Should You Sell Your Practice to a Hospital?

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Should You Sell Your Practice to a Hospital? Stephan Peron, AVA Partner Todd Sorensen, AVA Partner 17th Annual Improving Profitability, and Business and Legal Issues for ASCs October 23, 2010 Overview History of Physician Employment by Hospitals Typical Transactions Considerations Question and Answer 1981- Can Hospitals Survive? Ultimately, hospitals that cannot support their capacity from market demand will be compelled to close, unless they are somehow subsidized by the government. 1982- Cost Pressures and Health Policy Reform Health care costs are sustainable I know that many people have heard this line before from policymakers, yet the wolf has never appeared 1985- Acquisition Strategies of Multihospital Systems Hospitals will focus on advertising insurance providers Not focused on adverting care delivery 25 to 50 very large health services organizations will soon dominate the health care industry Health care will evolve from fee-for-services to fixed payment DRG are transitory form that will be replaced by a more sophisticated prospective pricing system Acquisition of teaching hospitals rising Increase acquisitions of nonhospital activities- acquiring insurance firms, developing PPOS, pre & post care capabilities, and forming joint ventures

1985- Cost Shifting and Care for the Uninsured Hospitals do not increase their markups from privately insured patients when revenues are squeezed from low remuneration of Medicare 1986- How Many Doctors Are Enough? 1989- Physician Need Large surplus in number of physicians, but small shortage in primary care. 1990- No Evidence of an emerging Physician Surplus Ideas of March (JAMA, 1993) Residency graduates are increasingly staying in general internal medicine, up to 40% stayed in 1993 22% increase in internal medicine graduates There is an enhanced interest in general internal medicine that is expected to continue in the near future. Current Trends in Physicians Practice Arrangements (JAMA, 1996) Between 1983 and 1994, The proportion of patient care physicians practicing as employees rose from 24.2% to 42.3% The proportion self-employed in solo practices fell from 40.5% to 29.3% The proportion self-employed in group practices fell form 35.3% to 28.4% The number of physicians employed rose 18% and the number in solo practices fell by 11%

History of PhysicianPhysician-Hospital Relationships We We ve been through this before Circa 1996 A majority of physicians will be employees in the very near future Many of these physicians will be in the employ of what has been called the new medical-industrial complex Managed care has increased pressures on solo and small group practices Several recent workforce analyses have forecast a surplus of physicians in the near future Source: Phillip Kletke, David Emmons, Kurt Gillis; Current Trends in Physicians Practice Arrangements, JAMA August 21, 1996 History of PhysicianPhysician-Hospital Relationships History of PhysicianPhysician-Hospital Relationships 2009 Center for Studying presentation to MedPac on hospital integration 1990s merger wave- 900+ deals from 1994-2000 Proportion system members grew from 40% in 1995 to 60% in 2000 Integration between physicians and hospitals grew rapidly from 1980s until the mid-1990s, then declined

History of Physician-Hospital Relationships What happened? Physicians joined arms with hospitals because of the initial high salary and uncertainty of future payment rates introduced by managed care Capitated/delegated model failed to become prevalent Hospitals divested and physicians were happy to leave Source: Hospital- Physician Relations, Health Affairs, September/October 2008 History of Physician-Hospital Relationships As one of the largest industries in 2008, healthcare provided 14.3 million jobs for wage and salary workers. About 40% were in hospitals; another 21% were in nursing and residential care facilities; and 16% were in offices of physicians. About 36% of all healthcare establishments fall into office based practices. Physicians and surgeons are increasingly working as salaried employees of group medical practices, clinics, or integrated health systems. About 595,800 establishments make up the healthcare industry; they vary greatly in terms of size, staffing patterns, and organizational structures. About 76% of healthcare establishments are offices of physicians, dentists, or other health practitioners. Although hospitals constitute only 1% of all healthcare establishments, they employ 35% of all workers. Wage and salary employment in the healthcare industry is projected to increase 22% through 2018, compared with 11% for all industries combined. Employment growth is expected to account for about 22% of all wage and salary jobs added to the economy over the 2008-18 period. Projected rates of employment growth for the various segments of the industry range from 10% in hospitals, the largest and slowest growing industry segment, to 46% in the much smaller home healthcare services. Source: Bureau of Labor and Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook 2010-11, Healthcare/ Physicians and Surgeons 2 Primary Drivers Desire by medical school graduates to be employed Changes or anticipated changes in the delivery system ACOs Payment reductions in Medicare / Medicaid Increased regulatory restrictions involving ancillaries

