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Market Stabilizes Around Five Large Organizations:

Boston, Massachusetts

Community Report No. 03
Winter 1999
Claudia Williams, Jon B. Christianson, Melanie L.E. Barraclough, Daniel S. Gaylin

n September 1998, a team of researchers visited Boston, Mass., to study that community’s health system, how it is changing and the impact of those changes on consumers. More than 60 leaders in the health care market were interviewed as part of the Community Tracking Study by Health System Change (HSC) and The Lewin Group. Boston is one of 12 communities tracked by HSC every two years through site visits and surveys. Individual community reports are published for each round of site visits. The first site visit to Boston, in September 1996, provided baseline information against which changes are being tracked. The Boston market includes the city of Boston and its suburbs.

fter a series of health plan and hospital mergers leading up to HSC’s site visit in 1996, Boston’s health care market entered a period of greater organizational stability. This trend continues today. Five nationally renowned not-for-profit organizations still dominate - two large care systems based in academic medical centers, Partners and CareGroup, and three large health plans, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Tufts Associated Health Plan and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts (BCBSM). While there have been some shifts in the competitive position of these entities, no single organization or sector controls the market.

Alongside this continuity there have been important changes in the market:

  • Health plans have assumed a defensive posture as they encounter increased anti-managed care sentiment.

  • The focus of large care systems has shifted from finding partners to managing large networks and risk contracts.

  • Medicaid enrollment has increased, but consolidation, market exits and state contracting changes have left fewer plans serving this population.

Boston Retains Distinctive Market Features

he Boston health care market - with a 46 percent HMO penetration rate - has several features that make it different from other high managed care communities. It is dominated by three well-regarded not-for-profit health plans and is influenced by an activist government with a strong consumer orientation. A large proportion of families report being satisfied with their health care-more than in other HSC study sites with high managed care penetration. There are more hospital beds and physicians per capita, and health costs are significantly higher than the national average. These costs are viewed by purchasers, plans and providers as a reasonable trade-off for access to Boston’s academic medical centers, key contributors to the local economy. Indeed, desire to maintain teaching and research capabilities was the main justification for the merger of Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital that created Partners in 1993.

While cost cutting has not been the major focus of attention, some organizations have tried to reduce operating costs in the last two years. BCBSM reports that it eliminated 50 percent of its staff in an effort to shed unprofitable business and streamline its operations. Boston Medical Center also made significant cuts, and Harvard Pilgrim recently announced plans to lay off at least 100 staff members.

At the same time, employers are accepting moderate increases on an already high premium base, although they are pushing plans to deliver added benefits and better customer service in return. Premiums in Boston rose by about 3 to 5 percent in 1998, on par with the national increase of 3.3 percent. Many observers predict that plans will press for larger premium increases in the range of 8 to 10 percent for 1999 because of their poor financial performance over the last two years.

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Government Continues to Act as a Shaping Force

tate government has long played a major role in shaping the Boston health care market. Extensive protections and mandates are already in place in Massachusetts, and the state government continues to play an active, behind-the-scenes role in shaping the health care market. Health care organizations pay close attention to concerns voiced by legislators and government officials and often proactively change their strategies to address these issues. At the same time, health care organizations try to achieve their competitive goals through policy initiatives.

Although little new legislation has been passed over the last two years, much debate has taken place on managed care issues. Reforms that were proposed in 1998 but did not pass would have introduced more state oversight of managed care plans, instituted a standardized appeals process and increased state- mandated services by requiring coverage for reasonable emergency room visits. Similar laws are expected to be proposed in the next legislative session.

As in the past, this year’s managed care proposals mobilized employers and health plans in opposition. The managed care debate also brought physicians and consumer groups into an unprecedented alliance in support of increased state oversight. The recent legislative effort has had a lasting impact on the market. Plan respondents indicate that local HMOs that have long been highly regarded have suddenly become unpopular.

