Physician Alignment Poses Challenge for ACOs
Physician alignment and incentive challenges could prove to be a major hurdle for healthcare providers who want to take part in accountable care organizations.
Richard C. Johnston, MD, an internist with Dallas-based Medical Clinic of North Texas, says hospitals will find ACOs to be a tough sell for skeptical physicians. "The main stumbling block in physician integration is alignment of incentives. That, and who controls the dollars. Who does CMS write the check to?" Johnston tells HealthLeaders Media.
"Since most of the savings in the ACO comes out of limiting hospitalizations and ER visits and readmissions, there is a natural conflict there. If hospitals start to have their reimbursement cuts and if their admissions fall it is going to be difficult to sustain their infrastructure. So, who gets the money and distributes it," he says. "If the hospital is getting the money I would think they would probably try to protect their profitability first and the physicians would be left out there."
A recent survey of 882 hospital administrators and physicians by recruiters AMN Healthcare found that 42% said physician alignment was the most serious obstacle to forming an ACO, followed by a lack of capital (38%), a lack of integrated IT (31%) and a lack of evidence-based treatment protocol data (25%).
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