A Bundled Payment can be defined as “a single package price that provides a positive margin for a comprehensive and specific set of healthcare services delivered by multiple providers over a specified period of time.”
There is growing consensus that this payment methodology, and the powerful spillover effect from extensive care redesign associated with its implementation, may be the most effective strategy to reduce spiraling healthcare costs.
The secondary hypothesis is that bundled payment creates sufficient financial incentives to encourage multiple stakeholders to re-align and focus on improving the value of healthcare delivered to the patient.
There is data, including from the Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute (CJRI), which supports these hypotheses. Despite growing interest in bundled payment methodology, however, there are numerous upside challenges and downside risks. In this webinar, these issues will be reviewed and a cogent strategy for implementing a bundled payment program presented.
About the Speaker:
Dr. Steven F. Schutzer graduated with Honors from Union College 1974 and then the University of Virginia School Of Medicine in 1978. Dr. Schutzer was a Lieutenant in the Medical Corps of the United States Navy between 1979 and 1981. He did his General Surgical training at the University of Rochester and then completed his Orthopedic Residency at the University of Connecticut in 1985. He was then a Fellow in Adult Hip and Reconstructive Surgery at the Massachusetts General Hospital and entered practice with Orthopedic Associates of Hartford in July 1986.
He is currently on the staff of St. Francis Hospital, Hartford Hospital and the University of Connecticut John Dempsey Hospital. Dr. Schutzer is a Founding Member and the Medical Director of the Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute. He is also President of Connecticut Joint Replacement Surgeons, LLC. Dr. Schutzer is a member of AAOS, AAHKS, and the Orthopedic Research Society.
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Implementing Bundled Payments: A Deeper Dive
1. Steven F. Schutzer, MD
Medical Director, Connecticut Joint
Replacement Institute
President, Connecticut Joint Replacment
Surgeons, LLC
2. Steven F. Schutzer, MD
Disclosures
• Medical Director, CT Joint Replacement Institute
• President, CT Joint Replacement Surgeons, LLC
• Investor, Renovis Surgical Technologies
• Unpaid Consultant, Renovis Surgical Technologies
• Editorial staff, J. Arthroplasty
• Principal, Novel Healthcare Solutions, LLC
3. The entrepreneurial spirit of the
independent private practice surgeon,
working at an arms length relationship
with a hospital partner, can more rapidly
and effectively create sustainable
healthcare value than other contemporary
alignment models.
Bias
4. “He who is not courageous enough to take risk,
will accomplish nothing in life.”
Muhammad Ali
5. Adapted from NEJM 361:16 8/9/09 Bohmer and Lee
“An important transition has begun in payment for health
care delivery in the US: organizations that have long been
paid for transactions, such as visits or procedures are
beginning to be paid for producing outcomes for populations.”
6. Traditional healthcare contracting
1. Cost shifting
2. Bargaining clout
3. Restricting choice/access
4. Dispute resolution via Court System
(tort)
“Zero Sum Competition”
7. Traditional healthcare contracting
1. Cost shifting
2. Bargaining clout
3. Restricting choice/access
4. Dispute resolution via Court System
(tort)
“Zero Sum Competition”
Provider financial success = Patient success
8. Professor Porter:
“Create the right kind of competition”
“Positive Sum Competition”
Based on creation of healthcare value and market
competition aligned with outcomes/cost for a
specific medical condition.
9. How can you achieve healthcare
value?
1. Integrated Practice Units
2. Integrated delivery networks
3. Scale it up
4. IT platforms
5. Measure outcomes and cost
6. Manage risk
7. Bundled Payments
10. What is a “bundled payment”
“single package price for a comprehensive
and specific set of healthcare services that
provides a positive margin for services
delivered to a patient by multiple providers
over a defined period of time (episode)”
11. Bundled Payment: why is CMS
interested in this option?
“The enemy is fragmentation. We just don't seem
to form the coalitions (read: alignments), nor the
communities we need to make progress”.
12. Bundled Payments:
the hypothesis
Create financial motivation to
collaborate/integrate/align and to
implement effective care redesign
strategies:
1. coordinate patient care
2. reduce variability
3. improve operational efficiencies
4. reduce low volume services
13. 2 key re-alignments necessary for
sustainable healthcare value
1. Providers, Payers…and Patients
2. unit of reimbursement with the unit of
healthcare value delivered to the patient
Bundled Payments…the most effective
strategy?