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As Plans Retrench, Provider Systems Strengthen Market Position

onfronted by increasing anti-managed care sentiment, plans are perceived to be assuming a lower profile than two years ago. They seem to have limited their scope of activities, selling off owned provider capacity, reducing product lines and transferring some responsibilities to providers. BCBSM sold its nine health clinics to MedPartners to support its goals of generating cash and returning to core functions. Harvard Pilgrim spun off its 14 health centers, the centerpiece of the original Harvard Community Health Plan, into a physician-directed enterprise, Harvard Vanguard.

The major plans have pursued regional strategies by affiliating with, buying or establishing plans in the other New England states to offer products to multistate employers. At the same time, there have been shifts in the market position of the three large plans. Harvard Pilgrim is still the largest plan in Massachusetts, but Tufts has moved into second place, due in large part to the strength of its Secure Horizons Medicare managed care product. BCBSM, once the largest insurer by far, is now in third place. While the Blues plan appears to be on the upswing, it has faced significant problems over the last few years, with financial losses that prompted close oversight by the state’s Department of Insurance and an enrollment freeze on its Medicare risk plan initiated by the federal Health Care Financing Administration.

Meanwhile, local provider systems appear to be operating from a position of relative strength, as they move from a period of finding partners to one of making existing partnerships work. They have expanded their range of activities in the last two years, as they implemented mergers, built networks and established risk management infrastructures. Respondents point out that large academic hospitals were notably silent during recent managed care debates in the legislature. These organizations seem well served by having plans take the heat from consumers and advocates.

Other health care entities in Boston are trying to increase their market power, by affiliating either with the five major organizations or with other entities. For example, Neighborhood Health Plan (NHP), a Medicaid HMO formed by the city’s community health centers, was recently acquired by Harvard Pilgrim Health Care. New England Medical Center, one of the last unaffiliated academic medical centers, was recently acquired by Rhode Island-based Lifespan. And Lahey Clinic recently announced a new partnership with CareGroup, after Lahey’s merger with the New Hampshire-based Hitchcock Medical Center fell apart. These changes highlight the continued importance for plans and providers of being part of large, regionally powerful organizations.

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No Immediate Gain Seen from Hospital Consolidation

y the time of the 1996 site visit, three large care systems had formed from a series of mergers with the stated goals of gaining market power and reducing excess capacity. Different consolidation strategies were pursued, with some integrating more than others. Two years later, it appears that the systems that did more to integrate and consolidate have not yet seen a payoff in market position.

  • Partners retained the autonomy of its two flagship hospitals, Massachusetts General and Brigham and Women’s, and sought integration opportunities that promised immediate returns and little opposition, especially from influential department chairs. While most of the managed care contracting and many administrative functions such as human resources and purchasing were centralized, Partners’ two main hospitals have remained operationally and clinically autonomous. The degree of independence of the hospitals was demonstrated when Massachusetts General opened an obstetrics unit, even though Brigham and Women’s is the preeminent maternity hospital in the area. Although a significant downsizing in Boston’s academic hospital capacity has long been predicted, Partners’ two academic institutions have opened previously closed beds during the past two years to accommodate increasing patient volume.

  • CareGroup devoted extensive effort and resources to combining Beth Israel Hospital and Deaconess Hospital into one entity. Significant progress has been made, including merging all departments and appointing single department chiefs. However, the process has been contentious and difficult. According to several reports, most of the chiefs selected for the merged departments were from Beth Israel, alienating many Deaconess physicians. While CareGroup reports that it has been successful in reducing costs as a result of the consolidation, some respondents note that its internal focus in the last two years has damaged the system’s competitive position. However, the recently announced partnership with Lahey Clinic may improve CareGroup’s standing in the market.

  • The Boston Medical Center merger consolidated Boston City Hospital (BCH) and Boston University Medical Center (BUMC) into one entity. Benefits of the merger include complementary clinical expertise and substantial cost savings. However, Boston Medical Center is viewed by many as being financially and operationally vulnerable. The consolidation also brought out cultural conflicts. Boston City’s physicians tended to be primary care-oriented, while BUMC’s physicians were more academic and subspecialty-focused. Physicians from BCH were concerned that the BUMC doctors would not support the public hospital’s mission of community service and care for the poor. These concerns, however, appear to have subsided somewhat since the merger was implemented.

