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![]() ![]() Specialty Hospitals: Focused Factories or Cream Skimmers?Issue Brief No. 62
The Rise of Specialty Hospitals The reasons for specialty hospital development are complex and vary across markets, but analysis suggests that three factors are important drivers of this trend nationally: relatively high reimbursements for certain procedures, physicians’ desire for greater control over management decisions affecting productivity and quality and specialists’ desire to increase their income in the face of reduced reimbursement for professional services. Since the first site visits in 1996-97, hospital executives have reported that surgical admissions are much more profitable than medical admissions, and that certain surgical procedures (e.g., cardiovascular and orthopedic) are among the most profitable. It is unlikely that payers intended to create these distortions in payment rates. Concerning management control, a specialty hospital might give physicians greater voice in decisions of importance to them such as hiring, staffing levels, scheduling and purchasing equipment. They can also help specialists to raise their income by increasing their productivity and sharing a portion of the profits from the facility if they are owners. Back to TopIndianapolis Case Study: Affairs of the Heart The flurry of specialty hospital development began when several cardiology groups affiliated with one of the area’s four hospital systems, Community Health Network (CHN), initiated discussions about building a heart hospital with MedCath, a national for-profit cardiovascular service company. These physicians had pressed CHN to build a new heart hospital in which they could share ownership interest, but they were turned away. The competitive threat posed by a heart hospital jointly owned by its cardiologists and MedCath convinced CHN to build a freestanding heart hospital with the physicians owning up to a 30 percent share through a joint venture arrangement. CHN took several other steps in response. To minimize competition with its own cardiac service programs, CHN consolidated its cardiovascular programs into the new hospital. To compete with other hospital systems, it located the specialty hospital in an affluent suburban area historically dominated by another major hospital system, St.Vincent, and added approximately 29 new beds to accommodate future growth. Finally, CHN built the new heart hospital within two miles of its own community hospital to facilitate transfer of emergency and other patients needing nonspecialty services. CHN was not the only hospital to bend under pressure from specialists who threatened to partner with MedCath. CareGroup, with approximately 90 cardiologists and 55 internists and other clinicians, provides care to approximately 30 percent of all patients in the St.Vincent hospital system.When CareGroup told St.Vincent it was about to sign an agreement with MedCath, the hospital agreed to build a new freestanding heart hospital one mile away from its general hospital and give the doctors a 50 percent ownership stake. Unlike CHN, St. Vincent did not consolidate cardiovascular services. The new heart hospital will compete with St.Vincent’s existing cardiovascular surgery programs, and all 122 of the heart hospital’s beds represent expanded capacity. In addition, the new hospital intends to operate a very limited emergency department and use St.Vincent Indianapolis for backup care. Given the increased competition from specialty heart hospitals and the "MedCath threat," the other two major Indianapolis hospital systems developed their own heart hospitals without physician ownership involvement. Clarian Health System relabeled a consolidation and modest expansion of its existing cardiovascular surgery and research programs as a heart hospital, and St. Francis Hospital and Health Centers announced plans to build a freestanding heart hospital of its own. Other physicians may try to follow suit. Orthopedics Indianapolis, a single-specialty medical group, has announced plans to build its own 40- to 60-bed orthopedics hospital, but hasn’t yet raised the needed capital. Back to TopGeneral Hospitals’ Response Some general hospitals build their own specialty facility so they can maintain their revenue stream and retain the physicians who otherwise might leave to develop a competing freestanding hospital. By offering physicians some of the advantages of a freestanding facility (e.g., increased productivity), hospitals have sought to prevent physicians from creating competing facilities. Hospitals have often attempted to keep down expenses by consolidating services from multiple hospitals or replacing older facilities. A second response is to form joint ventures with local physicians to build a specialty hospital. This approach retains a portion of the revenue that otherwise would be lost and keeps the doctors involved. As one hospital CEO who took this route characterized it, "Ideally, I’d like to have a whole loaf of bread. But if I can’t have that, I’d rather have a half a loaf than none."A third response is to fight back by "economically credentialing" physicians. Hospitals have tried to deny admitting privileges to