14. What is the evidence that Bundling
works in healthcare?
1. Medicare 5 year CABG Demonstration
2. 2009 NEJM article
3. Prometheus models/pilots
4. Provencare experience
5. Medicare ACE Demonstration project
6. CJRI data
15. Medicare ACE demonstration for
Orthopedic Surgery
• 5 Hospitals, In-patient costs (THA and TKA)
combined Part A & B
• Pilot began 2009
• Surgeon incentives (reimbursement up to
125% of Medicare fee)
• Patient incentives:
“Medicare will share 50 percent of the
savings it gains under the demonstration with
the Medicare beneficiary up to a maximum of
the annual Part B premium, currently $1,259”.
16. Medicare ACE demonstration for
Orthopedic Surgery
1. Closer ties with surgeons (changed behavior)
2. Significant investment necessary (2.5 FTE)
3. Profits arise from spillover benefits
4. Savings from device cost reductions
5. Substantial quality benefits
Ardent Health
ABC White paper, Jan. 2012
17. Physician/Hospital alignment
strategies
1. Co-management models
a. True “Co-management” models
b. Consultant Agreement without gain sharing
c. Consultant Agreement plus gain sharing
2. Bundled Payment models
a. Pure gain sharing
b. Consultant Agreement without gain sharing
c. Consultant Agreement plus gain sharing
3. Employment models
a. Performance bonus
b. Gain sharing
18. Provider alignment strategies:
Bundled payment
Under BP contracts (without gain sharing)
alignment is achieved by tying Physician
reimbursement for services with
compliance with consensus based best
practices/EBM protocols.
19. Connecticut Joint Replacement Surgeons, LLC
incorporated November, 2006
• 10 “community” Arthroplasty surgeons
from 5 different private orthopedic
practices
• Shared vision…create a world class
Institute for Joint Replacement surgery
• Commitment to “standardization”
• Commitment to “data driven” decision
making
20. CJRS, LLC
incorporated November, 2006
5 Core principles of our MOU:
1. Surgeon management
2. Dedicated multidisciplinary staff
3. Separate line of business
4. “hospital within a hospital”
5. Research investment (4 FTEs and Registry)
21. CJRS, LLC
incorporated November, 2006
• Consulting Services Agreement signed July 27,
2007
• CJRS, LLC manages CJRI (an Arthroplasty service
line)
• Our work has been valued by an outside source
• The LLC receives a monthly stipend for it’s work
• No gain sharing
• First case done July 31, 2007
22. The Bundled Payment program
at CJRI: “Step Ahead” plan
Three “Parties” (Anesthesia, Saint Francis, CJRS)
started negotiations in July, 2009.
Our “Basket of Care” Agreement was signed in
August, 2010.
23. Implementing a Bundled Payment program:
essential elements
1. CEO/Hospital Administration
2. Physicians Leaders/Physicians
3. Trust and transparency
4. Savvy Legal Counsel
5. Robust quality and cost monitoring
systems…clean data
6. Mature service line
7. Adequate case volume
24. 8 Steps to Development of a Bundled
Payment program
1. Build the dedicated team
2. Define the episode
3. Define performance measures (Cost and Quality)
4. Develop the Care Models
5. Cost reduction opportunities
6. Price the Bundle
7. Gain-sharing or other methods of compensation
8. Develop Continuous Process Improvements
9. Align with Post-acute providers
25. 1. Build the dedicated team
For the effort to succeed, there needs to
be a “cultural transformation” focused
on creation of a new healthcare delivery
model
27. 1. Build the dedicated team
Surgeon Co-Medical Directors
Anesthesiologists
Executive Director
Program Director
Hospital COO
Hospital CFO
Hospital CNO
Legal Representation
28. 2. Define the Episode
Detailed definitions:
1. which Parties involved
2. duties of each Party
3. define the “bundle”
4. define the time frame (EOC)
29. 2. Define the Episode
5. warranty (define covered service and
time frame)
6. cost over runs
7. best practices and EBM
30. 2. Define the Episode
Duties of each Party: Hospital
Provide the infrastructure necessary to
operate the program and service line
including facilities, staff, support
services, marketing, data resources,
Registry…and billing and collection for all 3
Parties.
