Harris Meyer August
31, 2019 01:00 AM
The 18 physician shareholders at Beacon
Orthopaedics in Cincinnati decided last year they needed an outside investor to
help them grow and compete more effectively in the rapidly consolidating
healthcare market.
After interviewing about 15 private
equity firms, the Beacon orthopedists selected Denver-based Revelstoke Capital
Partners to help them launch a management services organization that takes over
the business functions of the practice. That structure sidesteps rules in most
states barring nonphysicians from formally owning medical practices.
The MSO, which started in July, will
serve as the foundation for a new network of orthopedic groups across the
region and perhaps even nationally that would share management, billing,
staffing, credentialing, accounting, and other services. The 26-physician group
says it’s already in talks with more than a dozen other orthopedic practices
interested in joining the MSO.
Orthopedists, along with
gastroenterologists and urologists, are among the newest targets in the rush of private equity firms investing in physician
specialty groups over the past few years. These firms are attracted to
specialties that promise rich revenue from ambulatory surgery centers, lab,
imaging and other ancillary services. The trend is already far along in
dermatology, ophthalmology and dentistry.
Other orthopedic and gastroenterology
groups acquired by private equity firms over the past two years include the
Phoenix-based Core Institute, the Orthopaedic Institute in Gainesville, Fla.,
Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates, and Texas Digestive Disease Consultants in
Dallas-Fort Worth.
The proliferation of these deals has
raised alarm about whether ownership of physician practices by investors eyeing
a 400% return on their cash investment within a few years will affect overall
healthcare spending and quality of care. It’s set off an emotional debate
within medicine about potential pressure to provide unnecessary care and loss
of professional autonomy.
“It’s appropriate to be wary of new
people coming in and gobbling up practices,” said Dr. Arash Mostaghimi,
co-author of a recent JAMA Dermatology study on private equity acquisitions of
dermatology practices. “If you promote care that’s focused only on money,
humanity is lost,” he continued. “But there’s a lot to be gained from good
business practices and consolidation that produce better, more efficient care.
Probably both things will happen.”
“We’re simply focused on growing
the business and consolidating the market in orthopedic surgery in the best
interests of our patients.”
Dr. Peter Cha, president,
Beacon Orthopaedics
Revelstoke paid the Beacon shareholders
an undisclosed amount for a majority share of the management services
organization, with the physician group keeping ownership of the practice itself
and paying the management services organization a fee.
“The key to our decision to go with
Revelstoke was the ability of physician leadership to continue to manage and be
advocates for the care of our patients,” said Dr. Peter Cha, Beacon’s
president. “Time will tell whether we can take this into national markets.”
The big potential payday for both the
doctors and Revelstoke comes three to seven years down the line, when
Revelstoke sells the expanded business to another investor, most likely another
private equity firm but possibly an insurer, hospital system or another
physician company. Then the orthopedists will find themselves working with a
new managing partner.
“We’re not speculating as to who would
take over from Revelstoke,” said Cha, whose group also serves Dayton, Ohio, and
northern Kentucky. “We’re simply focused on growing the business and
consolidating the market in orthopedic surgery in the best interests of our
patients.”
Keeping autonomy, deep pockets
Despite the concerns, medical groups
are rushing into the arms of private equity investors. They see this as an
alternative to ownership by hospital systems or insurers that they believe will
preserve their professional autonomy and enable them to serve a much larger
market.
There were 181 private equity deals for all types of physician
practices last year, according to an analysis published in Bloomberg Law. In
dermatology alone, there were nearly 200 practices acquired by private equity firms over
the past six years, according to the JAMA Dermatology study.
We’re not in the business of telling doctors how to practice medicine;
we’re in the business of taking away roadblocks and making the practice easier
and better for providers. The experience is better for patients, and payers like
it as well.”
Andrew Welch, managing director, Revelstoke Capital Partners
In these deals, the shareholder
physicians receive a large cash payment upfront—which is particularly
attractive to older doctors near retirement—with the prospect of a much larger
bonanza when the private equity firm sells to another buyer. The initial
payment is based on a multiple of the practice’s earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, ranging from low single digits
to as much as 12 times EBITDA.
The doctors generally pay for their
equity interest by taking up to a 30% cut in their compensation, said James
Heidbreder, managing director of Coker Capital Advisors, which has brokered
nearly a dozen of these deals. They also contribute valuable practice assets
such as ancillary services to the new management firm.
A number of medical groups,
particularly in dermatology and ophthalmology, are already on their second
private equity owner, following a “liquidity event” in which the first owner
cashed out. There is little public information on how lucrative these
transactions have been for investors and physicians.
In one deal, Varsity Healthcare
Partners sold its ownership interest in Forefront Dermatology to OMERS Private
Equity in 2016 for a reported $450 million, 15 times the medical group’s
EBITDA, according to PitchBook. Forefront now has 130 clinics in 16 states.
Private equity firms say these deals
are proving successful financially, and the proof is that many are eager to
keep investing in medical groups.
Advocates say private equity partners
can help physician groups grow and improve their efficiency and quality of care
through better management and technology, as well as readying them for new value-based
payment models. They also can help the practices become one-stop shops for all
needed services, and speed the shift to lower-cost outpatient settings.
“We’re not in the business of telling
doctors how to practice medicine; we’re in the business of taking away
roadblocks and making the practice easier and better for providers,” said
Andrew Welch, Revelstoke’s managing director. “The experience is better for
patients, and payers like it as well.”