physicians who have ownership interests in competing inpatient or outpatient specialty facilities. Some courts have upheld these actions, and several cases are pending. When none of these three responses is possible or effective, general hospitals may lose patients and revenue to specialty hospitals, forcing them to take other steps, such as cutting back on services or patients that lose money or trying to negotiate higher prices for other services. Specialty hospitals, and the competitive response they evoke from general hospitals, raise fundamental questions about quality, costs and access to care. To date, solid evidence addressing these questions is sparse, but insight into specialty hospitals’ potential impact on patients and communities can be garnered through debates between proponents and opponents and related health services research. Back to TopMonitoring Quality and Cost Opponents argue that specialty hospitals cannot secure a high enough volume to improve quality and reduce costs without taking patients away from community hospitals.When more hospitals compete for the same or lower volume of services, quality may decline and per-case costs may increase because each hospital has less volume and excess capacity is rarely eliminated. Moreover, services may be overused and total spending may increase because specialty and community hospitals are filling beds inappropriately. Previous studies of other types of facilities and services have shown that overutilization is a significant quality problem and may be even more of a problem when physicians are owners.7 Only if demand increases will new specialty hospitals and general hospitals both have enough volume to provide high-quality, low-cost services. Demand for specialty services may increase for several reasons, including population growth, aging, higher functioning and quality of life expectations and poor health due to unhealthy behaviors (e.g., smoking, obesity). However, other factors may offset rising demand. For example, new technology such as the drug-eluting stent promises to reduce the need for coronary-bypass-graft surgery by allowing more people to be treated with less invasive procedures (e.g., angioplasty) or to live longer with the stent before surgery is required.8 Another central issue is whether specialty hospitals have other mechanisms besides high volume to improve quality and reduce costs. Specialty hospital proponents argue that optimal facilities for delivering specialty services can be built, the newest technology and equipment used and a select group of managers and health professionals can continuously improve all aspects of care. Opponents argue that new facilities alone are unlikely to improve quality and reduce costs, and it is not clear whether specialty hospitals have any unique ability to innovate and improve care. How emergency patients and those with multiple conditions are handled is another key quality issue. While some specialty hospitals are required by state licensure to have a full-service emergency department, others only have the capacity to handle emergencies related to the specialty services they provide. Specialty hospitals with limited emergency departments may not have arrangements in place to make timely transfers to general hospitals when necessary. They also might not have physicians on staff to provide timely medical care for conditions in which they do not specialize. Finally, it is unclear how much competition specialty hospitals will stimulate. The additional specialty capacity could lead to lower prices paid by health plans as a result of increased competition. However, price competition will be limited when large general hospitals systems own specialty hospitals and negotiate for them. Back to TopConcerns About Access to Other Services Physicians’ ownership interest in specialty hospitals creates an additional opportunity to select profitable patients, further jeopardizing general hospitals’ ability to provide basic services. Recent research shows that referral patterns of physicians with an ownership interest in ambulatory surgery centers differ from those of their peers.9 By selectively referring better-paying patients, physician-owners can increase their profits without offering a higher quality of care or achieving lower costs. Traditionally, privately insured patients have been the most profitable, while Medicaid and uninsured patients have been the least. Although specialty hospitals’ ability to improve quality and reduce costs is unclear, such hospitals could be financially successful nevertheless because of their ability to focus on lucrative services and patients. There has been very little research on whether and how patients treated by specialty hospitals differ from those treated by general hospitals. Two unpublished studies reported conflicting results, with one indicating that some specialty hospitals treat more severely ill patients who are probably more expensive to treat, and the other indicating that one specialty hospital treated less severely ill patients. 10 Back to TopPolicy Implications
Back to TopNotes
Back to Top ISSUE BRIEFS are published by the Center for Studying Health System Change. |
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