|
SURVEY: One-Fourth of Tri-State
Hospital Execs Would Leave Health Care
About one in four hospital executives
in the tri-state area of Arkansas, Tennessee, and Mississippi would
choose not to go into healthcare if they could start their careers
over, a new survey indicates. The survey, developed by The MHA Group,
an Irving, Texas based organization of affiliated healthcare staffing
firms, was mailed to over 350 hospital executives in the tri-state
area by the Arkansas, Tennessee, and Mississippi hospital associations.
Strategic Concerns
Hospital executives face a number
of concerns that might cause them to rethink their decision to enter
healthcare, according to James Merritt, president of The MHA Group.
Close to 90% of executives cited declining Medicare/Medicaid reimbursement
as one of the top three strategic priorities facing their hospitals
in 1999.
Other top concerns included reducing
costs/increasing efficiency, Y2K issues, and compliance with government
regulations. While responding to increased managed care was cited
as a top priority in 1998 by 29% of executives surveyed, only 18%
saw managed care as a top priority for 1999. "Managed care
is no longer at the top of most hospital executives' worry list,"
says Merritt. "They are more concerned with the budget crunch
caused by changing government reimbursement." To meet these
challenges, hospital executives spend the majority of their time
on hospital-based activities involving human resources, information
processing, medical records and other hospital departments. About
two-thirds of executives spend the majority of their time on such
activities. However, 45% of executives spend at least one-fifth
of their time on such community-based activities as business group
meetings, speeches, networking, and public relations events.

Primary Care Still Top Recruiting
Target
The great majority of executives
(98%) feel that their medical staffs are somewhat or very cooperative
with hospital administration, the survey indicates. Conflicts between
hospital administrators and physicians that do occur generally concern
physician recruitment practices, competition with physicians, or
hospital equipment and facilities.
"An increasing number of hospitals
now find themselves competing with physicians who own surgery or
diagnostic centers," Merritt states. "Physician recruitment
also is a sore spot. Many physicians feel threatened when a hospital
plans to bring additional physician services to the area."
Almost 50% of executives indicated
their hospitals are currently recruiting primary care physicians,
suggesting that "generalist" doctors remain the healthcare
providers in greatest demand. About 40% of executives stated their
hospitals are recruiting specialist physicians, with 33% recruiting
nurses, 29% recruiting allied healthcare professionals, and 14%
recruiting executive management. Forty percent or more of executives
surveyed believe recruitment in these areas has grown easier in
the last two-three years. About 30% to 40% of executives indicate
that recruitment has become more difficult.
A Few Regrets
The fact that one-quarter of healthcare
executives would choose a field other than healthcare if they could
start their careers over is not surprising, according to Merritt.
"Hospital administrators are in a pressure cooker," Merritt
says. "Patients demand quality, yet reimbursement keeps declining.
Meanwhile, government scrutiny of hospitals is at an all-time high.
No wonder some executives are questioning their choice of a career."
For a free copy of the survey, call The MHA Group at 800-876-0500,
or access www.mhagroup.com.

Home Health Cuts Too Much
New data from the Health Care Financing
Administration's (HCFA) Office of the Actuary confirms what home
care representatives have been saying for some time - Medicare home
health outlays dropped sharply between federal fiscal years (FY)
1997 and 1998. While the drop is good news for Medicare spending,
it may signal an approaching crisis in access to home health services
for eligible beneficiaries. HCFA's data indicate that home health
outlays for FY 1998 were $14.8 billion, down 16.9% from actual FY
1997 spending of $17.8 billion. This stands in stark contrast to
HCFA's May 1998 budget review, which had predicted $17.3 billion
in home health outlays for FY 1998.
Medicare home health spending estimates
have been a hotly debated issue in recent years. Several years of
rapid growth in spending, coupled with alleged fraud and abuse among
home health providers, led HCFA to propose ways to alter the payment
method for home health care. Those changes were incorporated into
the BBA and may now be responsible for cutting too much. The newly
released data was also the basis of a HCFA report issued in February
projecting total five-year Medicare expenditures for home health
at $86.7 billion. That is a dramatic difference from the pre-Balanced
Budget Act (BBA) estimate of $127 billion, or even a post-BBA estimate
of $110.9 billion. The disparity between those estimates, and between
the estimates and actual experience, highlights the degree of inaccuracy
of data used to justify the BBA changes two years ago. It also shows
how difficult it is for the Congressional Budget Office and HCFA
to accurately predict the level of home health outlays. The data
seem to confirm the home health industry's concerns that recently
enacted Medicare home health cuts, and others on the horizon, go
far deeper than originally intended.

Gets OIG's Attention
The Health and Human Services Office
of Inspector General (OIG) and the Department of Justice are intensifying
their investigations of how hospitals charge Medicare for pneumonia
cases. The OIG lists upcoding as a primary enforcement goal for
fiscal 1999. Inspector General June Gibbs Brown said her office
has begun tackling upcoding-what it calls "DRG creep"-by
focusing on pneumonia codes DRG 79 and 89. DRG 89 is used for simple
pneumonia, while DRG 79 is used for pneumonia caused by bacteria
that doesn't fall under a specific code. DRG 79 can pay thousands
of dollars more per case than DRG 89.
According to the American Hospital
Association (AHA), the Inspector General's office is currently investigating
DRG 79/89 coding at more than 100 hospi tals, and to date has issued
over 110 sub poenas targeting possible systemic mis coding. The
subpoenas require hospitals to provide the government with documentation
for specific records, any training material or written guidance
provided to coders, audit results, computer programs, and work papers.
According to the AHA's Health Care Compliance Service, to avoid
upcoding problems, hospital's should:
- abide by official coding guidelines
to ensure accurate and consistent coding;
- keep coding staff up to date
on clinical topics and regulatory changes;
- use coding software to screen
coding and DRG assignments;
- monitor inpatient diagnosis coding
and DRG assignments for unusual trends and compare them with national
standards;
- evaluate inpatient coding on a
daily basis to detect and correct discrepancies prior to billing;
and,
- develop a protocol for reporting
and returning discovered overpayments from the government, as
well as for determining when self-disclosure of potential miscoding
is appropriate.
|