An Interactive Decision Support Tool for Telemedicine Making
- Slides: 15
An Interactive Decision. Support Tool for Telemedicine: Making the Business Case Susan E. Palsbo, Ph. D National Rehabilitation Hospital George Mason University Michael J. Mc. Cue, DBA Virginia Commonwealth University
Acknowledgements Grant #H 133 E 980025
Problems • Fiscal concerns at the hospitals • Public policy concerns • Results of cost-benefit studies “I don’t care that telemedicine saves the patient time and money. It does not add revenue to my hospital’s bottom line. ”
Idea: Do Financial Analysis • Make the business case for telemedicine • Build an interactive spreadsheet decisionsupport tool for the CFOs to model different scenarios • Identify the scenarios under which a telerehabilitation program can be financially profitable and self-sustaining
Pro forma Direct Revenues • Segment the market by payer • Model different reimbursement assumptions (copays, origination fees) • Model different service volumes • Model different growth rates, by payer
Pro forma Indirect Revenues • Shortened LOS • Increased physician productivity • Fewer “no shows”
Pro forma Expenses • Capital outlay • Telecommunications expenses • Medical expenses
Capital Outlay • Two conceptual approaches – “Virtual clinic” – “Rental clinic” • Type of equipment • Lease or buy? • One-time training costs
Operating Expenses • Telecommunications – Fixed and variable costs – Connection charges – Servicing charges • Medical – Hourly salaries, benefits – Need to project volume of services by CPT code since work-hour equivalents vary by code
Medical Expense • Include hourly salaries, benefits • Work units per telerehabilitation procedures
Compute Breakeven Volume Revenue per visit - Variable expenses per visit = Contribution margin per visit • How many visits to cover fixed costs when indirect revenues are also included
Internal Rate of Return • IRR = the interest rate that makes the net present value of all cash flows = 0. • The return that the company would earn if they invested in the telemedicine program. • If the IRR > the return on other investments, then the business case is made!
Examples of Scenarios • For NRH (intranet), 4 encounters per week, volume grow at 10% a year, expenses grow at 3% a year make a profit in year #3. IRRyr 5 = 29% • If 1 extra encounter per week, but physician/psychologist sees extra 100 patients never make a profit. IRRyr 5 = -1% • If 1 extra encounter per week + 1 less noshow per week, make a profit in year #4. IRRyr 5 = 18%
Key Points • The best way to think of a telemedicine clinic is as if building a new clinic …but virtual is much cheaper than bricks and mortar. – Universities have already figured this out. • Segment the payer market and make tailored revenue and visit projections. – Insurance companies have already figured this out. • Urban telemedicine programs can be financially selfsustaining, especially when piggybacking on existing LANs and when there is available non-revenue producing physical space. • Don’t need to rely on indirect revenue, but it helps! • Build up volume as much as you can to make operating profits instead of relying on depreciation.
“Where Can I Get a Copy? ” http: //www. nrhresearch. org/chdrnav. cfm ? id=670 Or e-mail: spalsbo@gmu. edu
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