Overall, Partners appears to be in a better competitive position than the other two large care systems, CareGroup and Boston Medical Center, which both did more to integrate and consolidate. However, some have noted that Partners’ success may hinge more on the reputation and access to capital of its two hospitals than on its integration strategy.

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Large Care Systems Focus on Managing Risk Contracts

he number of lives covered under providers’ risk-based contracts has increased substantially over the last two years, and the two large academic medical center-based systems - Partners and CareGroup-have turned greater attention to implementing these contracts and managing their provider networks. Although these agreements still represent a relatively small share of the academic hospitals’ business and reportedly have not been profitable, they are seen to be important because the number of risk contracts is expected to grow, and because the networks are significant referral sources for the hospitals. The two systems have apparently invested heavily in the information and staff infrastructure needed to support these contracts, and observers predict they will push for payment increases when their plan contracts are renegotiated.

Partners and CareGroup have established management service organization (MSO)-like structures to manage this business, and these entities are now considered the dominant physician contracting organizations in the Boston market. Partners Community HealthCare, Inc., has 915 primary care physicians in its network, while CareGroup’s Provider Services Network has about 500. Both organizations have reportedly slowed acquisitions of physician practices, favoring affiliations and joint ventures.

For most of these risk contracts, the MSO is slated to receive 70 to 80 percent of the premium for enrollees from plans. Population-based budgets are established, and providers are paid on a fee-for-service basis with year-end reconciliation. The large care systems pass some of the risk along to risk units, each consisting of a group of physicians, such as the Massachusetts General physician group, and its affiliated hospital. Risk is assigned to these units based on the enrollee’s choice of primary care physician.

The increasing focus on risk contracts has highlighted the underlying tensions between academic medical centers and community hospitals about how to structure payments to the multiple risk units within their networks. Physicians affiliated with the academic medical centers want to institute risk adjustment methodologies to avoid penalties for attracting sicker patients who require more services.

Meanwhile, physicians based at community hospitals are concerned that the drive for better risk adjustment methodologies is part of a larger academic medical center strategy to attract patients who had historically received care at community hospitals. This concern may ultimately drive community hospitals and their physicians to seek contracting vehicles that are less closely tied to the academic medical centers.

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Concerns Raised About Control of Referrals and Care Management

ith the increase in risk contracts comes the critical issue of who controls referrals. Partners and CareGroup are directing patient referrals for at-risk business to their own affiliated physicians and hospitals. This raises concerns among health plans that patients will not have full access to the broad networks they are building and promoting in response to purchaser and consumer demands.

Plan reactions to provider referral management have varied. Harvard Pilgrim Health Care allows primary care providers who are at risk to make their own referral decisions but also allows enrollees to switch primary care providers at any time. Tufts Associated Health Plan has told providers who accept risk that enrollees must have access to the full Tufts network. BCBSM is also concerned about referral restrictions, especially since its signature asset is the breadth of its network, but it has not taken any action to counter referral management by providers, in part because it believes that could generate negative publicity.

The large care systems also want to control more care management functions to obtain a larger share of the capitated dollar. So far, plans have retained many care management responsibilities, including functions such as tracking and developing care plans for enrollees with chronic diseases. Plans have resisted handing over more responsibility on the grounds that care systems have not demonstrated their ability to implement system-wide quality improvement initiatives.

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Medicaid Enrollment Increases But Fewer Plans Participate

edicaid enrollment increased significantly as a result of program expansions in 1997 and 1998, when more than 100,000 children and adults gained coverage under the state’s Medicaid program, MassHealth. With these expansions in place, some speculate that the state may reduce funding for the uncompensated care pool, which pays for health services for eligible uninsured.

