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MNASCA ANNUAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE APRIL 14-15, 2011

MNASCA ANNUAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE APRIL 14-15, 2011. Presented by: Mary Sturm, Sr. VP Clinical Operations Surgical Management Professionals. Strong Anesthesia Relationships for a Strong Center . Presented by: Mary Sturm, Sr. VP Clinical Operations Surgical Management Professionals.

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MNASCA ANNUAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE APRIL 14-15, 2011

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  1. MNASCA ANNUAL EDUCATION CONFERENCEAPRIL 14-15, 2011 Presented by: Mary Sturm, Sr. VP Clinical Operations Surgical Management Professionals

  2. Strong Anesthesia Relationships for a Strong Center Presented by: Mary Sturm, Sr. VP Clinical Operations Surgical Management Professionals

  3. Goals of Anesthesia in an ASC Must Drive Value and Improve Quality

  4. Anesthesia Business Models • Traditional model • Employment model • Owner Provider Model

  5. Traditional Model Independent group practice model is most common

  6. Employment Model

  7. Owner Provider Model (not common in Midwest) • A separate anesthesia corporation is established under the same ASC ownership as facility. Anesthesia technical and professional fees are billed thru this corporation and profits are set up as distributions to the owners. The income for anesthesia providers is typically less than if they billed separately. –model is prevalent in GI centers in southern states. • Potential for corruption of medical judgment and potential for kickback concerns

  8. Current and Future Supply and Demand of Anesthesia Providers

  9. Anesthesia Supply Side • Average age of MDA and CRNA in United States is 49 • Steady decline in # of graduating anesthesiologists • 54% of states report shortage on MDAs • 60% of states report shortage of CRNAs • Surplus of CRNAs predicted by 2020

  10. Anesthesia Demand Side • Demand for anesthesia service in ASCs grew 300% in last ten years • Aging population increases need for anesthesia services

  11. Anesthesia Clinical Models • Anesthesia Care Team (ACT) is prevalent in most prevalent in Midwest • MDA supervising CRNAs (up to four per MDA) • Data to show cost effective as well as quality delivery model • Minnesota has been “opt out” state since 2002

  12. The “Culture” of Anesthesia Are anesthesia providers in the service business providing anesthesia? OR Are anesthesia providers in the anesthesia business providing service?

  13. Strategies for “On Boarding” Anesthesia • Clinical competence, safety, patient outcomes are assumed. • Selection and control on specific anesthesia providers in the ASC • Clinical competence in ancillary services such as pain management program, regional anesthesia • Provides the same culture of flexibility that you expect from ASC employees

  14. “On Boarding” Anesthesia – cont’d • Engagement in ASC center activities • Policies and Procedures • Compliance with Infection Control Policies • Protocols for pre op phone calls and patient management • Engagement in QI • Mandatory education compliance • Expectations for expense management (supplies & pharmaceuticals)

  15. Some Potential Hills to Die On • Restrictive clinical guidelines for patient acceptance (i.e. BMI) • Restrictive policies on surgery schedule start and end times • Restrictive policies on opening another OR • Restrictive policies on same day add- ons • Rush to discharge or transfer patients late in the day

  16. Anesthesia Providers as ASC Shareholders • Align Incentives Wherever Possible • Anesthesiologist who perform pain procedures as ASC Investors • Safe Harbor Implications If anesthesia providers are not performing procedures per se, may consider model of real estate investment opportunity

  17. Conclusion An effective anesthesia model should be a thing of beauty

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