Home
  Go 
Topics Login Become a Member 

Locate A Chapter

Healthcare Financial Views - August, 2009

HFMA VIEWS


Monday, August 31, 2009
Healthcare Reform – Are You Positioned to Move Forward?

By David Williams

During the most recent economic downturn, what has been the most difficult task aimed at keeping health care organizations healthy?  As the rating agencies have continued to downgrade healthcare organizations, how are these changes affecting access to capital?
 
I posed these questions recently in speaking with healthcare CEOs and CFOs about the future of their hospital systems.
 
After the first couple of conversations with health care financial executives, it became quite evident that ‘business as usual’ will not be acceptable in the current environment.
 
While most organizations are maintaining their current financial position, everyone is strategically evaluating and positioning to address the expected delivery of services and how it will be paid for.
 
Keeping a healthy organization requires new concerns from the leaders of healthcare entities.
 
One CEO, located in a non-urban setting, said maintaining patient market share has been the most difficult part of maintaining the health of his organization.  Attracting the needed physicians—based on the changing patient demographics—has been especially challenging.  Without an adequate medical staff, the system has seen a decrease in volume of 3 percent. This is somewhat higher than the national average of 1 to 2 percent.
 
In addition, the economic conditions have produced soft patient volumes nationally, as 56 percent of hospitals have seen a decrease in volume.  Many patients have tightened their healthcare budgets, which have in turn required the system to take a closer look at marginal services.
 
An urban hospital system’s CFO said people have become the most difficult part of maintaining his organization’s health. 
 
He said to take a look at every hospital across this country and you will see that greater than 50 percent of the expenses are related to personnel and benefits.  When looking to improve financial health there is no way to consider reductions without taking people into account.
 
As a result, hospitals and health systems are focusing on physician alignment strategies as preparations for continuing shortages of medical and surgical specialties and challenges associated with retention and growth of market share. 
 
In addition to market share and people, other areas of focus seem to be national patient safety goals, core measure scores, and coding and documentation as a way to position hospitals for payment bundling and/or value based purchasing. 
 
Access to capital has also been affected significantly with the downturn in the economy.
 
One CFO told me that his organization’s ability to keep pace with equipment upgrades that are essential to offering quality health care and maintaining the confidence of the patient may be adversely affected. This comment was based on this CFO’s challenge in fulfilling the capital requests needed in his organization. 
 
He pointed out that routine additions of technology and equipment are being met, but plans for major renovation phases will require a critical evaluation.  In order to deliver to the community in accordance with the facility’s mission, capital needs are a must and not an option. 
 
Until the current economic conditions improve, healthcare facilities will have to look for partners, defer or lengthen the time for deployment of major capital projects, and re-evaluate its mission and future for delivery of care with the available capital resources.
 
With the most recent announcements of the healthcare sector having a 3-to-1 downgrade ratio, the main point that healthcare CEOs are making is that the possibility of abundant capital market access is highly unlikely, even for a healthcare organization with a solid balance sheet.  Based on these discussions, it is quite evident that as operating margins continue to be flat and nominally growing, the credit markets, which are pretty much frozen right now, are not going to be generous to organizations looking to forge ahead with major projects. 
 
On a side note, the merger and acquisition activity in the industry is basically dormant.  This is another indicator that until the major healthcare initiatives of President Obama are proposed, and the financial impact of those changes is reviewed, most are holding their current positions with capital.
 
Healthcare providers seem to be focusing on making investments today that will position them to deal with any reform initiatives.  The common goal is to be more efficient no matter what the measure, and ensure that what an organization efficiently produces currently also becomes more effective.  
 
The picture will become clearer as the new administration’s footprint becomes clear for the national healthcare system.  But no matter what form healthcare reform takes, physicians and hospitals will need to work in a more cooperative and efficient fashion, to continue to meet the demand for healthcare services in the future. 

David Williams is leader of the Health Care Services Reimbursement and Advisory practice, HORNE LLP, Jackson and Hattiesburg, MS, and Nashville, TN: www.horne-llp.com.

posted on 8/31/2009 10:04:48 AM (CST)  Permalink 
Comments [0]
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
The Realities of Healthcare Costs

By Gregory Burfitt

America is in the midst of a great debate that will determine the fate and structure of the healthcare delivery system for the United States now and for future generations. The largest driving factor that will require us to move toward this change is the high cost of health care. Politicians rant about out-of-control healthcare costs, which the Obama administration projects will increase by 60 percent over the next 10 years and are rising at three times the rate of inflation. Some economists express concerns that health care could someday consume 20 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP).

