Staying Ahead of the CurveRevenue Cycle Change
Joseph J. Fifer, FHFMA, CPAPresident and CEO, HFMA
2014 MAHAP-MPAA-HFMA Michigan Revenue Cycle ConferenceSeptember 18, 2014
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Key Trends Affecting Revenue Cycle Leaders
1. Intensifying regulatory scrutiny (RACs, etc).
2. Preparing for ICD-10
3. Adapting to emerging payment models
4. Integrating with physicians and affiliated providers
5. Reducing costs
6. Impact of the Affordable Care Act
7. Adopting a patient-centered approach
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CMS RAC Settlement Offer
• Situation: CMS backlog of up to 800,000 cases has resulted in hospitals waiting up to 18 months to resolve a case.
• CMS is offering 68% of the net payable sum that most hospitals had appealed or planned to appeal of patient status claim denials.
• CMS’s stated goal is to “quickly reduce the volume of patient status claim denials pending in the appeals process.”
• HFMA Analysis: Each qualifying organization should evaluate the offer in the context of its case mix & historical success rate with appeals.
• Solving the backlog without addressing the root problem is only a Band-Aid solution. This offer does not address higher costs beneficiaries face when a RAC denies stay that would have otherwise qualified a patient for medically necessary skilled nursing care.
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ICD-10 Readiness Still Low
Source: Reader/CHIME survey reveals 12 ICD-10 delay surprises. SearchHealthIT. http://searchhealthit.techtarget.com/news/2240228031/Reader-CHIME-survey-reveals-12-ICD-10-delay-surprises
Only 11 percent of respondents to a survey conducted in summer 2014 reported that they are ready for ICD-10.
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Claims Processing Must Adapt to Reflect Changing Payment Models
Fee for Service Per DiemEpisode of Care
(Individual Provider)
Episode of Care
(Multiple Providers)
Capitation: Condition-
SpecificCapitation:
Full
Changing Payment
Changing Claims Processing
Insurance exchanges – plansNarrow networksHigh deductibles
501(r) requirements
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Fee-For Service Still Dominant. . . What Is the Tipping Point?
• Catalyst for Payment Reform found that only about 11 percent of all hospital payments were “value-oriented” in 2013.
• But even that may be high, because for 43 percent of these, providers were not at risk for their financial performance.
• We haven’t reached the tipping point yet, and it’s not clear what it will be.
• When that tipping point comes, revenue cycle must be ready.
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Realignment Is Erasing Traditional Healthcare Boundaries
Driven by demands for care transformation, the healthcare industry is realigning at an an unprecedented pace.
The Triple Aim framework was developed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass. (www.ihi.org).
SHARED GOAL
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Revenue Cycle Integration: Can It Keep Pace with Realignment?
• Improves efficiency by reducing costs and eliminating duplication and waste
• Prepares organization for integrated care delivery models
• Boosts patient satisfaction and retention
• Cultural barriers between hospitals and other care settings
• IT systems that are difficult or impossible to integrate
• Lack of leadership support
• Limited opportunities for collaboration between hospitals and payers
ChallengesBenefits
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A Perspective on the Long-Term Revenue Cycle Cost Imperative
“Health care is the only industry that has a revenue cycle with a designated subsector of companies that manage it. It costs 20 to 30 cents on the dollar to cross a trade in health care – to take the money from the buyer of health care, the self-insured employer, and put it into the pockets of the providers. If any other industry had a revenue cycle like that, we'd all be living like the Amish. Wall Street crosses a trade for fractions of a penny. There's an enormous opportunity to take costs out of the process by actually fixing the revenue cycle. And by fixing I don't mean by incremental process improvements. I mean blowing it up. And really rethinking the process of how we go about getting doctors and hospitals paid.“
-Sean Wieland, Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, Piper Jaffray
“Revenue Cycle Ripe for Radical Change,” Healthcare IT News, Dec. 9, 2013
http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/revenue-cycle-ripe-radical-change
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Why a Patient-Centered Approach Matters Now
• Patients are paying more of their health care out-of-pocket, due to increase in HDHPs and cost-sharing
• As a result, receivables are shifting from third-party payers to patients
• This shift
– Puts more pressure on revenue cycle processes
– Raises concerns for patients –and patients’ expectations of providers
• Big picture: we see a shift toward a more patient-centric industry
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ACA Enrollees Choose Lower Premiums Now & Higher Patient Share Later
Source: American Action Forum. May 15, 2014.Late ACA Enrollment Dominated by Bronze and Silver Plans.http://americanactionforum.org/uploads/files/serialized_products/Weekly_Checkup_20140515.pdf
Avg. Silver Plan Deductibles:
$2,907 Individual; $6,078 Family% Covered: 70%
ACA Enrollees Are Opting for High-Deductible Plans
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ACA Discourages Out-of-Network Care—But Patients May Not Understand That
• ACA regulations cap a patient’s annual out-of-pocket expense for in-network care.
