Funding Trauma Centers: Using the Bardach Framework to Develop a Rational Policy. Ellen J. MacKenzie, PhD, MSc Johns Hopkins University

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Funding Trauma Centers: Using the Bardach Framework to Develop a Rational Policy Ellen J. MacKenzie, PhD, MSc Johns Hopkins University

Overview In this lecture, we ll look at another strategy for reducing the burden of injury and assuring optimal care to those injured Tertiary prevention strategy Doesn t prevent injury-causing event or injury Response to and treatment of injuries Optimal strategy systems approach to delivering care 3

Section A Trauma Centers and Trauma Systems: Some Background

Distribution of Trauma Deaths 50% occur at the scene or in transport 30% occur within the first few hours 20% occur later within days or weeks Prevention is key! 5

What Is a Trauma Center? Specialty referral center designed, equipped, and staffed to provide immediate and definitive care to the most seriously injured Part of an overall systems approach to care Established criteria for pre-hospital triage and interhospital transfer Integration of components to ensure rapid discovery and transport to definitive care within the golden hour 6

Trauma Center vs. Non-trauma Center Above and beyond the resources and facilities: 24/7 availability of these resources Team approach multiple specialties Commitment to trauma care Volume of major trauma cases Research, education, system leadership 7

How Are Trauma Centers Identified? In 36 states with formal systems, TCs are designated by a lead agency In states without formal systems, hospitals can voluntarily seek verification by the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Centers are categorized by level of resources available 8

Trauma Centers: Level of Care Levels I and II provide comprehensive trauma care; level I serves as a regional resource and provides leadership in education, research, and system planning Levels III, IV, and V provide prompt assessment, resuscitation, and stabilization with transfer to Level I or II as needed; serve communities that do not have immediate access to a Level I or II 9

Access to Trauma Centers 69% of US citizens live within 45 minutes of a trauma center Source: Branas, MacKenzie, Williams, et al. (June 6, 2005). Journal of the American Medical Association. 10

Disparities in Access by Rurality Percent of population living within 45 minutes of a trauma center Urban 89% Suburban 73% Rural 8% Source: Branas, MacKenzie, Williams, et al. (June 6, 2005). Journal of the American Medical Association. 11

Trauma Systems Are Effective Two national studies Population-based study examined motor vehicle crash fatality rates before and after implementation of a trauma system in 21 states Cohort study compared case-fatality rates among patients treated in trauma centers versus non-trauma centers 12

Step 1: The Problem(s) Access to trauma centers is not uniform; particularly poor in rural U.S. Access does not translate into appropriate use in states with well-established systems in place, one-third of major trauma patients are not getting to trauma centers 13

Step 1: The Problem Trauma centers are closing or reducing their level of care across the U.S. and here in Maryland 14

The Problem Nationally Las Vegas Sun Malpractice woes may force Nevada trauma center to limit hours as of March 12 Orlando Sentinel Malpractice crisis threatens level I trauma center... a distinct possibility that hospital will not have enough oncall physicians to maintain its center Kansas City Star Mo. system strained by impending closure of St. Joseph s trauma center... it s going to fill up other hospitals in a domino effect 15

The Problem Nationally Between 2002 and 2005 18 level I and II centers closed 14 reduced their level of care to level III or IV 70+ reported their viability was threatened 16

The Problem in Maryland In June of 2002, Washington County in Hagerstown was forced to suspend its trauma program Reopened in October 2002, but downgraded from a level II to a level III Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury threatened Study panel appointed by Maryland General Assembly to study the problem and make recommendations 17

Section B Assembling the Evidence

Step 2: Assemble the Evidence So what What s the impact? Why are they closing? 19

The Potential Impact Percentage of population living within 45 minutes of any level I/II trauma center With TC Without TC Maryland Washington County 90% 86% Las Vegas 86% 17% Orlando 78% 69% Kansas City 65% 65% 20

The Potential Impact Based on a study of trauma center effectiveness... For every 100 major trauma patients who are treated at a trauma center versus non-trauma center, we can expect to save 3 4 lives 21

Contributing Factors News Stories General lack of funds 16% Hospital reimbursement 12% High patient volumes 11% Physician availability General trauma surgeons Orthopedic surgeons Neurosurgeons 61% 22

Step 1: Redefining the Problem The short- and long term viability of trauma systems is threatened by waning participation of physicians in taking care of trauma patients Poor lifestyle; workload is increasing Profession is changing less surgery Trauma surgeons not adequately paid for services Each must be addressed to solve the problem 23

Financial Burden on Physicians Identified as most serious problem facing Maryland trauma system Uncompensated care and under-compensated care Lost revenue due to taking trauma calls Rising malpractice premiums (less of a current threat in Maryland) 24

Under-compensated and Uncompensated Care Payer mix at Maryland trauma centers All Maryland trauma centers Self pay 25% Medicaid 10% Medicare 10% Commercial 50% Other* 5% *Other includes workers comp and auto insurance 25

Percentage of Physician Cost Paid by Payer 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 100% 26 Percentage of Cost Self pay (20%) Medicaid (19%) Medicare (10%) Blue Shield HMO Commercial Md. Shock Trauma, 2002