There are several realities about healthcare costs that must be understood if we are to avoid the risk of developing a reformed program that is worse and more expensive than our present system. The most striking reality is that the same government that proposes to solve the current healthcare dilemma is the very entity that has contributed to our healthcare cost problem and amplified it over the past 45 years. Here are the facts and realities behind our healthcare cost discussion.

Reality No. 1: The healthcare product being purchased today is not the same product of the past.

The discussion about the rapid rise in healthcare costs takes place without regard to the differences in quality, convenience, breadth of services, access, or overall quality of life that have occurred. Americans have always wanted the best care, and no one leaves America for Canada to receive better health care. The next time you are in a hospital, look around you. The person delivering that expensive aspirin to your private room is highly trained and surrounded by expensive equipment, inspected regularly, to ensure that any potential emergency can be handled with the best possible outcome. This equipment and technology available is second to none. In other countries, virtually all hospitals have diagnostic equipment available only on a regional basis, and certain criteria or wait periods exist before access to this equipment may be granted.  The result of this specialized technology and the advanced skill of physicians is the ability to rapidly return patients to their lengthy productive lives, leading to a decrease in time spent away from work and family and a corresponding increase in national productivity (which is never calculated into the healthcare cost discussions). There are many reasons that the United States is more productive than other countries. An integral part of that calculation is the timely, high-quality health care that is provided to its citizens.

Reality No. 2: Healthcare costs and healthcare charges (or prices) are not the same thing.

Charges are the list price for healthcare services received. Politicians often use the terms “cost” and “charges” interchangeably. Medicare requires by law that there can only be one charge schedule for an organization. As a result, most billing statements received by consumers reflect charges, not costs, and not the amount of revenue actually received by the hospital or physician.  The bill that you open does not reflect the amount the hospital actually receives from the insurance company or the federal government. The only patients who are expected to pay charges are patients who are without insurance or other contracts.

Actual cost increases are not the only reason for the rise in the amount of our nation’s GDP that is spent on healthcare. Our population is living longer, and their demand for services has increased. The improvement in the death rate for major diseases such as heart disease and cancer has resulted in people living long enough to develop chronic diseases that require treatment over the longer term. Illegal or undocumented aliens typically do not have access to insurance, and the expense of their treatment must be assumed by the rest of society.

Reality No. 3: Most patients and insurance companies do not pay charges.

The patients who are expected to pay charges are those who are without insurance or other contracts, and represent less than 10 percent of the total patient volume. This category includes undocumented aliens, individuals who can pay for their care but choose not to (their bills often fall under “bad debt”), and people who can purchase insurance, but choose not to. Because of intense political pressure and concerns of discrimination, most uninsured patients are now routinely offered discounts. At most facilities, this is calculated on an income-scaled basis. Deductibles and co-pays are usually calculated from the charges, which inflates the patient's responsibility for co-pays by as much as 50 percent to 70 percent. It is not uncommon for the patient to pay more to the provider than their insurance company or third-party payer.  This issue could easily be corrected by lawmakers without radically changing our healthcare system.

Reality No. 4: The federal government does not pay the full costs of its current Medicare and Medicaid programs.

The federal government currently underpays the actual costs incurred by these programs by $88 billion annually. For Medicare, this equates to paying approximately $.89 out of every dollar of cost incurred. The Medicare program originally paid actual costs along with additional funds allocated for technology, bad debt, capital costs, and additional nursing costs incurred in providing care to senior citizens. It only took a few years of operation for the Medicare program to delete these additional real-cost expenditures from the reimbursement process. The original program was designed to provide care for people over 65 after retirement. The original cost projections for the program were made when the average life expectancy was 70 years of age. The average life expectancy has now grown to 75, which has significantly increased the cost of the program to the federal government and the taxpayer.

The Medicaid program is operated by states and is funded through state budgets and federal matching funds. The funding and level of benefits provided, and the qualification levels for participation, vary by state. The amount of funding provided for the operation of the program also varies widely by state. The typical state Medicaid program pays about 50 percent of the actual costs experienced in providing care to its recipients. To participate in the Medicaid program, states must provide a set minimum group of services. Although these services are required by the federal government, many are not funded by the federal government. These unfunded services are known as unfunded mandates. Most states struggle with the Medicaid program because the greatest use of the program occurs when unemployment is up and state revenues are down. Governors at a recent national meeting expressed concern that the proposed changes to our healthcare system would further shift cost and service responsibility to the states without corresponding financing being provided. In other words, there would likely be additional unfunded mandates down the road.

