CapitationCapitation. Determination of Premium Rates Benefit Payments –Paid to providers Risk Premiums –Profit earned by payer as a function of accepting.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MANAGED CARE STRATEGIES FOR FINANCING & DELIVERING HIV SERVICES JULIA HIDALGO POSITIVE OUTCOMES, INC. & GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY.
Advertisements

Assignment Nine Actuarial Operations.
Health Insurance – Part 1 Eric Jacobson. Employer Health Benefits 2004 Annual Survey Kaiser Family Foundation
© 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill Career Education Computers in the Medical Office Chapter 1: The Medical Office.
Lecture No. 3 Insurance and Risk.
PAYMENT METHODS: Managed Care and Indemnity Plans
Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO’s) Sandy H. Yoo May 5, 2006.
Health Insurance October 19, 2006 Insurance is defined as a means of protecting against risk. Risk is a state in which multiple outcomes are possible and.
The Basics of Self Funded Health Plans for Small Employers 11084s1212 Edition Brought to you by: Allied National February 2014.
© 2009 Corporate Executive Board, All Rights Reserved. Health Plan Dictionary How to Understand Your Plan and Make Cost- Effective Choices.
Chapter 2 Insurance and Risk.
The Health Care Industry Part 2 - Medical Insurance Karen F. Nichols, MSA School of Allied Health Professions University of Nebraska Medical Center.
1 Chapter 9 - Insurance Purpose – protect against catastrophes Risk pooling and diversification Policy – a contract with an insurance company –Losses covered,
Copyright © 2008 Delmar Learning. All rights reserved. Chapter 18 Financial Management of the Medical Practice.
CHAPTER © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 Introduction to the Medical Billing Cycle.
1 Chapter 9 - Insurance Purpose – protect against catastrophes Risk pooling and diversification Policy – a contract with an insurance company –Losses covered,
Chapter 4: Insurance Company Operations
 Indemnity or Fee-for-Service coverage- -allow you go to the doctor of your choice and pay for services at the time of the visit. -The amount that your.
HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau1 HIV/AIDS BUREAU HEALTH RESOURCES AND SERVICES ADMINISTRATION FUNDAMENTALS OF MANAGED CARE.
Trends In Health Care Industry KNH 413. Difficult questions What is health insurance? What is health care versus health insurance? Is one or both a right.
1 Managed Health Care Pricing for Provider Arrangements Presented by Vanessa Olson Seminar on Health and Managed Care October 18, 1999.
Component 1: Introduction to Health Care and Public Health in the U.S. 1.5: Unit 5: Financing Health Care (Part 2) 1.5b: Reimbursement Methodologies and.
Health Care Financing and Managed Care. Objectives  To understand the basics of health care financing in the United States  To understand the basic.
Continuity Clinic Liability Insurance 101 Modified from information on
1.3 Health Care Plans (Continued) 1-14 Managed care offers a more restricted choice of providers and treatments in exchange for lower premiums, deductibles,
LESSON 11.3: HEALTH INSURANCE Module 11: Health Policy Obj. 11.3: Calculate the cost of health care based on health insurance plan.
Good Health Everyone desires good health, both for the sake of quality of life and because it contributes to our remaining productive years and earning.
1 Fourth: Health Care Plans: 1. 2 The Economics of Health Care: Price rationing occurs because buyers base purchasing decisions on the relative quality.
Slides for Class 2 H ADM 545 January 17, Broad model depicting what a Health Care Organizations (HCO) must do to remain financially viable. Hire.
Key financial underwriting concepts For Producer use only. Not for use with clients. DI
The Basics Understanding Health Insurance Terms Jennifer Flory, HIA, CPIW, CGBA.
1 Benefits in Health Insurance: Calculating the Costs and Premiums Alliance for Health Reform October 10, 2008 John Bertko, FSA, MAAA.
Consumer-Driven Health Plans HSA and HDHP Overview A Health Savings Account (HSA) is a special account owned by an individual where contributions to.
Any CHC - Sample Multi-year TREND REPORT Access and Financial Measures Budget Access to Primary Care.
Foundation Standard Discuss common methods of payment for healthcare.
Managed Care Organizations. Managed Care Continuum Use of Managed Care Techniques Less More Traditional Indemnity Health Plan Traditional with Cost Containment.
1 Chase Smith Health Insurance. 2 Health Insurance Facts 85 of 100 Americans are currently covered by a government based health insurance or private health.
Agribusiness Library LESSON: HEALTH INSURANCE. Objectives 1. Determine the function of health insurance, and define common health insurance terms. 2.
1 Healthcare Group of Arizona Director Anthony D. Rodgers State Coverage Initiatives - Summer Workshop ‘Pressing Forward: Cuts, Coverage, and Creativity’
2 Understanding Managed Care: Insurance Plans.
Comprehensive Health Insurance Billing, Coding, and Reimbursement Copyright ©2009 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey All rights.
© 2010 Principles of Healthcare Reimbursement Third Edition Chapter 1 Healthcare Reimbursement Methodologies.
Chapter 2 Insurance and Risk
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 2 The Insurance Mechanism.
Insurance and Risk 2-1. Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 2-2 Agenda Definition and Basic Characteristics of Insurance Requirements.
Managed Care. In the broadest terms, Kongstvedt (1997) describes managed care as a system of healthcare delivery that tries to manage the cost of healthcare,
Component 1: Introduction to Health Care and Public Health in the U.S. 1.4: Unit 4: Financing Health Care (Part 1) 1.4 c: Insurance and Third-Party Payers.
Conducting a Medical Practice Assessment. PurposePurpose To determine the readiness of the medical practice to receive payment by a given reimbursement.
 Agreed upon fees paid for coverage of medical benefits for a defined benefit period. Premiums can be paid by employers, unions, employees, or shared.
1 Aon Risk Services 1999 CAS Seminar on Health and Managed Care Provider Excess Insurance Overview Presented By: Riggs Stephenson Aon Risk Services Franklin,
UNIT 1 BUILDING A FOUNDATION CHAPTER 4 TYPES AND SOURCES OF HEALTH INSURANCE Copyright © 2011, 2009, 2007 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc.
Private Health Insurance
Chapter 12 Financial Analysis of Alternative Health Care Firms.
Chapter 8 Private Payers. Employer-sponsored  Group health plans  Carve out~designed plan  Open enrollment periods  Regulated by state laws.
HEALTH INSURANCE PLANS. BACKGROUND INFO Cost is a major concern Health care is over 15% of gross national product Without insurance, the cost of an illness.
PPO Plans What You Need To Know Burt Krebs Virginia State Insurance Manager.
Alternative Risk Financing Vehicles. Began development in 2010 Launched first captive in 2011 Current Active Captive Portfolio ‒ Legacy health – Heterogeneous.
THE UNITED STATES HEALTH CARE SYSTEM Combining Business, Health, and Delivery CHAPTER Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. The.
Chapter 2 Insurance and Risk
Understanding Health Systems: The Organization of
Chapter 8 Private Payers.
Personal Finance Health Insurance
Chapter 7 Managed Care.
The State of Healthcare Benefits
Health Insurance in the USA
Component 1: Introduction to Health Care and Public Health in the U.S.
Types of Insurance Advanced Level.
Chapter 3: Basic of Health Insurance
3 Understanding Managed Care: Medical Contracts and Ethics.
Module 5 HC Economics Students.
Presentation transcript:

