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Pain Physician ; 17(3): E253-61, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24850110

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: One consequence of the shifting economic health care landscape is the growing trend of physician employment and practice acquisition by hospitals. These acquired practices are often converted into hospital- or provider-based clinics. This designation brings the increased services of the hospital, the accreditation of the hospital, and a new billing structure verses the private clinic (the combination of the facility and professional fee billing). One potential concern with moving to a provider-based designation is that this new structure might make the practice less competitive in a marketplace that may still be dominated by private physician office-based practices. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the impact of the provider-based/hospital fee structure on clinical volume. OBJECTIVE: Determine the effect of transition to a hospital- or provider-based practice setting (with concomitant cost implications) on patient volume in the current practice milieu. SETTING:   Community hospital-based academic interventional pain medicine practice. STUDY DESIGN: Economic analysis of effect of change in price structure on clinical volumes. METHODS: The current study evaluates the effect of a change in designation with price implications on the demand for clinical services that accompany the transition to a hospital-based practice setting from a physician office setting in an academic community hospital. RESULTS: Clinical volumes of both procedures and clinic volumes increased in a mature practice setting following transition to a provider-based designation and the accompanying facility and professional fee structure. Following transition to a provider-based designation clinic visits were increased 24% while procedural volume demand did not change. LIMITATIONS: Single practice entity and single geographic location in southeastern United States. CONCLUSIONS: The conversion to a hospital- or provider-based setting does not negatively impact clinical volume and referrals to community-based pain medicine practice. These results imply that factors other than price are a driver of patient choice.  


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care Facilities/economics , Pain Management/economics , Physicians' Offices/economics , Physicians/economics , Provider-Sponsored Organizations/economics , Ambulatory Care Facilities/trends , Humans , Insurance, Health, Reimbursement/economics , Insurance, Health, Reimbursement/trends , Pain/economics , Pain Management/trends , Physicians/trends , Physicians' Offices/trends , Provider-Sponsored Organizations/trends
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