Reality No. 5: The greatest reason for the rapid rise in healthcare charges is the federal government’s underpayment for services provided to Medicare patients, resulting in cost shifting to other payers.

In the typical hospital, 50 percent of patients are Medicare patients, 5 percent are Medicaid patients, and 5 percent are charity and bad debt. The payment received by the provider of care for each of these groups is less than the provider’s actual costs. This means that the patients with contracts from insurance companies and third-party providers and the 10 percent of patients without contracts must pick up this deficit in order for the hospital or physician’s office to remain solvent.

Contract patients represent 35 percent of most hospitals’ activity levels. These are the only patients for which normal market forces prevail. Dominant insurers with large volumes of patients can negotiate great discount rates from providers. Providers with a dominant market position, critical services, or wide geographic distribution can negotiate better rates with insurers. The payment methodology varies widely and includes payments based on percentage discount off of charges, diagnosis-related group (DRG) payments, flat-rate payments, and cost plus reimbursement arrangements. For years the benchmark for negotiation has been the Medicare reimbursement rate, which is lower than costs. Most contracted payers negotiate rates that are between 130 percent and 150 percent of the Medicare rate. Most negotiated contracts have terms of three years to five years, which means if there are rapid changes in costs during that period, the provider will suffer in the short term. This explains why there are cyclical changes in the inflation rate of healthcare charges. An institution or physician must break even financially over time, and ideally would have at least a 4 percent operating margin. For the typical patient mix outlined above, the charges that a noncontracted patient must pay are three times the amount of the institutional cost, or a markup of 300 percent. If the federal and state governments paid their actual costs of the programs they currently operate, the charges would only be 140 percent of costs. This would represent an immediate potential charge reduction of 53 percent to the patient.  Cost shifting is real and significantly affects the prices paid by all persons with and without insurance.

As a result of cost shifting, the burden placed on physicians or hospitals to generate surplus income for expansion and technological advances is transferred to non-Medicare or non-Medicaid patients. Because the actual cost for bad debt and indigent care is also not covered by the government, this cost also affects the ultimate cost structure of healthcare providers. Providers with a smaller percentage of patients who fall under Medicare, Medicaid, indigent, and bad debt have an easier time creating a positive bottom line. They are able to get better and lower-cost financing, which influences their overall capital structure and ultimately their pricing.

Reality No. 6: The charges for care can never be equal for all regions of the country.

Politicians have pointed to the differences in the cost of care in various areas of the country, citing low-cost situations and questioning why these lower costs cannot be true for all regions of the United States. These data come from the billing system, where the “cost” being discussed is really charges. The premise being made is that somehow better information from the national plan regarding practice patterns will bring huge savings to the entire system. Better information regarding best practices is helpful and can improve average charges, but unfortunately, until the federal government pays the full costs of the current programs it operates, equalization of expense can never happen. For example, a hospital in Miami with 70 percent Medicare, 10 percent Medicaid, and 10 percent bad debt will have to have charges that are 454 percent greater than its actual costs versus the 300 percent required for the average hospital. The only way to truly level out charges uniformly throughout the United States is to ensure that every city throughout the country has the same percentage of Medicare patients, Medicaid patients, indigent care patients, and undocumented aliens. Because of cost shifting, hospitals with equal efficiency in Miami can never have the same cost per case, or charge per case, as hospitals in Wisconsin.

Reality No. 7: Individual’s personal health care coverage will likely end up in the national health plan.

A federally operated national health plan will never compete equally on a cost basis and will drive every other insurer out of the market. Even if the national health plan was initially set up on an equal expense basis with private plans, the loss of patients who currently have insurance that migrate to the national plan would force hospitals and physicians to negotiate larger increases from the private plans. Even a small shift of insured patients into the national plan will cause a disproportionate cost shift to private insurance plans. It is critical that a national health plan pay rates that are higher than actual cost and that payment not be reduced below this level by legislators in the future.

