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Who Supports the 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals?

Prepared to Care:. Who Supports the 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals?. The standby role of full-service is both unique and critical in the health care system. Standby Role: Provide access to care 24 hours a day 7 days a week (24/7)

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Who Supports the 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals?

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  1. Prepared to Care: Who Supports the 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals?

  2. The standby role of full-service is both unique and critical in the health care system. Standby Role: • Provide access to care 24 hours a day 7 days a week (24/7) • Care for all patients regardless of ability to pay • Be ready to respond to disasters

  3. 24/7 Role of Full-service Hospitals

  4. Americans rely heavily on the 24/7 access to care provided by hospital EDs… • One third of hospital care begins in the emergency department. • The majority of ED patients require immediate care. • More than half of ED care occurs outside of normal business hours. Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  5. …and that need is growing. Emergency Department Visits, 1997 – 2004, In Millions Emergency Department Visits Source: AHA Annual Survey, data for community hospitals. Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  6. Meeting common emergency needs requires a wide array of resources be maintained 24/7. Example: Resource Needs for a Common Condition Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  7. Safety Net Role

  8. Hospitals provide a medical safety net for the growing number of uninsured… Number of Uninsured, 2000 – 2004, In Millions Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  9. …serving proportionally more Medicaid and uninsured patients than physician offices… Percent of Total Visits by Expected Source of Payment, Emergency Departments vs. Physician Offices, 2003 Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  10. …and taking an increasing role in the care of the behaviorally ill. Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities, 1995 – 2004 Behavioral Health-Related Emergency Department Visits, 1994/95 – 2001/02 In Millions Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  11. Disaster Readiness

  12. A wide range of disasters hit communities annually… Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  13. ...and hospitals stand ready to respond. Percent of Hospitals with Response Plans by Type of Incident, 2003 Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  14. How is this Role Supported?

  15. Hospitals support the standby role through revenues from patient care. Indigent Care 24/7 Capacity Disaster Readiness Unfunded Revenue from Service to Paying Patients Medicare and Medicaid Under- funded Emergent Cases More Complex Medical Cases Private Payers Surgical Cases Less Complex Elective Cases Well-funded

  16. But hospitals face rising levels of uncompensated care… Total Uncompensated Care Costs (in $ billions), 1998 - 2004 Source: AHA Annual Survey

  17. …and a growing shortfall in payment from Medicare and Medicaid. Hospital Payment Shortfall Relative to CostsFor Medicare and Medicaid Patients in Billions, 1997-2004 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Medicare Billions of Dollars Total Shortfall in 2004: $22 Billion Medicaid Source: The Chartis Group, Prepared to Care: The 24/7 Role of America’s Full-service Hospitals, 2006

  18. Medicare and Medicaid account for over half of the care provided by hospitals. Percent of Gross Revenues by Payer, 2004 Other 1.7% Private Pay 43.0% Medicare 40.7% Medicaid 14.6% Source: The Lewin Group Analysis of American Hospital Association Annual Survey data, 2004 data for community hospitals

  19. When some payers don’t pay their fair share, others must pick up the difference. Cost Shifting “Hydraulic" Cost Shift (A)= Shortfall (B) + Margin Contribution (C) 130% A 120% Cost Shift B C 110% Cost 100% Shortfall Margin 90% 80% 70% Payment to Cost Ratio 60% Above Cost Payers Below Cost Payers 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage of Provider Costs

  20. Thus private payers are taking an increasing role in supporting hospital costs. Aggregate Hospital Payment-to-cost Ratiosfor Private Payers, Medicare, and Medicaid1980 - 2004 Private Payer Medicare Medicaid Source: The Lewin Group analysis of American Hospital Association Annual Survey data, 1980 - 2004 for community hospitals

  21. Conclusion • America’s communities depend heavily on the standby role of full-service hospitals and that need is growing. • Despite its importance, this role is not explicitly funded. • Hospitals fund the standby role through revenues from patient care. • But levels of uncompensated care are rising and the Medicare and Medicaid shortfall is growing. • Thus, hospitals increasingly depend on the private sector to subsidize this role.

  22. Conclusion (continued) • The level of “cost-shifting” is increasing. • Government under-funding is a serious issue for businesses that provide health insurance. • “Cost-shifting” drives up the cost of private health insurance. • Higher costs make it harder for employers to maintain coverage. • Hospitals need the support of the business community in securing adequate funding for government programs.

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