CapitationCapitation

Determination of Premium Rates Benefit Payments –Paid to providers Risk Premiums –Profit earned by payer as a function of accepting financial risk Administrative Costs –Claims processing, marketing, insurance coverage, etc.

Determination of Premium Rates Marketing Expenses –Intangibles (i.e. market power, good service)

Definition of a Stop Loss Specific Stop Loss –Severity of claims Aggregate Stop Loss –Frequency of claims

Corridors & Trends To Specific and Aggregate Stop Loss Trends –Measured by Utilization Level & Charges –Related to Aggregate Stop Loss Corridors –Refers to Costly Claims Requiring LCM Intervention –Refers to Specific Stop Loss

Risk Rating Process of adjusting healthcare utilization for demographic factors and other factors

Other Factors Affecting Healthcare Utilization Income –Wealthier use more services Education –More educated use more services Type of Employer –Manufacturing, healthcare, and unionized workers use more services

Other Factors Affecting Healthcare Utilization Location –Urban residents use more services Benefit Design –Copays & deductibles affect utilization Sex –Women use more services –Men have more catastrophic care

Other Factors Affecting Healthcare Utilization Age –0-17 yrs. has lowest utilization –Utilization increases for yrs. –Utilization decreases for yrs. –Utilization rapidly increases for 44+ yrs.

Causes of Financial Risk in Capitation Adverse Selection –Occurs when a group’s characteristics predispose them towards higher than predicted utilization Random Nature of Healthcare Demand –Much of utilization results from random events (i.e. epidemics, accidents, etc.)