One of the proposed payment rates being floated for the national health plan would equal 110 percent of the current Medicare payment rate, which is $.89 for every dollar of cost incurred. This means that people participating in the program would also underpay at approximately $.98 for a dollar of cost. If only a small percentage of the businesses opt to discontinue their current insurance plans and transfer their employees into the national plan, the negotiated rates with insurance companies would increase drastically. This huge cost differential between insurance rates and the national plan would then force businesses to transfer their patients into the national plan as well. Over a fairly short period of time, there would be no alternative to the national healthcare plan, and the United States would be operating under a single payer system.

Reality No. 8: Government underpayment for Medicare and Medicaid assures that any trigger for implementation of a national health plan based on controlling rising healthcare costs is guaranteed to ensure the implementation of the national plan.

There has been resistance towards initiating a national health plan; therefore, a compromise solution has been floated that would initiate the national health plan only if healthcare costs cannot be contained. Simultaneously, the healthcare industry has been forced to commit to saving $155 billion in reimbursement over the next 10 years. There is no plan or methodology to bring about such savings. If Washington follows its normal behavior, these proposed savings will become part of the future budgets proposed for Medicare. This reduction in reimbursement to hospitals, along with inflation and the existing $88 billion shortfall, will guarantee the additional costs will be shifted to other payers. Thus, costs (charges) will not be contained at an appropriate level. Therefore, the national plan will be activated. Government reimbursement methodology makes this an inevitable outcome.

Is the cost of healthcare important? Absolutely! But let’s take into account the differences in the healthcare product to which Americans have access versus the healthcare product offered by other countries. We can change our system drastically, but in so doing could put at risk our ability to choose, our ability to access needed services at will, and the rate of technology advancement in our country.

America is currently the funding mechanism for the majority of the pharmaceutical advances made in the world. The cost of drugs in other countries is a fraction of that paid in the United States. The balance of the difference in payment is used for research and development that benefits the entire world. An inefficient healthcare delivery program operated by the government does not guarantee access to needed treatment. In other countries that have already attempted the same approach, taxes are higher, GDP growth is lower, treatments are routinely denied, and lines of patients waiting for treatment are long.

Do we need change? Yes! But changes to our healthcare system should be thoughtful and carefully chosen and implemented. We do not have a perfect system, but it is not broken enough to completely dismantle. We have a good building platform to begin the process of rational change. Americans should not let fear, misinformation, and unrealistic pressure for speedy change force them into a reformed system that does not work and has not worked in other countries where it has been tried. The government-controlled healthcare system being discussed in Washington cannot be financially sustained without huge tax increases. Our legislators are so certain about the effectiveness of the new plan that they have excluded themselves from participation. Why not ask our leaders to develop a plan and try it on themselves before subjecting the rest of the country to it? We do need reform, but reform can be achieved by utilizing the best parts of our existing system--correcting its problems, such as portability, eliminating denial for pre-existing conditions, allowing the sale of insurance across state lines, and allowing small businesses to form groups to negotiate for lower premiums. These, and other positive changes, could be made to improve the existing system and could be implemented for significantly less money than a radical overhaul.

Gregory Burfitt, FACHE, is a senior advisor, BDC Advisors, LLC, Greenwood Village, Co., and a member of HFMA’s Colorado Chapter (gburfitt@bdcadvisors.com).

posted on 8/19/2009 3:37:58 PM (CST)  Permalink 
Comments [0]
Thoughts on Generating a More Prosperous Year

By Rod Bazzani

At a time when some analysts expect the unemployment rate to reach 10 percent by the end of the year, hospital administrators face not only a daunting 2009, but likely a difficult 2010 as well. In the past, when confronted with an economic downturn, administrators may have simply hoped for the best and tried to ride it out; however, this approach is no longer a viable option. It is critical that healthcare organizations address the current economic climate to mitigate any negative impact on revenue.

Healthcare organizations tend to mirror the economic conditions of the communities they serve--in many cases, with a six- to 12-month lag effect. For example, a hospital in a community where a factory or major office has just closed may not feel the impact of this closing immediately. However, when healthcare benefits for displaced workers run their course, the impact becomes real. Healthcare administrators need to take into account unemployment and delinquency barometers such as this when guiding their organizations through economic challenges. The healthcare industry is one of a few industries that have the luxury of such lag time to for a pending downturn or upturn.  

According to economic forecasting models, the rate of mortgage and auto loan delinquencies will hit their highest levels ever at the end of 2009--and these levels may only peak midway through the year 2010. The levels of delinquency have been so abrupt that it is quite possible hospitals will face difficult times for some time after the peak is reached. 