Underpayment of Trauma Physicians Underpayment of trauma physicians Maryland Shock Trauma FY 2002 % Total charges Est. cost (in 000s) Actual collections Deficit Uninsured 20% $2,395 $455 $(1,941) Medicaid 19% $2,274 $674 $(1,600) Medicare 10% $1,218 $996 $(222) Commercial/ HMO 51% $6,131 $8,580 $2,449 TOTAL 100% $12,018 $10,704 $(1,314) Source: Scalea. (2003). 27

Physician Reimbursement: Percentage of Cost Percentage of Cost 105 100 95 90 85 80 100% 75 FY '99 FY '00 FY '01 Md. Shock Trauma, 2002 28

Lost Revenue Due to Taking Call Most physicians in level II and Level III trauma centers have private surgical practices that incur economic losses when they take a trauma call Unable to see regular patients or perform elective surgeries when on call Forced to reschedule or postpone elective cases when trauma cases spill over into regular surgical schedules 29

Additional Cost to Trauma Center Trauma centers forced to subsidize physician income through on-call stipends to ensure adequate coverage Stipends cost individual trauma centers between $462,000 and $876,000 annually Federal law prohibits including provider reimbursement or professional fees in hospital rates, so trauma centers must rely on their operating margins to cover these expenses 30

The Problem: A Summary Trauma centers are closing Impact access to quality trauma care Principal reason Lack of physician coverage Physicians less likely to take trauma call because their costs are not adequately covered Physician costs are not covered due to Uncompensated care Under-compensated care Lost revenue due to taking call High malpractice premiums 31

Convincing the Decision Makers Putting a face on the problem is key! A 24-year-old, UNINSURED male was admitted to Shock Trauma after a motorcycle crash Injuries included multiple leg fractures, head trauma, and an abdominal wound After multiple trips to the operating room, and 65 days in the trauma center, he was discharged to inpatient rehab 32

Professional Fee Reimbursement Actual cost: $55,000 100000 80000 60000 40000 20000 0 33 Payment Self pay Medicaid Medicare Blue Shield Commercial Md. Shock Trauma, 2002

Section C Constructing the Alternatives and Making a Decision

Step 3: Construct the Alternatives Two layers of decisions How to solve the problem? How to finance the solution? 35

Alternative Solutions Reduce amount of uncompensated care (e.g., universal health insurance; expand Medicaid eligibility criteria) Increase reimbursement rates for trauma care (e.g., increase Medicaid from 33% to 100% of Medicare) Pay physicians for on-call coverage 36

The Solution The Maryland Trauma Physician Services Fund Pay trauma physicians for uncompensated and undercompensated care Grants to trauma centers to cover physician on-call costs How to finance the solution?... 37

Step 3: Construct the Alternatives Alcohol tax: proposed in Calif., Ore. Motor vehicle fees: Md., Wash. Traffic fines: Miss., Wash., Ill., Tex. DUI/DWI convictions: Ill., Calif., N.C. Firearms tax/violations: Ill, Calif. Gas tax: None Property/sales/cigarette tax: Calif., Ariz. 38

Step 4: Select the Criteria Efficient Will it produce sufficient resources at low administration cost? Dependable Large stable tax base; are there other competing uses of the funds? Flexible Easily changed if more revenue needed Equitable Is the cost spread over all potential users of the service? Politically acceptable Is re-election possible? Population benefit Is there a health benefit associated with tax? 39

Step 5: Project the Outcomes Alcohol tax Motor vehicle registration Traffic court fees Gas tax Efficient Flexible Dependable Equitable Politically acceptable Population health benefit $20 million $0.20 per gallon $5.00 per registration $25.00 per case $0.01 per gallon 40

Step 5: Project the Outcomes Alcohol tax Motor vehicle registration Traffic court fees Gas tax Efficient ++ +++ + +++ Flexible ++ ++ + + Dependable ++ +++ + + Equitable ++ +++ ++ +++ Politically acceptable Population health benefit 0 +++ ++ 0 ++ 0 0 +? $20 million $0.20 per gallon $5.00 per registration $25.00 per case $0.01 per gallon 41

Step 5: Project the Outcomes Alcohol tax Motor vehicle registration Traffic court fees Gas tax Efficient ++ +++ + +++ Flexible ++ ++ + + Dependable ++ +++ + + Equitable ++ +++ ++ +++ Politically acceptable Population health benefit 0 +++ ++ 0 ++ 0 0 +? $20 million $0.20 per gallon $5.00 per registration $25.00 per case $0.01 per gallon 42

Step 6: Confront the Trade-offs Any we would eliminate? One alternative clearly dominant? Which criterion is most important? 43

Step 7: Making the Decision Increase MV registration fee by $2.00 Increase alcohol tax by $0.05 per gallon Increase traffic court fee by $10.00 Increase MV registration fee by $5.00 44

Policy Advocacy Maryland is a special case Only 12 states currently provide additional funding for trauma centers How to convince other states that trauma systems and trauma centers should be considered a public good? Focus groups with key legislative aids and state officials Development of a tool kit for decision makers 45