ASCs’ surgeries often less costly than hospitals’
A new study from the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) reports that the payments for common workers’ compensation surgeries conducted at ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) are lower than many of the payments for similar surgeries performed at hospital outpatient settings.
"Advocates for freestanding ASCs argue they may be more efficient than hospital outpatient departments and, therefore, should be less costly to payers and patients," said Bogdan Savych, PhD, the study’s author and policy researchers at WCRI. "The goal of this report is to inform the debate about how the costs of ASC surgeries compare to the costs of similar hospital outpatient surgeries." WCRI provides information about public policy issues involving workers’ compensation systems.
In many states, the study finds support for the conventional wisdom that ASC surgeries are less expensive than hospital outpatient surgeries, although there are exceptions. For example, in Connecticut, ASC surgeries were more expensive than hospital outpatient surgeries for all surgery types examined. Also, in Georgia, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Tennessee, ASC surgeries were more expensive than hospital outpatient surgeries for some of the surgery types examined in the study.
Link to fee schedule regs
The study found differences or similarities in payments for ASC and hospital outpatient surgeries often reflected underlying fee schedule regulations.
When the ASC fee schedules were lower than hospital outpatient fee schedules, the payments also were lower. Differences in fee schedule rates were an important factor in Illinois, South Carolina, and Texas. When ASC fee schedules were similar to the hospital outpatient fee schedules, the payments were mostly similar.
According to the study, ASC surgeries were less expensive than hospital outpatient surgeries in states that used different approaches for regulating prices paid for surgery. In four states (Florida, Maryland, Michigan, and Pennsylvania), payments for ASC surgeries used a fixed-amount fee schedule, while payments for hospital outpatient surgeries were tied to charges, which led to large differences in payments for ASC and for hospital outpatient surgeries.
The study analyzed ASC and hospital outpatient facility payments for common knee and shoulder surgeries performed in calendar year 2011 in 23 large states representing more than two-thirds of the workers’ compensation benefits paid in the United States.
The 23 states included in this study are Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Wisconsin. For more information on this study, go to http://bit.ly/1zursYm.