Becker's Spine Review

Becker's May/June 2022 Spine Review

Issue link: https://beckershealthcare.uberflip.com/i/1468175

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 55

10 SPINE SURGEONS Walmart partnership pushes retailer into spine care By Alan Condon A chain of spinal health and wellness centers will begin popping up at Walmart stores this year, another key move in the retailer's push into the healthcare industry. e chain of retail spine clinics, called e Back Company, are in partnership with Brentwood, Tenn.-based IMAC Holdings, a provider of minimally invasive and regenera- tive orthopedic therapies. Following the success of a pilot program, e Back Company will provide chiropractic adjustments, corrective instrument adjusting and percussion therapies for so tissue re- covery, muscle relaxation and spinal wellness in the retail store. Services are priced at $25 per treatment, with memberships available for $65 per month, in addition to family and wellness plans, according to the company. e Back Space locations in Walmart stores offer both walk-in and appointment-based treatments. "We have the ability to leverage a compet- itive advantage in a $20 billion industry that will efficiently utilize capital to increase storefronts quickly through franchising," Jeff Ervin, CEO of IMAC, said in a news release. "Our pilot allowed us to develop our tech- nical infrastructure, refine the services and messaging and implement the infrastructure needed to launch the franchise program." e Walmart partnership comes nine years aer the retail giant launched its Centers of Excellence program, which affiliates with health systems that demonstrate appropriate and high-quality care in specialty areas that include spine surgery and joint replacement. e program bundles payments for the costs of certain procedures, allowing Walmart to bypass insurers and work directly with health systems. Walmart's Centers of Excellence for spine surgery comprisehospitals and health systems in 10 states, including Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic, Emory Univer- sity Hospital in Atlanta, Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, Pa., and Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle. Under the COE program, Walmart pays for the entire cost of employees to travel and receive spine care at designated facilities. Employees can seek care outside of the des- ignated centers, but they will be responsible for the bill. A Harvard Business Review analysis of the program in 2019 found: 1. Employees who had spine surgery at Centers of Excellence sites had an average hospital stay of 2.5 days, compared to 2.9 days for non-COE employees. 2. 0.6 percent of the COE patients were discharged to skilled nursing facilities, com- pared to 4.9 percent of non-COE patients. 3. From 2015-18, the readmission rate per 1,000 patients was three for COE patients and 65 for non-COE patients. 4. On average, patients who received care at a Center of Excellence returned to work aer 10.6 weeks, 2.6 weeks sooner than the non- COE patients. n Spine surgeon will advise HHS in new role at nonprofit By Alan Condon N onprofit organization Mitre has named Stephen Ondra, MD, chief medical adviser of the CMS Al- liance to Modernize Healthcare federally funded research and development center. Dr. Ondra will serve as an adviser to all HHS organizations, providing thought leadership, guiding teams and build- ing partnerships with the private sector to promote health and wellness in the U.S. He will be responsible for devel- oping new ideas to advance private insurance markets, Medicare and Medicaid, value-based payments and care quality in partnership with HHS and the private sector. "[Dr. Ondra's] experience as a business innovator, health insurance executive, clinician, researcher, veteran and public policy official will bring a unique vantage point to the complex health and human services problems facing our government sponsors," Kim Warren, vice president and director of CMS Alliance to Modernize Healthcare, said in a March 7 news release. "His experience will provide new perspectives to tackle hard questions and reimagine approaches to achieve health and well-being for all." Dr. Ondra previously practiced spine surgery at North- western Memorial Hospital in Chicago, where he served as senior vice president and CMO, and has experience overseeing clinical operations for Health Care Service Corp, the parent company of five Blue Cross Blue Shield plans. Former President Barack Obama appointed the sur- geon as the senior policy adviser for health affairs at the Department of Veterans Affairs, and he also served in the executive office of the President. Most recently, Dr. Ondra was CEO of Cygnus-AI, which specializes in artificial intelligence and clinical decision support tools for diagnostic radiology. n

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Becker's Spine Review - Becker's May/June 2022 Spine Review