• But the patient’s responsibility—and the hospital’s exposure—is unlimited for care delivered out-of-network.
• And nearly 4 in 10 non-group insurance enrollees (37%) in a recent study didn’t know the amount of their deductible.
• Source: Kaiser Family Foundation. Survey of Non-Group Health Insurance Enrollees. June 19, 2014. http://kff.org/health-reform/report/survey-of-non-group-health-insurance-enrollees/
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Many Newly Insured Don’t Understand Basic Insurance Terms
Source: Public Understanding of Basic Health Insurance Concepts on the Eve of Reform. Urban Institute. Dec. 2013.http://hrms.urban.org/briefs/hrms_literacy.html
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• * Estimate is statistically different from estimate for the previous year shown (p<.05). • NOTE: These estimates include workers enrolled in HDHP/SO and other plan types. Average general annual health plan deductibles for PPOs, POS• plans, and HDHP/SOs are for in-network services. • SOURCE: Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Benefits, 2006-2013.
Employees Are Also Sharing More Costs; Not Necessarily by Choice
Percentage of covered workers enrolled in a plan with a general annual deductible of $1,000 or more for single coverage, by firm size, 2006-2013
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Even at higher income levels, collection yields on balances after insurance drop precipitously as balances increase
Balance: $0 - $250 Balance: $250 - $500 Balance: > $500FPL < 200% 200- 400% > 400%
FPL < 200% 200- 400% > 400%
FPL < 200% 200- 400% > 400%
60 Day 29.1% 38.0% 44.7% 22.9% 31.7% 38.9% 5.6% 9.6% 15.6%120 Day 37.2% 46.7% 54.1% 30.4% 40.4% 49.0% 7.5% 12.5% 19.9%180 Day 39.8% 49.2% 56.6% 33.9% 43.8% 52.6% 8.6% 14.0% 21.9%
360 Day 41.9% 51.4% 58.5% 37.5% 47.3% 56.2% 10.2% 16.0% 24.5%
75% Decline
Source: David Franklin; Connance; Patient Pay Collectability Data Study Review; March 14, 2014
Providers’ Collection Yields Fall as Balance After Insurance Increases
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Dissatisfied Patients Are Less Likely to Pay
Source: Steve Levin, “What to Expect in Round Two of the Health Insurance Exchanges.” HFMA Revenue Cycle Strategist, Sept. 2014. http://www.hfma.org/Content.aspx?id=24697
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How to Adopt a Patient-Centered Approach to Revenue Cycle
• Before (or at) the time of service
– Help patients understand what they will be expected to pay
• After the time of service
– Ensure that patients with unresolved accounts are treated fairly
• Throughout the time that patients are interacting with you
– Treat patients with empathy and respect
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Patients Want Better Price Information
“Participants repeatedly said they wanted to
see a resource, or ask their doctor, to
better understand what a particular test or
procedure would cost before they agreed
to it, and wanted to comparison shop
among providers when possible. They said
that they also wanted the ability to know
what a treatment should cost before they
agreed to it, and needed more transparent
information on price in order to do
this….They were very interested in efforts
to share information on price and quality.”• Source: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Consumer Attitudes on Healthcare Costs: Insights from
Focus Groups in Four U.S. Cities. January 2013. http://www.rwjf.org/en/research-publications/find-rwjf-research/2013/01/consumer-attitudes-on-health-care-costs--insights-from-focus-gro.html
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Our Payment System Was Not Designed for Price Transparency
• Historically, prices have served a wholesale function
• Only recently have prices been viewed as retail
• Without transparency, neither consumers nor hospitals could compare hospital prices
• With thousands of items, the chargemaster is not “transparency-friendly”—and not reflective of “price”
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Would this be a reasonable pricing system for buying a truck? Yet , that is the system hospitals and doctors are REQUIRED to use
The Time Is Right for Price Transparency
In a system where. . .
