Home
Surgery Center Education
Pa. Report: ASCs Save Medicare $464 Million Annually
Surgery Center Education
Pa. Report: ASCs Save Medicare $464 Million Annually
| Pa. Report: ASCs Save Medicare $464 Million Annually |
|
| Written by Scott Becker | |
| Friday, 18 January 2008 | |
|
An independent report on Pennsylvania's ASCs has turned up some interesting statistics. The report, entitled Financial Analysis 2006, Volume Two, reported a total of 205 licensed ASC facilities in the state with 28 facilities having opened between June 2006 and May 2007. The report also indicated a 17-point increase in the number of outpatient diagnostic and surgical (D&S) procedures over a six-year period. In 2006, ASCs performed 622,652 of the total 2.3 million outpatient D&S procedures in the state.
"The continued growth of ambulatory surgery centers demonstrates that there is a need ... for alternative, low-cost, high-quality outpatient surgical services within our communities," says Rick Bloxdorf, the president of the Pennsylvania Ambulatory Surgery Association and administrator for Village SurgiCenter of Erie, Pa. The following statistics bear this out, he says: * Payers save money. Medicare payment to ASCs for high-volume procedures is lower than Medicare payment to outpatient department of hospitals for the same procedures. In 2008 the difference will be 37 percent. Studies have shown the Medicare program would pay approximately $464 million per year more if all procedures performed in an ASC were instead furnished at a hospital. * Consumers save money. A Medicare beneficiary could pay as much as $496 in co-insurance for a cataract extraction procedure performed in a hospital outpatient department, whereas the maximum out-of-pocket cost for the same beneficiary to receive the service in an ASC is $195. Likewise, a Medicare beneficiary could pay as much as $186 in coinsurance for a colonoscopy performed in an outpatient department of hospital but only $89 if they had the procedure in an ASC. * Employers often achieve similar savings when their employees choose ASCs as the Medicare program does for its beneficiaries. Reimbursement from private insurers for the same outpatient surgical procedures performed in an ASC setting is lower than in an outpatient hospital setting. As in Medicare, both the insurance company and the patient pass less for their care if they use an ASC. The report is the product of the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council, an independent state agency charged with collecting, analyzing, and reporting information that can be used to improve the quality and restrain the cost of healthcare in Pennsylvania. In addition to ASCs, the report also includes data representing the financial health of other non-general acute care facilities, including long-term acute care, rehabilitation, psychiatric, and specialty hospitals. Copies of the report are available online. |
Advertisement
- 10 Valuation Facts and Statistics for ASCs
- 10 Benchmarking Statistics for Ambulatory Surgical Centers
- 10 Interesting Facts and Statistics for ASCs
- 10 Keys to Turning Around Financially Troubled ASCs
- California Licensure and Accreditation Concerns -- Ambulatory Surgery Centers
- Establishing an Ambulatory Surgery Center: A Primer from A to Z
- N.J. Decision May Cause Big Challenges for State's Physician-Owned ASCs
- CMS Proposes 3 Percent Increase for Outpatient Services, Adding 9 Procedures to ASC List
- Top 10 Billing Errors ASCs Make
- The Fraud and Abuse Statute and Investor-Owned Ambulatory Surgery Centers
- 30 Orthopedic Procedures Added to Medicare ASC List in 2008 Which Are Advantageous to Perform
- Orthopedic Coding in ASCs - An Audio Conference
- 12 Interesting Statistics From the VMG Health Endo Centers Financial and Operational Benchmark Study
- Compensation Up for 8 Core Specialties That Regularly Practice in ASCs
- Litigation Against ASCs on the Upswing
Ambulatory Surgery Center
| Surgery Center Education |
| Selling a Surgery Center |
| Business Issues |
| Planning |
| Safe Harbor Surgery Center |
| Legal Issues |
| ASC Review |
Outpatient Surgery
| Business Issues |
| Outpatient Surgery |
Healthcare Business
| Legislation |
| Legal Issues |
| Business Issues |
| Clinical Issues |
About Becker's ASC Review
| About Us |
| About Scott Becker |
| Exhibiting |
| Advertising |
| eNewsletter |
| Subscribe |
| Contact Us |
| Previous Issues |