Docs keep equity
On the other hand, private equity investors
like Welch structure the deals to ensure the physicians have a strong stake in
the business’ profitability. “We don’t want a situation where the doctors just
run clinical and we run the business and we’re not aligned on the overall
strategic direction,” he said. “We try to keep the physician leadership very
active on the business side as well.”
With their improved quality, larger
size, and expanded services and locations, the private equity-backed groups
also have more clout to negotiate better deals with payers, though they
downplay this to avoid attracting attention from antitrust regulators.
“The goal is to develop market
leverage,” said Bill Brown, a healthcare strategist with Nashville-based A2B
Advisors. “It’s a war of who can get big enough in any area to get payers to treat
you with respect.”
Some observers say private
equity-backed management firms also bring practice standards that protect
patients from lesser-quality practitioners.
“In small practices, if one doctor is a
bad apple, it’s almost impossible for the others to do anything about it,” said
Dr. Lawrence Casalino, a health policy professor at the Weill Cornell Medical
College who’s studying private equity deals with physicians. “Whereas (the
private equity firm) can get rid of the bad apple or make him behave.”
There are few published studies so far
on the impact of these deals, though researchers are gathering data and
promising results within the next year.
In small practices, if one doctor is a bad apple, it’s almost impossible
for the others to do anything about it. Whereas (the private equity firm) can
get rid of the bad apple or make him behave.”
Dr. Lawrence Casalino, a health policy professor at the Weill Cornell Medical
College who’s studying private equity deals with physicians
Some early studies, however, already
have raised concerns about private equity ownership of
dermatology groups leading to loss of physician autonomy, conflicts of interest, increased utilization of high-cost
services and inadequate supervision of midlevel clinicians.
A recent editorial in JAMA Dermatology urged a halt to private equity acquisitions of dermatology
practices until more data is available on cost and quality outcomes.
“This does not seem to be a step in the
direction of value-based, lower-cost care,” said Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, vice
dean for public health practice at Johns Hopkins University who co-wrote the
editorial.
A study by Yale University researchers published last year
found that two large, private equity-owned medical groups, TeamHealth and
EmCare, aggressively used out-of-network billing tactics to boost revenue.
Insurers and other groups have pointed to private equity ownership as a culprit
in the current congressional battle over legislation to end surprise
out-of-network medical bills.
“My biggest concern is private equity
firms aren’t focused on making healthcare better,” said Zack Cooper, an
associate professor of health policy at Yale who co-authored that study. “They
are focused on hunting out narrow slivers of the healthcare system where they
can make significant amounts of money by exploiting loopholes.”
Questioning the model
Another looming question is whether the
private equity business model is sustainable for medical practices,
particularly after the first buyer cashes out. Observers wonder how much growth
and greater efficiency can be achieved to enable subsequent investors to
continue to pull large profits out of the practices.
“Who’s going to be the ultimate buyer?”
Casalino asked. “If there is no ultimate buyer, then things don’t turn out so
well.”
Buyers and sellers say they’re acutely
aware of the disastrous experience with the wave of investor-owned
physician management companies in the 1990s. A number of those companies, along
with the physician practices they acquired, went bankrupt. Some have called
those ventures Ponzi schemes.
But today’s environment and deals are
sharply different from the ’90s in key ways, private equity investors and
consultants say. “Everyone is positioning for value-based payment initiatives
and population health, and smaller medical groups see they need capital and
expertise to succeed in that,” said Gary Herschman, an attorney at Epstein
Becker & Green who advises clients in these transactions.
Instead of putting physicians on salary
as earlier management companies did—and as some hospital systems still do—smart
private equity firms now structure deals to make physicians business partners
with strong financial incentives to boost productivity and revenue, said Nader
Naini, managing partner at Seattle-based Frazier Healthcare Partners. His firm
closed a deal with Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates last December to form a
management services organization platform called United Digestive.
Also unlike before, investors are
bringing in experienced medical executives to provide management and technology
help in integrating practices.
Still, Naini worries some private
equity investors continue to see this as a pure financial play, with the goal
of acquiring more and more practices rather than building high-quality,
integrated medical groups. “If you don’t integrate, you are slapping s*** on
top of s***,” he said. “There are still people in the market who have that
mentality of the ’90s, and we’ll have circumstances that don’t work out.”
My biggest concern is private equity firms aren’t focused on making
healthcare better. They are focused on hunting out narrow slivers of the
healthcare system where they can make significant amounts of money by
exploiting loopholes.”
Zack Cooper, associate professor of health policy at Yale
Chris Gordon, managing director at Bain
Capital Private Equity, who also lived through the 1990s fiasco, wonders
whether private equity investments in medical practices are moving too far and
fast. He’s particularly skeptical about orthopedic group deals because market
power in that specialty depends on specific physicians and referral patterns.
“People are deciding every specialty
should be rolled up into a physician practice management platform,” he said. “I
wouldn’t say it’s a bubble but it’s probably a little euphoria. It’s still not
obvious that the whole world of physicians should be moving toward” practice
management companies.
He’s one of many observers who see the
rapid growth of these deals as a risky national experiment that could produce
both successes and disasters.
Even so, Weill Cornell’s Casalino said
many physicians believe they have no good alternative to accepting the
uncertain outcome of private equity investment, given doctors’ often-negative
experiences with hospital ownership of practices.
“Once you do it, you don’t know what
life will be like in five years, because you’ve given up control of your
destiny,” he said. “But that may be fine with some doctors, as opposed to
selling to their local hospital, where they know all too well what their
destiny is and they may not like it much.”
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