Causes of Financial Risk in Capitation Law of Large Numbers –Increased risk with smaller groups

Effects of Capitation Gatekeeper Transfer of Risk –Payer to provider Utilization Ground Rules Specialty Referrals –Reverse Capitation

Effects of Capitation Pressure for Fee Reductions –Increased likelihood that specialists are capitated –Increased pressures for sub-capitation, carve outs, and disease management

Process of Calculating a Risk Contract PMPM Rates Using a Capitation Model 1Define services included in the capitation contract 2Risk adjust medical services 3Identify other variables in PMPM premium rate model

Process of Calculating a Risk Contract PMPM Rates Using a Capitation Model 4Adjust for current demographic factors for this health plan –Inflation factor –Premium rate structure & rates at respective levels –Community rating flexibility

Process of Calculating a Risk Contract PMPM Rates Using a Capitation Model 5Continuous assessment of key managed care performance indicators –Membership –Inpatient care –Ambulatory care –Financials

Process of Calculating a Risk Contract PMPM Rates Using a Capitation Model 6Adjust for variances in key indicators –Physician mix –Level of services –Level of integration under capitation contract

Average Benefit Payments

Total benefit payments usually account for approximately 70-90% of the premium

Average Benefit Payments Breakdown for a typical group of insureds during a policy year: –500 of 1,000 = No claims –375 of 1,000 = Payments of $0-$500 –2 of 1,000 = Payments of >$10,000 –Average cost of providing care per insured = $560 per policy year

Operational Example 1,000 insureds at following premiums: –Employee only coverage = $120/month With 400 lives = $48,000/month –Employee + 1 or more = $350/month With 600 lives = $210,000/month –Total premium per month = $258,000 $3,096,000 annualized

Operational Example Average claims = $560 x 1,000 employees = $560,00 pre-shock losses Two shock losses at $1M & $500K Surplus = ($3,096,000 - $560,000 - $1M - $5K) = $1,036,000 –Covers other operating expenses such as cost of reinsurance, administrative overhead, acquisition costs, etc.

Operational Example Operating costs = 20% of total premiums customarily = $619,200 Pre-tax surplus = $1,036,000 - $619,200 = $416,800 = 13.5% After tax profit = $416,800 x.61 = $254,248 Return on total premium = 8%

Are Withholds Ethical or Unethical? Clinical protocols –Can reduce liability exposures –Must make changes when dictated by indication & necessity Professional liability exposures –Claims denials –Failure to provide coverage –Abandonment of patient

Requirements for Transition to Capitation Align financial incentives Develop primary care driven medical groups Establish long-term preferred relationships Decentralize medical management Develop a continuous improvement process

Calculation of Basic Capitation Rate Routine Office Visit: Example #1 Primary care practice receives $45/visit Average of 3 visits PMPY 3 visits x $45/visit = $135 PMPY $135 PMPY/12 months = $11.25 PMPM (Approximate Cap Rate) 2,000 subscribers assigned to the practice 2,000 ss x $11.25 PMPM = $22,500/month $22,500/month x 12 months = $270,000 per year

Calculation of Basic Capitation Rate Routine Office Visit: Example #2 Primary care practice receives $45/visit Members pays $10 copay/visit Average of 3 visits PMPY 3 visits x ($45/visit - $10 copay/visit) = $105 PMPY $105 PMPY/12 months = $8.75 PMPM (Approximate Cap Rate) 2,000 subscribers assigned to the practice 2,000 ss x $8.75 PMPM = $17,500/month

Calculation of Basic Capitation Rate Routine Office Visit: Example #2 (cont.) $17,500/month x 12 months = $210,000/ year Add projected copay of patients –2,000 ss with 3 visits PMPY = 6,000 visits/year –6,000 visits x $10 copay/visit = $60,000 copay/yr $210,000/yr + $60,000 copay/yr = $270,000/yr Example #2 has become the prevalent method. Why?

Calculation of Withhold Using Examples #1 & #2 Withhold policy of managed care company is 20% of total reimbursement Under Example #1, net reimbursement after withhold is calculated as follows: $22,500 x 20% = $4,500/month x 12 months = $54,000/year Net reimbursement from MCO = $216,000/yr

Calculation of Withhold Using Examples #1 & #2 (cont.) Under Example #2, net reimbursement after withhold is calculated as follow: $17,500 x 20% = $3,500/month x 12 months = $42,000/year Net reimbursement from MCO = $168,000/yr Which practice is better off financially? Why?

Liability and Compliance Issues

Liability Exposure Among MCOs Negligent credentialling &/or provider selection Network development Vicarious liability Utilization review Warranties Financial incentives

Types of Liability Coverage Required by MCOs Medical Professional Liability Coverage –Claims made vs. occurrence from coverage –Covers direct patient care

Types of Liability Coverage Required by MCOs Directors and Officers Liability Insurance –Decisions and policies –Two types Managed Care D & O Corporate D & O Managed Care Professional Liability Coverage –Covers sale of MCO products & services to third parties