By Carmen Heredia Rodriguez APRIL 26, 2019
Eric
Lewis’ plans for expansion have derailed.
As
chief executive officer of Olympic Medical Center, he oversees efforts to
provide care to roughly 75,000 people in Clallam County, in the isolated, rural
northwestern corner of Washington state.
Last
year, Lewis planned to build a primary care clinic in Sequim, a town about 17
miles from the medical center’s main campus in Port Angeles.
But
those plans were put aside, Lewis said, because of a change in federal
reimbursements this year. Medicare has opted to pay hospitals with outpatient
facilities that are “off campus” a lower rate, equivalent to what it pays
independent doctors for clinic visits.
Over
the past decade, hospitals have been rapidly building outpatient clinics or
purchasing existing independent ones. It was a lucrative business strategy
because such clinics could charge higher rates, on the premise that they were
part of a hospital.
With
its new policy, Medicare is essentially saying that an off-campus office is an
off-campus office, regardless of whether it’s owned by a hospital, a group of
doctors or a solo practitioner.
Making
that statement will save Medicare — and possibly patients — money. The federal
insurer bore the brunt of its members’ extra charges, but beneficiaries
sometimes picked up part of that expense through deductibles and copayments.
Patients with commercial insurance often were blindsided by high bills — going
to what seemed to be a normal primary care clinic, only to discover they were
charged a hospital facility fee, for example.
Health
policy experts said the new policy represents an important step in
rationalizing payments. The new policy — part of a strategy called
“site-neutral” payment — has its roots in the Obama administration and was part
of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015.
“You
don’t care about where [your treatment is] happening. You care that it’s a safe
and inexpensive procedure,” said Gerard Anderson, director of the Johns Hopkins
Center for Hospital Finance and Management. “And the facility fee just adds to
the cost with very little added value.”
The new
payment structure may hurt some hospitals financially, he and other experts
acknowledged. But making reimbursements more uniform across providers
facilitates competition and may lead commercial insurance to follow suit —
which could translate to more savings.
The
policy’s two-part phase-in cut Medicare payments for clinic visits to
outpatient departments by 30% this year, according to the rule finalized
in November. By 2020, the rate will be cut another 30%.
The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) estimates the change
will save the federal government $380
million this year and patients an average of $7 every time they
visit a hospital-owned clinic because their copayments will be lower. Clinic
visits are the most commonly charged service for
hospital outpatient care in Medicare.
It
could also cut down on consolidation in the industry, experts said, by closing
the loophole that created incentives for hospitals to purchase independent
physician practices and charge higher rates for services at taxpayers’ expense.
The
American Hospital Association filed a lawsuit in December alleging that CMS
overstepped its authority when setting the new reimbursement schedule. Olympic
Medical Center is among the named plaintiffs.
The
hospital association claims that the new rule infringes on a precedent Congress
set with the 2015 budget law. That legislation standardized Medicare payments
for clinic visits to physicians’ offices and new hospital outpatient
facilities, but allowed most hospital-affiliated departments that existed at
that time to continue receiving a higher rate, according to a comment letter from
the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. The group is a nonpartisan agency
that advises Congress.
The
differential for site-based payments was designed originally to help hospitals
offset the higher costs they incur for maintaining the staff and equipment to
handle a wide variety of treatments, said Christopher Whaley, an associate
policy researcher at the research organization Rand Corp.
But
that relief became an incentive for hospitals to
buy independent practices, said Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, associate professor of
health care policy and medicine at Harvard Medical School. Hospitals could
charge higher prices for services performed in newly acquired clinics. Mehrotra
said the new CMS rule could be a way to slow down the trend.
“This
isn’t going to fully put the brakes on it,” he said, “but it could be one push
on the brakes here to kind of push that consolidation down.”
Some
experts have urged the government to expand the
number of services covered by the site-neutral policy, including paying
hospitals’ on-site clinics a rate equivalent to what independent doctors
receive.
Hospitals
acknowledged the change implemented by CMS could lead to savings in the health
care system, but they say it comes at the cost of patient access. In Washington
state, Lewis anticipates a loss of $1.6 million for his hospital. The lack of a
clinic in Sequim means ailing patients there will not be able to get care close
to their homes, he said.
“If
you’re well-to-do financially, these aren’t big problems,” Lewis added. “But I
think the poorest, elderly, sickest of our society will pay the price of this
policy.”
Said
Melinda Hatton, general counsel for the hospital association: “I think access
trumps a couple extra dollars in copays every single time.”
On the
other hand, many independent physicians support the change. Marni Jameson
Carey, executive director of the Association of Independent Doctors, echoed the
experts’ hope that the rule will curb consolidation. According to a report by the
consulting firm Avalere Health, the number of hospital-owned physician
practices more than doubled, from 35,700 to 80,000, between July 2012 and
January 2018. Hospitals own more than 31% of all physician practices, the
researchers said.
Jameson
Carey said these mergers can also cause problems for the local economy. When a
nonprofit hospital acquires an independent clinic, it effectively removes a
tax-paying business from the area. That’s because nonprofit hospitals are
exempt from paying certain federal, state and local taxes in exchange for
providing community benefits.
“So not
only do they [hospitals] get the facility fee,” Jameson Carey said, but also,
“they don’t have to pay taxes.”
Carmen
Heredia Rodriguez: CarmenH@kff.org, @ByCHRodriguez
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