Over the last few years there has been a marked decrease in the number of independent oncology practices. The Practice Impact Report, a recently released study by the Community Oncology Alliance (COA), shows that 241 clinics have closed over a 4.5- year time period ending in 2011.1
“The key driver of consolidation in oncology is financial strain,” said David Eagle, MD, president of COA. “While there are some concerns about business and professional changes, the key driver is almost purely financial. All of the others are secondary to payment issues.”
Impact of Medicare Modernization Act
The reimbursement changes began with the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA). Congress moved payments from a profit margin above the average wholesale price to an average sales price. They hoped this would better match payments with the services provided by oncologists.
“The problem is that Congress overdid it,” said Eagle. “The money they took away from chemotherapy and supportive drugs was more than they put toward infusion services. In addition, Medicare has been cutting payments for infusion services every year since MMA was implemented.”
Payments for infusion services have declined by a total of 35% since 2004—a figure that rises to nearly 50% after factoring in medical inflation. An analysis of oncology practice expenses by COA and Avalere Health showed Medicare payments covered only 57% of the cost of providing these services.2
“Over time, private payers have also begun migrating to the same system,” said Eagle. “That is one of the reasons that a law enacted in 2003 is just hitting its apex.”
Trend Accelerating
COA’s latest Practice Impact Report suggests the trend away from community practices may be accelerating. There was a 20% increase in the number of physician-owned community oncology practices impacted in the 12 months since the release of the previous report. Additionally, there was a 21% year-overyear increase in clinics closed.
Passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) may stimulate another round of consolidation in oncology practices. This time, however, other specialties may be impacted, as well.
“When the ACA passed, it launched another increase in efforts to buy out physician practices,” said Vivian Ho, PhD, James A. Baker III Institute Chair in Health Economics at Rice University in Houston, Texas. “Some hospitals believe strongly that we are moving toward more accountable care, either the Medicare or other models. They are preparing by acquiring physician practices to bring as much care in-house as they can.”
Another driver of oncology practice consolidation is that Medicare seems to be moving toward a payment model geared toward rewarding large organizations. Some of the programs require a minimum of 5000 patients for entry.
Risk Shifting
Both the federal programs and private insurers are looking to shift risks from them to the practicing physician. Thus, they are moving toward more bundling of treatment payments, episodic care, large accountable care organizations, and the like.
“There are many names for the changes being made, but the bottom line is a realignment of people and providers,” said Kenneth Hertz, FACMPE, a principal with the MGMA Health Care Consulting Group. “These changes in who has the risk exposure tend to drive people to work together so they can reduce costs, provide better compensation to the providers, spread the risk over more people, and obtain more and easier access to financial resources.”
Governmental payers have already moved toward bundled payment for some cardiovascular disease codes to cover not only the hospitalization, but all services up to 30 days after discharge. The National Cancer Institute estimates that the total US cost for cancer care is $125 billion, and that figure is projected to go as high as $158 billion (in 2010 dollars) by 2020. Because of this “target-rich environment,” Medicare is looking at putting a target on the backs of oncologists next.3
One frequently overlooked change in the oncology landscape is how radically the definition of what constitutes good cancer care has evolved over the last 2 decades.
“Medical oncology, and to a degree radiation oncology, is very different than it was when I went into practice 20 years ago,” said Therese Mulvey, MD, physician chief, South Coast Center for Cancer Care, New Bedford, Massachusetts. “At that time you basically saw a patient with cancer, you determined the correct treatment plan, administered that therapy, and then followed the patient for a period of time. Patients, and the entire healthcare industry, are now expecting that we will be able to provide far more services to the individual patient.”
Counseling and social work services, nutritional support, integrative medicine, patient navigation, outreach and support groups, and genetic screening are now part of what most consider standard care. Smaller practices have problems providing all of the needed resources in this environment.
“Some of the migration to hospital employment or to larger practice entities has to do with being able to provide all the services that we now believe to be part of high quality care,” said Mulvey. “The expectations are completely different, yet reimbursement has only gone down during that time. This quality of care standard is hard for smaller practices to deliver unless there is some link to the resources of a larger organization.”
She stressed that although much of the talk on this subject focuses on how reimbursement changes are causing problems throughout oncology, a lot of the impact on the financial stability of practices is driven by patients’ wants and needs. “It has crossed the line where oncologists are no longer being asked to do the same with less, we are now being asked to do significantly more with less,” she said. “It is combining increasing responsibilities with lower reimbursements that really drove oncologists to look for partners. Those who could help them achieve high-quality patient care in a way that did not bankrupt everybody.”
Funding Source: None.
Author Disclosure: Mr. Ullman reports no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article.
Authorship Information: Concept and design; acquisition of data; drafting of the manuscript; and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content.1. Community Oncology Alliance practice impact report. Community Oncology Alliance. http://goo.gl/9FgbA. Published April 4, 2012. Accessed August 31, 2012.
2. Providing high quality care in community oncology practices: an assessment of infusion services and their associated costs. Avalere Health, LLC. www.avalerehealth.net. Accessed August 30, 2012.
3. The cost of cancer. National Cancer Institute. http://goo.gl/nC5mU. Published January 12, 2011. Updated February 18, 2011. Accessed August 30, 2012.
How English- and Spanish-Preferring Patients With Cancer Decide on Emergency Care
November 13th 2024Care delivery innovations to help patients with cancer avoid emergency department visits are underused. The authors interviewed English- and Spanish-preferring patients at 2 diverse health systems to understand why.
Read More
Geographic Variations and Facility Determinants of Acute Care Utilization and Spending for ACSCs
November 12th 2024Emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations for ambulatory care–sensitive conditions (ACSCs) among Medicaid patients constitute almost 40% of all ED visits and hospitalizations, with lower rates observed in areas with greater proximity to urgent care facilities and density of rural health clinics.
Read More
Pervasiveness and Clinical Staff Perceptions of HPV Vaccination Feedback
November 11th 2024This article used regression analyses to quantify how clinical staff perceive provider feedback to improve human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rates and determine the prevalence of such feedback.
Read More