Becker's ASC Review

Nov/Dec 2016 Issue of Becker's ASC Review

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18 ASC MANAGEMENT 8 Key Notes on Physician Practices: Just 33% Are Independent Practice Owners By Laura Dyrda T he Physicians Foundation's "2016 Sur- vey of America's Physicians: Practice Patterns & Perspectives" found hospital employment is rising, along with administra- tive work and serious dissatisfaction. Here are eight key findings from the report: 1. Just 33 percent of respondents were in- dependent practice owners or partners; in 2012, that number was 48.5 percent. 2. More than half, 55 percent, of physi- cians are participating in Physician Qual- ity Reporting Systems and 75 percent par- ticipate in some sort of patient satisfaction survey. 3. ACOs have been much-discussed, but currently only 36 percent of physicians participate in an ACO. 4. ICD-10 went into effect about one year ago, but only 6 percent of physicians re- ported it improved efficiency at their prac- tices; 42.5 percent said it detracted from efficiency. 5. More than half, 54 percent, said their morale is somewhat negative and only 37 percent said their feelings about the future of the medical profession are positive. 6. Employed physicians see 19 percent fewer patients than practice owners, a so- bering trend as practice owners disappear. Additionally, a recent study on hospital employment from the Boston-based Har- vard T.H. Chan School of Public Health found hospital employment doesn't im- prove patient care. 7. ere are only 17 percent of physicians in solo practice, down from 25 percent in 2012. 8. Physicians report spending 21 percent of their time on non-clinical paperwork. Only 14 percent reported having the time needed to provide the "highest standards of care." n What This Year's Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics Means for ACOs, Physician Compensation By Emily Rappleye T wo economists were awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences Monday for their work in contract theory — work that could inform physician- hospital, compensation and value-based care agreements. The economists, Oliver Hart, PhD, a professor at Harvard, and Bengt Holmström, PhD, a professor at MIT, help explain how to better design contracts to improve output and align incentives. The awarding body, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, notes that contract theory cannot provide defini- tive answers, but can help provide structure and evaluate contract effectiveness. For example, under pay-for-performance agreements, phy- sicians are usually paid an incentive-based bonus on top of fee-for-service compensation. These payments are based on agreed-upon measures of quality and cost. Dr. Holm- ström's work suggests payment under this type of structure should be tied to the broadest possible measure of perfor- mance. He argues that a manager's pay should not depend entirely on his or her firm's share price, because this could reward the manager for good or bad luck if an industry is up or down. Instead, pay should be linked to the firm's share price relative to the overall industry performance, ac- cording to Dr. Holmström. His work also demonstrates performance that is difficult to measure should be compensated with a structure that is more fixed. Likewise, pay should be more fixed if a person is responsible for a variety of tasks. For example, physicians could begin to focus too closely on improving specific measures while neglecting others to improve compensa- tion. They would be "teaching to the test," according to Dr. Holmström's work. These principles also play out in ACOs, where teamwork can lead to free-riding. Under an ACO's framework, more patients and physicians are needed to ensure quality met- rics are precise, hence Medicare's minimum requirement for ACOs to have 5,000 beneficiaries. However, this also means individual physician behavior has less influence on the group's overall quality performance, leading to the pos- sibility of free-riding, or those who shirk responsibilities and benefit from the efforts of others. Dr. Holmström suggests employing an outside owner or deferring portions of com- pensation can help mitigate this problem. Dr. Hart's work can help inform physician-hospital con- tracts. It focuses on incomplete contracts, or those that face unforeseen challenges that could not be anticipated when drawing up the agreement. Because future events are un- known, Dr. Hart posits that contracts should instead outline who has the right to make the decision if both entities do not agree. When contracting is complex and many out- comes are unforeseen and therefore cannot be measured and benchmarked, Dr. Hart suggests using decision alloca- tion rights instead. He also provides theory to guide ownership decisions and financial contracts. Dr. Hart suggests some contracts, par- ticularly those that require entrepreneurship or innovation, give the manager or entrepreneur the right to make deci- sions for the business if performance is positive, but allow investors to step in if performance lags. The work of Drs. Hart and Holmström provides healthcare organizations the tools to analyze the financial terms of con- tracts as well as how control and decision rights are allocated between physicians, hospitals and other stakeholders. n

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