CarePayment Program Hospital Outcomes: Results from Semi-Structured Interviews with Hospital Staff

Julie Solomon, Ph.D., Laura Lessard, Ph.D., M.P.H.

Abstract


The research described in this article was supported by a grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

Introduction: Although the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has resulted in lower medical debt rates among Americans, bad debt remains a significant problem for U.S. hospitals. A number of companies offer patient financing programs that may help ameliorate hospitals’ bad debt-related challenges, including CarePayment (CP), which offers a zero interest line of credit to patients at participating hospitals. We undertook an exploratory study of CP outcomes that is, to our knowledge, the first independent outcome evaluation of a patient financing mechanism in the U.S. One purpose of the study was to investigate hospital-level outcomes through qualitative interviews with hospital staff.

Methods: We conducted semi-structured, in-person interviews with staff who worked directly with the CP program at a purposive sample of hospitals. Priority was given to hospitals serving low-income populations, and to creating a sample of hospitals of different sizes and offering CP for different time-periods. The interview questions addressed hospital context, interviewees’ experience with CP, and CP outcomes. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. The online platform Dedoose was used to facilitate coding and qualitative analysis. Analytic memos on outcomes of focus were developed and discussed among the study team.

Results: Five hospitals participated in interviews, with 23 staff interviewed in total. Across the hospitals, bad debt was reported to have either gone down or leveled off due to CP. All five hospitals reported that having CP manage a bill payment plan was beneficial. Four reported not having the staff, skills, and/or systems to efficiently manage the internal payment plans they had prior to CP. Contrary to our expectation, no interviewee felt that changes in bad debt rates or other savings associated with CP have had a direct impact on hospital provision of charity care or other community programming. Finally, at least one interviewee at each hospital expressed the view that CP helps to give the hospital a competitive advantage because of patient satisfaction with the program. Interviewees offered stories exemplifying patient satisfaction, and cited few complaints and repeated use of CP as further evidence.

Discussion: The findings provide preliminary qualitative evidence of positive outcomes for most indicators that were examined. Two hospitals’ experiences of observing higher-than-expected rates of returned accounts due to non-payment by CP patients underscore the need for ongoing analysis of collections performance in light of revenue cycle objectives, in order to ensure the best possible revenue outcomes through the program. Limitations that should be taken into consideration in interpreting the study findings include CP’s involvement in selection of and outreach to potential participant sites, and the possibility of social desirability bias influencing the interviewees’ responses. Steps were taken to reduce both potential sources of bias.

Conclusion: Bad debt and payment collection challenges are likely to remain important problems for U.S. hospitals. External patient financing options, such as CP, have the potential to reduce bad debt and improve payment collection efficiency and patient satisfaction. Hospital administrators might consider the promise of such programs for benefitting both the bottom line and patient care.


Full Text:

PDF

References


References are listed in order of their initial citation in the article:

Collins SR, Rasmussen PW, Doty MM, Beutel S. (2015). The Rise in Health Care Coverage and Affordability Since Health Reform Took Effect: Findings from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey, 2014. New York: The Commonwealth Fund. Accessed February 7, 2015 at http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/files/publications/issue-brief/2015/jan/1800_collins_biennial_survey_brief.pdf.

Kutscher B. (2013a). ACA-compliant plans may not help hospitals cut bad debt. Modern Healthcare, 43(44):10.

Kutscher B. (2013b). Targeting bad debt. Hospitals getting proactive on billing. Modern Healthcare, 43(33):32-3.

Kutscher B. (2015). High-deductible plans change how hospitals interact with patients. Accessed August 29, 2015 at http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20150624/NEWS/150629941/high-deductible-plans-change-how-hospitals-interact-with-patients.

Bayley M, Calkins S, Levine E, Machado-Pereira M. (2013). Hospital revenue cycle operations: opportunities creased by the ACA. Accessed August 29, 2015 at http://healthcare.mckinsey.com/sites/default/files/793544_Hospital_Revenue_Cycle_Operations.pdf.

Koenig S. (2010). A prescription for turning self-pay accounts into revenue. Journal of Health Care Finance, 37(1):30-34.

Brasch W. (2014; May 9). Navigating the compliance minefield of patient financing. Becker’s Hospital Review. Accessed October 13, 2015 at http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/navigating-the-compliance-minefield-of-patient-financing.html.

Unland JJ. (2005). Two years into the storm over pricing to and collecting from the uninsured--a hospital valuation expert examines the risk/return dynamics and asks: would fair pricing and fair medical debt repayment plans increase yields to hospitals and simultaneously mitigate these controversies? Journal of Health Care Finance, 32(1):54-66.

Levitt JC. (2004). Transfer of financial risk and alternative financing solutions. Journal of Health Care Finance, 30(4):21-32.

Evans M. (2013). Across the board: Affordable Care Act prompting hospital trustees to pay closer attention to policies on patient billing, collection and bad debt. Modern Healthcare, 43(27):30-31.

Phelps R. (2011). New technologies reduce bad-debt risk and collection costs. Revenue Cycle Strategist, 8(5):6-7.

Garnier A. (2015). Using IRS Code 501(r) to Improve Patient Financial Engagement. [White Paper.] Lake Oswego, OR: CarePayment.

Herman PM, Rissi JJ, Walsh ME. (2011). Health insurance status, medical debt, and their impact on access to care in Arizona. American Journal of Public Health, 101(8):1437-1443.

Kalousova L, Burgard SJ. Debt and foregone medical care. (2013). Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 54(2):204-220.

Sommers A, Cunningham PJ. (2011). Medical bill problems steady for U.S. families, 2007-2010. Tracking Reports, 28:1-5.

Traub A, Ruetschlin C. (2012). The plastic safety net: 2012. Accessed October 15, 2012 at http://www.demos.org/publication/plastic-safety-net.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


©Journal of Health Care Finance