31. 2. Define the Episode
Duties of each Party: Surgeon
1. Appropriateness for surgery
2. Perform surgery
3. Routine post-op in-patient care
4. Adhere to any and all guidelines and
protocols
5. Coordinate daily patient care
6. Strategic leadership in development and
implementation of the Program and best
practices
32. 2. Define the Episode
Duties of each Party: Anesthesia
1. pre-op patient review to determine
eligibility and risk stratification (“none or
minimal systemic disease”)
2. Customary Anesthesia services
3. Adhere to best practice and protocols
4. Post-op pain management
33. The “Step Ahead” program at CJRI is offered
to patients less than 70 years of age who are
candidates for standard primary THA or TKA
with either none or minimal systemic disease
(would also exclude patients with certain
conditions)
34. 2. Define the Episode
expenses and excess costs
• Cash reserves:
(a) Operating reserve
(b) Claim reserve
• Cost over runs: shared and not shared
• Claims: Low claim, High claim, Insured claim
• Stop Loss coverage
35. 2. Define the Episode
expenses and excess costs
• Cash reserves:
(a) Operating reserve
(b) Claim reserve
• Cost over runs: shared and not shared
• Claims: Low claim, High claim, Insured claim
• Stop Loss coverage
36. Excess costs: not shared
“Excess costs resulting from unwarranted or
deliberate deviation from the approved
protocols.”
37. Excess costs: shared
a. Low claim-
cost over runs under $5K come off the
top
b. High claim-
cost over runs in excess of $5K (but less
than $10K) are deducted from the claim
reserve
c. Insured claim-
cost over runs in excess of $10K
38. “Step Ahead”
Stop Loss policy
Provided by our Med Malpractice carrier
$250,000 annual contract limit
$10K deductible per claim
Shared excess costs greater than $10K
become an “Insured claim”
39. 2. Define the Episode
Patient Warranty
Negotiable terms
Re-admissions for surgical site complications:
wound complications (hematomas,
infections, cellulitis, dehiscence)
peri-prosthetic fractures
instability
45. 4. Develop the Care Models
A unique opportunity to map out, end to end,
the patient experience and then perform a
complete care re-design of your program
46. 4. Develop the Care Models
1. pre-op documentation (5)
2. Intra-op documentation (6)
*use of an approved prosthetic implant
3. Post-op In-patient documentation (4)
4. Discharge documentation (4)
5. Post-discharge documentation (3)
22 Clinical Protocols and Best Practices:
47. Physician Agreement and
Acknowledgement
Each Orthopedic surgeon and Anesthesiologist
that performs BP surgery will participate in an
in-service that outlines in detail their specific
responsibilities, the protocols/best practices,
and their own personal financial risks for non-
compliance.
49. 5 - 6. Cost reduction opportunities
and pricing the bundle
While re-designing care plans, drill down on
the direct cost associated with each step to
eliminate waste, duplication and unnecessary
services…cost reduction.
Determine the “base cost” of the hospital
component of the Bundle…first step in pricing
the bundle.
50. 5 - 6. Cost reduction opportunities
and pricing the bundle
History and Physical
Laboratory
Medical supplies (including prosthetic implants)
Nursing
DME
Pharmacy
Radiology (hips only)
Physical Therapy
Surgical supplies
Hospital Base cost per case
51. “Fair market value”
Physician base cost per case:
1. Time, resources, expenses
2. The warranty provided to the patient or
purchaser for post-acute complications
3. The financial risk assumed by the Party
4. Current “market” reimbursement rates
52. 5 - 6. Cost reduction opportunities
and pricing the bundle
Surgeon Base cost per case
Calculate Surgeon’s practice cost/hour
Calculate the Surgeon’s time involved with each
step of patient flow from initial visit to the 3 month
post operative office visit = total hours of care
Surgeon’s practice cost/hour x total hours
53. 5 - 6. Cost reduction opportunities
and pricing the bundle
Our Anesthesiologists were asked to undertake
the same analysis to determine their base
component of the package price.
Anesthesiologist Base cost per case
54. Total Bundled Payment for Primary
THA and TKA
Hospital base cost + margin*
Surgeon’s base cost + margin*
Anesthesia base cost + margin*
Small % added to package price for two cash reserves
PLUS
PLUS
= total package price for BP services
% package = % risk for shared over runs
*same for all
3 Parties
PLUS
55. 5 - 6. Cost reduction opportunities
and pricing the bundle
Emergency Department protocol:
Within 90 day post-op period, establishes
a mechanism to determine appropriateness
for additional treatment or re-admission for
all BP patients. The Orthopedic PAc is the
designated point person.