A look at recent levels of 60-day mortgage loan delinquencies--a variable that is looked upon as a precursor to foreclosure--has hovered at approximately 2 percent for the better part of the decade. However, a 50 percent increase in delinquencies occurred between the end of 2006 and 2007, and delinquencies increased more than 55 percent between 2007 and 2008 to reach the current rate of 4.66 percent. These rates are expected to continue to climb in 2009 and 2010, and certain geographic areas will be hit harder than others.

Increases in delinquency rates are not limited to just mortgages. In fact, 60-day auto loan delinquencies are expected to rise from 0.88 percent at the end of 2008 to 1.03 percent by the conclusion of 2009, and 90-day credit card delinquencies are expected to rise from 1.09 percent to 1.37 percent during that same period. 

What can hospital administrators do to stem the tide of this economic maelstrom? One option is to analyze data elements of this type on a national, state, and local level to understand the potential impact these elements could have on your operations, from staffing to collections. Delinquent payment in other sectors will more than likely make its way to hospital operations as well. It is imperative for hospital administrators to stay ahead of this curve and look for new ways to ensure their organizations are able to continue to thrive financially.

Rod Bazzani is Executive Vice President of Health Care, TransUnion, Chicago, and a member of HFMA's First Illinois Chapter.

posted on 8/19/2009 1:15:32 PM (CST)  Permalink 
Comments [0]
Incremental Healthcare Reform Can Work

By Olakunle Olaniyan and Kayode Williams

The U.S. healthcare system is currently in the process of being transformed, and across the country, people are debating what the new system should look like. Our current healthcare system has been described as broken, in need of an overhaul, and unsustainable. From all the discussion, one would think we had one of the worst healthcare systems in the world.

Contrary to popular opinion, we have one of the best healthcare systems in the world. We develop by far more breakthrough technologies and drugs than any other country in the world. Our physicians are some of the best trained in the world, and many people from all over the world come to the United States seeking great health care.

Given the many positives of our current system, plus the fact that we are currently in a recession, a major overhaul of the system will be too costly and is not necessary to fix a system that works fairly well. Change should be urgent but incremental. Health care is very complex, with multiple layers of interdependencies. No one really knows what the ripple effect will be of any given action on the rest of the system. An overhaul changes many variables at the same time, and it would be impossible to predict the effect of these changes on the system or how affected stakeholders would respond to the changes. As a result, the likelihood that things will not work out as intended is high.

In health care, when things go wrong, people get hurt. Incremental changes to our healthcare system would allow our government to identify the root cause of any unforeseen problems and adjust quickly.

From a political standpoint, it is easier to push incremental change through Congress than to attempt drastic overhauls. Had the Clinton administration started with incremental changes, we would likely be ahead of the game today. In addition, the power of major stakeholders to block reform was clearly demonstrated during the Clinton administration’s attempt at reform. These powerful stakeholders are less likely to feel threatened and more likely to come onboard if change to our healthcare system is incremental.

This is not to say our current system has no problems; there are significant problems that must be addressed, and the two main problems are:

  • The high number of uninsured Americans. This is a national disgrace. The richest country in the world should not have 15 percent of its population uninsured.
  • The cost of care in our country. The current cost trend is simply not sustainable and needs to be addressed.

Covering the Uninsured

Ensuring coverage for all Americans should be a goal of healthcare reform; however, this can be done in phases over time to minimize the cost to taxpayers. Most of the uninsured are poor (54.6 percent are below 200 percent of the federal poverty level, according to State Health Access Data Assistance Center (SHADAC) estimates (Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement, 2008), young (63 percent are below age 35, and 21 percent are below age 18, according to Office for the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation [ASPE] tabulations of the 2005 Current Population Survey), and working (66.7% are in a family where the family head works full time, according to the SHADAC). Mandating that all employers cover healthcare for their full-time employees and ensuring all children below age 18 are covered either through the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) or other means depending on family income will reduce the uninsured rolls by more than 50 percent. This is a feasible goal that can be implemented quickly with the necessary assistance and incentives for small businesses.

A target future date can then be set to cover almost everyone else by expanding the current Medicaid program to include everyone below a certain federal poverty level (FPL) and ensuring the remaining uninsured individuals above the target FPL are able to buy affordable health insurance with appropriate government assistance, where necessary, and possible tax disincentives to encourage compliance. Insurance companies will have to be made a part of the solution; they could be mandated to form large risk pools to cover small businesses and individuals regardless of prior existing conditions, government has the power to do this.

