivity to quickly ensure and verify all pertinent information that is key to correct and timely payment for services rendered;
  • Master Person Index software to eliminate duplicate medical record numbers and assist with achieving of a unique identifier for all patients;
  • registration and admission software that scripts the admission process to assist employees in obtaining required elements and check that insurer-required referrals are documented;
  • denial management definition, including focus on how to obtain all the correct patient information up front while the patient is in-house; and
  • imaging of data up front.

Health Information Management

This is the middle process of a hospital revenue cycle and is often still referred to as “Medical Records.” This area is made up of chart processing, coding, transcription, correspondence, and chart completion. Better control of revenue cycles requires the following recommended technology:

  • chart-tracking software to eliminate manual outguides and decrease the number of lost charts;
  • encoding and grouping software to improve coding accuracy and speed and improve reimbursement;
  • auto printing and faxing capabilities;
  • Internet connectivity for release of information and related document management tasks; and,
  • electronic management of documents.

Patient Financial Services

This is the back-end process of a hospital revenue cycle. The operations include all business office functions of billing, collecting, and follow-up post-patient care. Recommended technology to optimize these functions includes the following:

  • automated biller queues to improve and track the productivity of each biller;
  • claims scrubbing software to ensure that necessary data is included on the claim prior to submission; and
  • electronic claims and reimbursement processing to expedite the payment cycle.

Automation

Automation can lead to decreased paperwork, process standardization, increased productivity, and cleaner claims. In 2004, Hospital & Health Network’s “Most Wired Survey” found that the 100 most wired hospitals — including three out of the four AA+ hospitals in the country — had better control of expenses, higher productivity, and efficient utilization management. Today, these top hospitals tend to be larger and have better access to capital in these times of credit tightening.

Product DetailsProduct Details

Assessment

The positive return on investment in technology increases allocation of funding to technology. This correlation is important because it begins to link the investment in information technology with positive financial returns in all areas of a hospital’s business, including the revenue cycle.

MORE: Rev Cycle Mgmnt

Channel Surfing the ME-P

Have you visited our other topic channels? Established to facilitate idea exchange and link our community together, the value of these topics is dependent upon your input. Please take a minute to visit. And, to prevent that annoying spam, we ask that you register. It is fast, free and secure.

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:

 

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details

New Health Insurance Compliance Issues

Implications of US Patriot and Bank Secrecy Acts on Hospitals

By Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA, CMP™

By Hope R. Hetico; RN, MHA, CMP™  dave-and-hope4

With the recent popularity and growth of personal health insurance plans (PHIPs), health savings accounts (HSAs) and / or medical savings accounts (MSAs), compliance with the USA PATRIOT Act has become an important issue for these new health insurance products.  

These insurance plans place financial services organizations into relationships with shared information institutions like hospitals, healthcare organizations, medical clinics and patient clients.

The Online Connection 

This happens because many, perhaps even the majority of health insurance plans are opened online as patients and insurance company clients use Internet search engines to find the “best” policy type to meet their needs.  

Appropriately, banks, healthcare entities, and hospitals are working with insurance companies, trust companies, banks and broker-dealers to offer identity-compliant and integrated insurance plan products. 

Verifications that these clients are who they say they are, is as paramount as monitoring their activity. 

Example:  

Section 314(b) of the US Patriot Act permits financial institutions and health insurance companies – upon providing notice to the United States Department of the Treasury – to share patient and related information with one another in order to identify and report to the federal government activities that may involve money laundering or terrorist activity.  

The US Patriot Act 

The US Patriot Act aims to partially accomplish this through three critical goals:  

  1. First, it gives investigators familiar tools to use against a new threat.
  2. Second, it breaks down a wall that has prevented information sharing between agencies.
  3. Third, it updates U.S. laws to respond to the current Internet environment.  

Bank Secrecy Act, PHIPs, MSAs and HSAs 

For additional compliance security, The USA Patriot Act also amended the Bank Secrecy Act [BSA] to give the federal government enhanced authority to identify, deter and punish money laundering and related terrorist financing activities.  

Assessment 

Whatever the financial outlays required for insurance/financial organizational compliance, it may result in very large savings later if affected hospital assets and patient health insurance information is safeguarded against attacks of virtual or real assets. 

Conclusion 

And so, what is your opinion on the above health law and policy? 

Institutional information: www.HealthcareFinancials.com 

Terminology: www.HealthDictionarySeries.com 

Related reference: Marc B. Royo and David B. Nash.Sarbanes-Oxley and Not-for-Profit Hospitals: Current Issues and Future Prospects.” American Journal of Medical Quality: Vol. 23, No. 1, 70-72, February 2008.

Product DetailsProduct DetailsProduct Details