The largest recipients of uncompensated care pool dollars, Boston Medical Center and Cambridge Hospital, have developed their own managed care programs to attract MassHealth enrollees and the uninsured. These two hospital systems negotiated higher Medicaid payments and approval to develop shadow managed care programs for the uninsured. Under these new programs, the hospitals use pool dollars to fund a comprehensive package of services for the uninsured. Rather than receiving treatment on an episodic basis, the uninsured enrollees will be linked with primary care providers and have access to preventive services.

While the number of Medicaid eligibles has grown, the number of HMOs serving the Medicaid market has declined. Two commercial plans in the market-BCBSM and Tufts Associated Health Plan-are no longer contracting with the state’s Medicaid program. The two plans had a combined enrollment of more than 60,000 Medicaid recipients and very broad provider networks. BCBSM withdrew because it was losing money on Medicaid. Tufts, which was also reported to have lost money on Medicaid, indicated it could not comply with the state’s increased reporting requirement along with the information technology demands presented by year 2000 computer problems.

With these two plans out, Harvard Pilgrim is the only remaining commercial plan serving the Boston Medicaid market. At the same time, the plan has stopped enrolling Medicaid beneficiaries in its large Pilgrim network, relying instead on the narrower networks of Harvard Vanguard and NHP providers. While beneficiaries still have access to a very broad network of providers under the state’s primary care case management (PCCM) program it maintains as an alternative to HMOs, there are concerns about the implications of these changes. According to market observers, changes in plans’ participation in Medicaid indicate that HMOs with broad and more loosely managed networks have had trouble surviving with the current rates. The state’s response to these new challenges remains to be seen.

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Issues to Track

n the past two years, the large academic care systems have grown stronger, and tensions have increased between these organizations and the three leading health plans. At the same time, Boston’s health care system has retained many of its unique attributes: high managed care penetration, high costs, renowned plans and academic hospitals and an activist government. Emerging issues that could upset this stability include the following:

  • How will large care systems like Partners and CareGroup handle risk adjustment and referrals internally? What will be the effect on academic medical centers’ relationships with community hospitals?

  • Will health plans cede more plan responsibilities, including care management, to providers?

  • Will Medicaid change its purchasing strategy in light of health plan consolidation and exits from the Medicaid market?

  • What impact will managed care legislation have on the market, whether enacted or just anticipated? Do these recent legislative proposals signal an emerging shift in Boston residents’ longstanding favorable view of managed care?

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Boston Compared to Other Communities HSC Tracks

Boston, the highest and lowest HSC study sites and metropolitan areas with over 200,000 population

Gatekeeping and Compensation Arrangements


Consumer Perceptions of Access to Care


Physician Perceptions of Access to Care


Employers and Health Insurance

+Site value is significantly different from the mean for metropolitan areas over 200,000 population.

The information in these graphs comes from the Household, Physician and Employer Surveys conducted in 1996 and 1997 as part of HSC’s Community Tracking Study. The margins of error depend on the community and survey question and include +/- 2 percent to +/- 5 percent for the Household Survey, +/-3 percent to +/-9 percent for the Physician Survey and +/-4 percent to +/-8 percent for the Employer Survey.

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Background and Observations

Boston Demographics

Boston, Mass.Metropolitan
areas above
200,000 population
Population, 19971
4,369,071
Population Change, 1990-19971
1.8%6.7%
Median Income2
$29,996$26,646
Persons Living in Poverty2
10%15%
Persons Age 65 or Older2
14%12%
Persons with No Health Insurance2
9.1%14%
Sources:
1. U.S. Census, 1997
2. Household Survey
Community Tracking Study, 1996-1997

Health System Characteristics

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The Community Tracking Study, the major effort of HSC, tracks changes in the health system in 60 sites that are representative of the nation. Every two years, HSC conducts surveys in all 60 communities and site visits in the following 12 communities:

  • Boston, Mass.
  • Cleveland, Ohio
  • Greenville, S.C.
  • Indianapolis, Ind.
  • Lansing, Mich.
  • Little Rock, Ark.
  • Miami, Fla.
  • Newark, N.J.
  • Orange County, Calif.
  • Phoenix, Ariz.
  • Seattle, Wash.
  • Syracuse, N.Y.

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