– Charges are primarily used as a factor in a payment calculation
– Actual prices are essentially invisible to the consumer, and…
– Charges have little relationship to the service being acquired
. . . change is inevitable!
We all contributed to this situation—hospitals, physicians, payers, the business community, and even patients.
We all need to work together to fix it!
HFMA Resources to Help You Improve the Billing and Payment Experience for Patients
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hfma.org/dollars
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HFMA Price Transparency Task Force Report
• Clarifies basic definitions that are often misused
• Sets forth guiding principles
• Establishes roles for payers, providers, others
• Reflects consensus of key stakeholders
hfma.org/dollars
Cost, charge, and price should not be used as interchangeable terms.
• Cost varies by the party incurring the expense.
• Charge is the dollar amount a provider sets for services rendered before negotiating any discounts.
• Price is the total amount a provider expects to be paid by payers and patients for healthcare services.
Definitions of Key Terms
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Care Purchaser
• Individual or entity that contributes to the purchase of healthcare services.
Payer
• An organization that negotiates or sets rates for provider services, collects revenue through premium payments or tax dollars, processes provider claims for service, and pays provider claims using collected premium or tax revenues.
Provider
• An entity, organization, or individual that furnishes a healthcare service.
Definitions of Parties to a Transaction
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An Actionable Definition of Price Transparency
Readily available information on the price of
healthcare services, that, together with other
information, helps define the value of those services
and enables patients and other care purchasers to
identify, compare, and choose providers that offer
the desired level of value.
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Guiding Principles
Price transparency information should:
• Empower patients and other care purchasers to make meaningful price comparisons
• Be easy to use and easy to communicate
• Be paired with other information that defines the value of services for the care purchaser
• Enable patients to understand the total price of their care and what is included in that price
And price transparency will require the commitment and active participation of all stakeholders.
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Roles for Key Stakeholders
• Health plans should serve as the principal source of price information for their members
• Providers should be the principal source of information for uninsured patients and out-of-network care
• Referring clinicians should use price information to benefit patients
• All stakeholders can offer a price information resource to consumers
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• Health plans should serve as the principal source of price information for their members.
• Tools for insured patients should include:
– The total estimated price of the service
– A clear indication of whether a particular provider is in the health plan’s network
– A clear statement of the patient’s estimated out-of-pocket payment responsibility
– Other relevant information on the provider or service sought
Health Plan Role
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Provider Role
For uninsured patients and out-of-network care, providers should:
• Offer an estimated price for a standard procedure and make clear how complications may increase the price.
• Clearly communicate pre-service estimates of prices.
• Clearly state what services are included in an estimate.
• Give patients other relevant information, where available.