Given the above, the need for an expensive public plan run side by side with existing insurance plans becomes questionable. The attraction of a public plan is that it would cover all the business the insurance companies refuse to cover, it would play fair and would not indulge in unfair practices, and it would be cost efficient. However, these are mutually exclusive scenarios. Insurance companies refuse to cover individuals and groups they deem too risky (costly) and to avoid high costs. Therefore, if a public plan covered these high-risk individuals and groups, it would be impossible for the public plan to be less costly than private insurance plans. Ultimately a public plan would either have to be subsidized by government or allowed to go bankrupt. Rather, government, thru regulations, should mandate insurance companies to play fair and accept all applicants for coverage regardless of preexisting conditions; ultimately this approach would be less costly and less likely to fail than a public plan option.

All Americans can be covered in a reasonable period of time within our existing structure without incurring the likely high cost, uncertain results and possible unexpected effects from a public plan option.

Controlling the Cost of Care

Addressing the cost of care is a much more difficult problem. Lest we forget, managing healthcare costs was the primary reason Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) came into existence. The premise was to manage cost by building integrated care systems (small closed networks/staff-model HMOs), changing the way doctors were reimbursed (capitation/diagnosis-related groups/case rates/ per diem) and monitoring the use of care (utilization management). Sound familiar? These same approaches are being touted as panaceas today, but with new buzz words. It is important to note that the HMOs were successful at controlling cost for a time (medical trend was relatively flat in the mid-1990s). However, most of the cost-saving initiatives were unpopular and were slowly dismantled with the help of government.

The point is this, many of the large, national managed care companies have been trying to manage cost of care for decades and have acquired a considerable amount of experience and talent in managing healthcare cost, but they have been limited by what consumers and their representatives in Congress were unwilling to accept. However, the current debate on healthcare reform has brought about a paradigm shift in the healthcare discussion, as the topic of cost is now front and center in the debate. In the past, this was not the case--it was extremely unpopular to talk about managing the cost of care. Now that everyone realizes cost is the issue, government can openly look for the best ideas and leverage them to manage cost.

Unfortunately, much of the rhetoric on healthcare reform has labeled managed care as the bad guys, yet many of the best ideas on cost savings have been developed by the managed care industry. Many large insurance companies have extensive experience with many cost saving initiatives such as:

  • Innovative reimbursement methodologies, including episode treatment groups
  • Risk-adjusted physician care profiles and practice patterns
  • Predictive modeling and case management
  • New technology assessment

We cannot think of any other industry that has this type of expertise. Many of these ideas did not catch on because no single managed care company had the market strength to deploy them against considerable resistance from providers who were concerned about diminishing reimbursement as a result of these initiatives. We are certainly not suggesting that managed care companies are blameless or should be left to their own devices. What we are suggesting is this: bring managed care companies to the table as part of the solution and tap into their considerable expertise. Look for the best ideas, test them and validate their efficacy, and legitimize them by taking them out of the managed care arena to reduce the appearance of conflict of interest. Deploy them first through Medicare and then all other government programs. If they work, private insurers will adopt them quickly. In this way, we will be using existing infrastructure as well as already developed initiatives and ideas to leverage government’s considerable power to deploy the best available cost-saving initiatives and bring them to a broad section of the healthcare landscape relatively quickly and inexpensively.

Healthcare reform is necessary, but a major overhaul of the entire system would be too costly and risky. The same improvements can be accomplished over a period of time taking an incremental approach that would ultimately be less costly, less risky, and more politically expedient. Many of the necessary components of a successful reform package have been worked on for many years, but the efforts were fragmented, uncoordinated, underfunded, and often without any government support. Government focusing, coordinating, and funding some of the more promising initiatives will go a long way to improving our healthcare system.

 Olakunle Olaniyan, MD, is president, Case Management Covenants LLC, Columbia, Md., and a member of HFMA's Maryland Chapter (o.olaniyan@cmcovenants.com).

Kayode Williams, MD, FFARCSI, is assistant professor and medical director, Blaustein Pain Treatment Center, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Division of Pain Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md. (kwilli64@jhmi.edu).

posted on 8/19/2009 1:07:49 PM (CST)  Permalink 
Comments [2]