We’ll see.
Hospital Support Trends Up
The most remarkable number in the 2011 SHM-MGMA survey is the financial support provided to practices per FTE hospitalist annually. This support nearly always comes from a hospital, and is often colloquially, and misleadingly, referred to as the “subsidy.”
In 2001, hospital support was about $65,000 per FTE. In the 2008 and 2010 surveys, the median financial support per FTE was $97,000 and $98,000, respectively. But it jumped to $136,403 this year. That is a really huge jump in one year. (Note: The surveys changed from biannual to annual in 2010, and the new SHM-MGMA survey uses a different financial support question/methodology and has a different respondent pool than the previous SHM surveys.)
Some of the increased dollars probably went to pay rising hospitalist compensation, which rose about 3% over the prior year without any significant increase in productivity. But that 3% salary increase translates to only about $5,000 (median compensation rose from roughly $215,000 to $220,000), and could be explained in part by such factors as removing academicians from this data set. (Starting in 2010, academic hospitalists are surveyed and reported separately, so aren’t included here.) So I don’t think the change in hospitalist incomes seen in this survey has much to do with the dramatic, near-40% increase in financial support.
The survey showed that hospitalist productivity hasn’t declined, so the other most likely culprit is declining professional fee collections, which might be due to an increasing portion of hospitalized patients who are uninsured or underinsured. Many hospitals report that their “payor mix” has worsened since the economic crisis of the last few years. And because hospitals typically hold the risk for the financial performance of their hospitalists, then if the latter see more uninsured patients and collect less in professional fees, the hospital will make up the difference. This phenomenon might explain much of the increased financial support.
But I’m not satisfied that a worsening payor mix explains everything. For example, if this were the most significant reason for increasing financial support, I think we would have seen this effect in the prior survey. Why did it “hit” so suddenly in this year alone?
We will get more information about collection rates when the second part of the survey is published in September. For example, we’ll be able to compare the dollars collected per encounter or per wRVU in the current survey to the prior one. If there was a significant drop, then it will require only a little math to see how much overall collections dropped per FTE and see if it is similar to the rise in financial support provided.
Of course, it will be very informative to see what the financial support turns out to be in the next survey (check back in late spring 2012). Will it stay around $136,000 per FTE or be something very different? TH
Dr. Nelson has been a practicing hospitalist since 1988 and is co-founder and past president of SHM. He is a principal in Nelson Flores Hospital Medicine Consultants, a national hospitalist practice management consulting firm (www.nelsonflores.com). He is course co-director and faculty for SHM’s “Best Practices in Managing a Hospital Medicine Program” course. This column represents his views and is not intended to reflect an official position of SHM.