Referring Clinician Role
Physicians and other referring clinicians should
• Help patients make informed decisions about treatment plans
• Recognize the needs of price-sensitive patients
• Help patients identify providers that offer the best value
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Employer Role
• Employers should continue to use and expand transparency tools that help their employees identify higher-value providers
• Self-funded employers should identify data that will help them
– Shape benefit design
– Understand their healthcare spending
– Provide transparency tools to employees
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Pricing Resource for Consumers
• Describes how to request price
estimates, step by step
• Clarifies what estimates may or
may not include
• Explains in-network and
out-of-network care
• Defines key terms
• Available for posting on your
website at no charge
• Hardcopies available for purchase
in bulk at a nominal price through
AHA’s online storehfma.org/transparencyahaonlinestore.org
• Determining effect of transparency on prices
– For consumers, more transparency is better.
– But in the B2B marketplace, the jury is still out.
• Surfacing issues with out-of-network balance billing
– Inadvertent out-of-network use (e.g., anesthesiologists, pathologists)
– Emergency care
• Reassessing hospital chargemasters
– It is time for change!
Transparency Issues Yet to Be Addressed
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Identify a reasonable starting point
Assess whether your pricing structure is transparency-ready
Consider how care purchasers will access the information you provide
Identify other information sources that will help patients assess the value of the services you provide.
Work on a collaborative basis with the payers in your market
Be prepared to explain healthcare pricing
Checklist for Preparing for Price Transparency
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Every day, healthcare professionals conduct sensitive financial discussions with patients. But there have been no accepted, consistent best practices to guide them in these discussions—until now
hfma.org/dollars
Communication Is Critical Throughout the Process
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What the Best Practices Cover
Provision of Care
Registration and Insurance
Verification
Financial Counseling
Patient Share
Prior Balances (if applicable)
Balance Resolution
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Designed for the Most Needed Settings & Purposes
Emergency Department
Time of Service (Outside the
ED)
Advance of Service
Practices for All Settings
Measurement Criteria
Framework
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Benefit Patients and Providers
• Encourage patients to talk with a financial counselor about any financial concerns
• Identify opportunities to locate additional or alternative insurance coverage
• Determine how accounts will be resolved through conversation
• Identify patients who fall under the 501(r) regulations
• Benefit from the public relations value of a satisfied consumer vs. an unhappy consumer
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Achieve Recognition as an Adopter
• Recognition demonstrates commitment to best practices
• Based on HFMA review of an application and supporting documentation
• All provider organizations may apply
• Recognition valid for two years
• Adopters may use the phrase “Supporter of the Patient Financial Communications Best Practices” in their marketing materials
Best Practices for Medical Debt
• We want to find solutions that are balanced, fair, and reasonable.
• We keep patients informed about payment expectations and time frames.
• The business practices that we—and our business affiliates use—have been approved at the Board level.
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By following the HFMA Best Practices for Medical Account Resolution, your organization is affirming that. . .
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Selected Best Practices
• Educate patients and follow best practices for communication
• Make all bills and other communications clear, concise, correct, and patient-friendly
• Establish policies and make sure they are followed internally and by business affiliates
• Be consistent in key aspects of account resolution—from billing disputes to payment application
• Coordinate with business affiliates to avoid duplicative patient contacts
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Selected Best Practices (cont.)
• Exercise good judgment about the best ways to communicate with patients about bills
• Start the account resolution clock when the first statement is sent to the patient
• Report back to credit bureaus when an account is resolved (in the event that an account is reported to a credit bureau)
• Track all consumer complaints.
• Draw on best practices, principles, and guidelines to inform your organization’s approach
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The Revenue Cycle Model Must Change
Historical Model The Near Future
Gather basic info before & at the time of service.
Most billing processes are post-service, amounts due based on data gathered after service, calculated retrospectively.
Patients notified of financial obligations after insurance is billed & paid.
Pre-Service
At Service
Post-service: Retrospective Data
Gathering and Processing
Pre-Service: Prospective Data
Gathering and Processing
At Service
Post-Service
Gather info before & at time of service.
Prospectivelycalculate expected out-
of-pocket costs.
Providers bill at or right after time of service. Many times,
patients know in advance what they owe & agree on
terms.
Insurance bill verifies what the patient already expects.
What we have before us are some breathtaking opportunities disguised as insoluble problems.
John GardnerSecretary, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1965