Los Angeles Times

Rx for high health bills

Some employers steer patients to cheaper out- of- town hospitals

- By Chad Terhune

Retiree Leslie Robinson-Stone and her husband enjoyed a weeklong, all- expenses- paid trip to a luxury resort — all thanks to the county she worked for.

The couple also received more than a thousand dollars in spending money and a personal concierge, who attended to their every need. For Santa Barbara County, it was money well spent: Sending Robinson- Stone 250 miles away for knee replacemen­t surgery near San Diego saved the government $ 30,000.

“The only difference between our two hospitals is one is expensive and the other is exorbitant,” said Andreas Pyper, assistant director of human resources for Santa Barbara County, referring to the local options.

After years of hospital industry consolidat­ion, frustratio­n with sky- high hospital bills and a lack of local competitio­n is common to many employers and consumers across the country. Fed up with wildly different prices for routine operations, some private employers are steering patients they insure to top- performing providers who offer bargain prices. Santa Barbara County, with about 4,000 employees, is among a handful of public entities to join them.

The county has saved nearly 50% on four surgery cases since starting its out- of- town program last year, officials said. The program is voluntary for covered employees.

At a Scripps Health hospital in the San Diego area, the county paid $ 61,600 for a spinal fusion surgery that would have cost more than twice as much locally. It avoided two other operations altogether after patients went outside the area for second opinions.

Typically, employers are seeking deals through “bundled payments” — in which one fixed price covers tests, physician fees and hospital charges. And if complicati­ons arise, providers are on the hook f inancially. Medicare began experiment­ing with this method during the Obama administra­tion.

Santa Barbara County is among about 400 employers on the West Coast working with Carrum Health, a South San Francisco start- up that negotiates bundled prices and chooses surgeons based on data on complicati­ons and readmissio­ns.

“Not all surgeons are equal. We don’t want to give Scripps a blank check. That defeats the whole purpose,” said Sachin Jain, Carrum’s chief executive.

Santa Barbara officials try to persuade workers and their fam-

ily members to participat­e in the program by waiving co- pays and deductible­s. The county pays about $ 2,700 in travel costs and still comes out way ahead.

“If that doesn’t speak to the inefficien­cies in our healthcare system, I don’t know what does,” Pyper said. “It’s almost like buying a Toyota Corolla for $ 50,000 and then going to San Diego to buy the same Corolla for $ 16,000. How long would the more expensive Toyota dealership last?”

Even as more employers and insurers embrace bundled payments, the Trump administra­tion is applying the brakes.

In August, Medicare officials proposed canceling mandatory bundled payments for certain surgeries and scaling back the program for knee and hip replacemen­ts. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, when he was still a member of Congress, accused Medicare of oversteppi­ng federal authority and interferin­g in the doctor- patient relationsh­ip. Hospital trade groups have voiced similar objections.

That leaves some healthpoli­cy experts dismayed.

“These bundled payments put pressure on medical providers … and the savings are astonishin­g,” said Bob Kocher, a former health official in the Obama administra­tion and now a partner in the venture capital f irm Venrock.

Santa Barbara County officials said they had no choice after seeing their medical costs soar 15% in each of the last two years. Like many local government­s, the county has an older workforce prone to chronic illness, blocked arteries and bum knees.

But health costs run higher than the state average in this scenic coastal county of about 450,000 peo- ple, according to data from Oakland- based Integrated Healthcare Assn. By one measure, the average health insurance premium in the individual market runs $ 660 a month in Santa Barbara, 27% higher than in Los Angeles.

Still, Maya Barraza, the county’s manager for employee benefits and rewards, knew the program would be a hard sell to workers. “You don’t want to be away from your family and what’s familiar,” she said.

Cottage Health, the county’s largest health system, says it wants to keep patients in town for treatment and follow- up care.

Establishe­d in 1891, it’s grown from a single hospital to more than 500 beds across three hospitals, and annual revenue hit $ 746 million last year.

Valet attendants greet visitors at two entrances outside the group’s white, Spanish- style hospital in the city of Santa Barbara. In the main lobby, the names of wealthy donors are splashed across one wall, including billionair­e investor and Donald Trump confidant Thomas Barrack.

“We are continuall­y looking at reducing costs and improving quality,” said Cottage Health spokeswoma­n Maria Zate. “Cottage Health has some of the top surgeons in California.”

Sixty miles north in Santa Maria, the state’s largest hospital chain, Dignity Health, offers another option: Marian Regional Medical Center.

Both Cottage and Dignity hospitals in Santa Barbara County have quality scores of fair to excellent for joint replacemen­ts, spinal procedures and coronary bypass surgeries, according to three years of Medicare data analyzed by research firm Mpirica Health.

Dignity Health didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Carrum tries to help employers like Santa Barbara County find more affordable options. It has struck bundled price deals for various procedures with Scripps hospitals in the San Diego area, Stanford Health Care in the Bay Area and Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, part of the Providence Health chain.

Some companies have gone so far as to send patients overseas for cheaper care, but most employers favor a more regional approach, experts say. Workers still rely on local physicians for follow- up care.

For some hospitals, there are advantages in offering deep discounts: They get patients they otherwise would never see and are paid in full right after the patient is discharged, avoiding the onerous billing and collection­s process.

They also have the financial capacity to offer such sharply reduced prices.

Michael Bark, assistant vice president of payer relations at Scripps Health, said most hospitals significan­tly mark up their commercial rates for orthopedic procedures and cardiac surgeries to compensate for lower government reimbursem­ents.

“There are immense profit margins built into those cases,” Bark said.

Robinson- Stone, a former county sheriff ’ s deputy and a computer support specialist, was initially wary of traveling for her surgery. But the 62- year- old Lompoc resident had ongoing pain that kept her from biking, walking her dogs and tending to her fruit trees. Medication and cortisone shots didn’t work, and she had no ties to local surgeons. So she signed up online and was given a choice of six orthopedic surgeons at Scripps Green Hospital in La Jolla.

In June 2016, she and her husband, Frank Stone, checked in at the Estancia La Jolla Hotel and Spa.

Robinson- Stone met the surgeon on a Wednesday, had the operation the next day and returned to her hotel room by Saturday. She continued physical therapy at the hotel and returned to the hospital a few days later to have the staples removed.

She was back on her bike within two months and eventually lost about 20 pounds.

“I just celebrated one year from surgery,” she said, “and I’m a happy camper.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Heidi de Marco Kaiser Health News ?? COTTAGE HEALTH, Santa Barbara County’s largest health system, says it wants to keep patients in town for treatment.
Photog r aphs by Heidi de Marco Kaiser Health News COTTAGE HEALTH, Santa Barbara County’s largest health system, says it wants to keep patients in town for treatment.
 ??  ?? RETIREE Leslie Robinson- Stone saved Santa Barbara County $ 30,000 by undergoing surgery near San Diego.
RETIREE Leslie Robinson- Stone saved Santa Barbara County $ 30,000 by undergoing surgery near San Diego.
 ?? Photog r aphs by Heidi de Marco Kaiser Health News ?? LESLIE Robinson- Stone was wary of traveling for surgery. But she was back on her bike within two months and now is a “happy camper.”
Photog r aphs by Heidi de Marco Kaiser Health News LESLIE Robinson- Stone was wary of traveling for surgery. But she was back on her bike within two months and now is a “happy camper.”
 ??  ?? MAYA BARRAZA, Santa Barbara County’s manager for employee benefits and rewards, said she knew the out- of- town program would be a hard sell to workers.
MAYA BARRAZA, Santa Barbara County’s manager for employee benefits and rewards, said she knew the out- of- town program would be a hard sell to workers.

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