Focus on Hospital Re-admissions
56. 7. Gain-sharing Incentives (or other
methods of compensation)
CJRI Service Line Co-Management model:
Shared risk would be looked upon favorably by the
OIG but not shared savings…
…we are already compensated for identifying cost
savings for the service line.
…This particular model is not a Gain-sharing
arrangement
57. 8. Develop a Continuous Process
Improvement Plan
•Data Registry
•Standard/consistent clinical protocols
•Shared IT for cost/quality analysis
•Shared financial risk
(a) Clinical Integration
58. 8. Develop a Continuous Process
Improvement Plan
1. Annual review of clinical protocols
2. Monitor compliance
3. Provide feedback for variances
4. Quarterly quality data review
5. Annual review of cost of services and
opportunities for additional savings
(b) Utilization Review
61. Process Improvement
Blood Transfusion
• Between May, 2011 (new protocol
instituted) and January, 2012…
• 21% Transfusion rate reduced to 4%
• Saved @550 units of RBCs/year
• About @$550,000 cost savings
62. 9. Develop relationships with Post-
acute providers
1. ECFs
2. Homecare Agencies
Both participated in our TDABC project
with the Harvard Business School
75. The “Step Ahead” Plan
at CJRI
Six “prongs” to our Marketing efforts:
1. Commercial Payers
2. CMMS/CMMI
3. Large self-funded Employers/TPAs
4. Medical tourism industry
5. Large PCP groups or ACOs
6. Uninsured or underinsured patients
76. The “Step Ahead” Plan
at CJRI
One signed commercial contract with
Connecticare (June, 2012) with just over 300
patients under contract to date.
Letter of Intent pending with one National
Payer.
Negotiating with commercial TPAs.
Uninsured and under-insured patients.
77. The reality of Implementing a
Bundled Payment program
1. Time commitment
2. Financial commitment
3. Financial risk
4. Legal and Regulatory obstacles
5. Contracting challenges
78. The reality of Administrating a
Bundled Payment program
1. Calculating cost of manual processing
2. Calculating cost of monitoring over runs
3. Double billing issues
4. “retro eligibility” issues - hospital absorbs the
loss
5. Collection of Co-Pay and deductibles - hospital
absorbs the loss
79. Bundled Payment plans:
Pitfalls and Risks
1. Unclear definitions and time frames
2. Imperfect risk adjustments
3. Financial loss related to risk bearing
4. Does it support “low level” of care?
5. Does it encourage “un-bundling” and delay
in treatment
6. Administrative burden > anticipated
7. What are we going to do with the excess
capacity?
80. Bundled Payment plans:
Risks
8. Caution: Is it just another way for the
Commercial Payers to make more
money by shifting risk and
administrative burden?
81. Bundled Payment plans:
Benefits of implementation
1. Changes culture of distrust
2. Aligns incentives and goals
3. cuts the “fat” and waste
4. Keeps the patient at the “top of the
pyramid”
5. Preserves entrepreneurial spirit
6. Encourages healthy re-alignments
82. Bundled Payment plans:
Benefits of implementation
7. The entire process drives operational
efficiencies…
“A total of 95% of excessive costs of elective
surgical procedures were due to inefficiency and
only 5% were due to higher-than-predicted adverse
outcomes rates.”
Fry, DE et al. JACS, 2011
83. Bundled Payment Plan
We recently completed a re-evaluation of
our BP program including post-acute
services together with the Harvard Business
School and IHI’s JRLC using Time-Driven
Activity Based Costing methodology.
85. • Time
• Patience
• Discipline
• Steady Physician leadership
• Real $$ cost
• Opportunity cost
Elements of a successful Value
journey
86. Conclusions
• Despite movement towards restructuring
healthcare delivery, competing agendas and
misaligned priorities still remain between
payers and providers
• Broad adoption of the Value Agenda will not be
easy
• Performing TDABC, embedding PFCC and
implementing bundled payments adds
considerable value nonetheless
• YOU must be a player in this space!
87. Bundled Payment Plan
The end game for your entity will be a re-
alignment of incentives amongst all
Participants toward delivering the highest
quality of care at the lowest cost to the
patient and purchaser. This will allow you to
compete in the new Healthcare market…
based on Value.
88. This was done by a bunch of “community”
Orthopedic surgeons
89. “Healing is an Art, Medicine is a
Science…Healthcare is a business”
90. Thank you for your attention and
good luck with this work