Where are the physician incentives today? The current trend toward hospital employment of physicians is different from the 1990s, when hospitals typically approached physicians about employment opportunities rather than the reverse. Today, many physicians, specialists in particular, are seeking hospital employment to relieve them of the stress of high malpractice rates, the struggle for reimbursement, administrative duties and the general risks and hassles of private practice. Hospital employment is viewed favorably by many physicians today and, in our experience, hospitals offering employed positions may enjoy an advantage over those that do not. Source: Merritt Hawkings 2010 Review of Physician Recruiting Incentives Source: Bureau of Labor and Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook 2010-11, Healthcare/ Physicians and Surgeons Practice Setting Single Specialty Group 2008 2006 2003 2001 23% 91% 30% 24% Partnership 24% 71% 41% 21% Multispecialty Group Hospital employee Outpatient Clinic 16% 60% 13% 28% 22% 52% 4% 3% 8% 17% 2% 8% Association 4% 9% 2% 0% Solo 1% 8% 4% 8% Source: 2008 Merritt Hawkins Final Year Medical Students Survey * In 2006, resident surveyed had the option of choosing multiple responses.

Accountable Care Organization ( ACO ) To qualify for ACO status in PPACA a organization much have 5,000 or more beneficiaries managed by primary care Hospitals are looking to build physician relationships to gain status Primary care physicians are the target because they are the gate-keepers for the ACO patient base Hospitals are expecting a shared savings model from Medicare and want to use employed physicians to get these payments Payment reductions in Medicare/Medicaid Operating in a office-based environment may be less viable Regulatory environment is more hostile with the expansion of fraud and abuse investigations What are hospitals looking for? In a recent survey performed by the American Hospital Association ( AHA ), hospitals are looking to employ more physicians. Of the hospitals surveyed, 65% are making efforts to increase the number of employed physicians. 80% are seeking to grow the number of Primary Care physicians 42% are seeking more General Surgery physicians. Source: AHA Rapid Response Survey, March 2010 Top 5 specialties hospitals are acquiring Primary Care Reason: Hospitals are driving towards an ACO or integrated environment. Primary care is the gate-keeper to referrals. Cardiology Reason: A high revenue specialty for hospitals. 30% of surveyed cardiologists, according to the American College of Cardiology, are integrating their practices with a hospital Survey of 300 cardiology practices, showed 60% of practices have already integrated with a hospital or are considering it. Full integration: 14.3% Co-Management agreement: 7.8 % Considering integration: 45.5% Neurosurgery Reason: Significant revenue generator for larger-sized hospitals and a shortage of neurosurgeons is already prevalent in the physician pool. Orthopedics Reason: As the population continues to age, orthopedics will become increasingly important. As well, revenue stream is strong Gastroenterology Reason: Hospitals need GI specialists because of the continual patient movement to outpatient settings. GIs are making a shift away from being dependent on patient referrals from hospitals to self-referrals. GIs have seen the highest growth in the ASC setting from 2000-2009. Source: Becker s Hospital Review: 3 Medical Specialties Most Pursued for Employment by Hospitals, Sept 27, 2010

Typical Transactions Valuation Most of the time Fixed Assets / Little Intangible (Goodwill) Value Why? Exceptions Profitable employment relationships with physicians and mid-levels High levels of ancillaries Requires sacrificing earnings Physician Work-Force Typical Transactions What will the agreement look like? Compensation Typically guaranteed for 2 years at historical levels or in some cases more, with upside Productivity based after initial guarantee period Work RVUs Net Professional Collections % of Earnings / Profitability (Virtual Private Practice) Other key terms Term Typically include outs without cause Buy-back provisions Non-competes Considerations Key Question: Can employment do something for me that I cannot accomplish without the hospital? Economic Increased compensation Replace potential loss of ancillary earnings Alleviate the need to make substantial investment in information technology May be best or even only way to participate in risk-based contracting, global billing arrangements, ACOs or other quality initiatives. Caution: How long is the employer going to be willing to lose money? Non-economic Security Quality of Life