The Corporate Practice of Emergency Medicine

Expert from Rules of the Road for Young Emergency Physicians

Robert McNamara, MD MAAEM FAAEM

The Problem

The Corporate Practice of Medicine (CPOM) occurs when a for-profit business entity exerts control over the practice of medicine. CPOM presents a major problem for the specialty of emergency medicine, and for you, the practitioner.

The emergency physician who cares for the patient, toiling at the bedside at all hours, using skills acquired through years of difficult training, and making high-risk decisions critical to the well being of that patient, deserves to receive the physician professional fee that is paid on behalf of that patient. No other person or physician is entitled to a portion of that fee unless the emergency physician has decided they offer something of value. The physician must have the freedom to speak out on issues affecting patient care. A physician who is performing the required professional duties in a competent and professional manner should have job security and not be subject to termination for business reasons.

Do you agree with the above? These statements are the essence of the profession of medicine. Similar language can be found in the ethical canons of all the major professional societies as well as the AMA’s Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs.

Now, what happens when you try to splice the above with the profit motive of a for-profit business that controls the contract for emergency services at a hospital? Read on.

The Issue in Context

The specialty of emergency medicine (EM) represents one of the most important aspects of the health care system. Great strides have been made in the specialty of EM and the field currently attracts top medical students who seek the challenge of this demanding practice. Unfortunately, there are major problems within the specialty that have little to do with the practice of medicine and everything to do with the business of medicine. The physician practice management (PPM) industry, the largest purveyors of the corporate practice of EM, are at the core of these problems.

When a for-profit business controls the ED contract, the professional codes of ethics may not enter the equation. Physicians can become exploited to the point where their job dissatisfaction is profound enough to cause them to leave the specialty of EM. Early burn out of highly trained EM physicians deprives this nation of front line providers. Corporate policies often strip the physician of the ability to speak out on the quality of care and on the patient’s behalf. Business decisions reach the bedside and determine how many patients per hour you must see and whether you or a physician extender will evaluate and manage the patient. The Corporate Practice of Emergency Medicine is the single greatest threat to our profession and the patients we serve.

The issues that are of importance can be summarized as follows:

  1. The PPM industry dominates the EM marketplace.
  2. The locus of control is corporate ownership of the ED contract, generally by creating a front professional association or corporation to be the “physician” entity securing the contract.
  3. The ED contract is the key to the profit stream derived from the work of the emergency physician.
  4. Any threat to that contract is dealt with in a serious manner. As such, emergency physicians must answer to the corporation and be circumspect in their dealings with hospital administration and the rest of the medical staff. If the nursing staff becomes aware of the tenuous nature of the physician’s position, this may pose additional problems for the physician.
  5. Concerns expressed by EM physicians about the quality of care implicating the hospital or other members of the medical staff may result in termination of the EM physician. This termination can be carried out efficiently as corporate groups routinely deny their EM physician’s access to the usual due process pathways afforded to other physicians in the hospital.
  6. The working emergency physician is routinely denied access to review what patient care services are coded, billed and paid on his or her behalf.
  7. Attempts by emergency physicians to gain access to this information can result in termination.
  8. Emergency physicians are not able to fulfill their role as a check on deceptive and fraudulent billing practices.
  9. Lack of “open books” places the emergency physician at risk for unwitting involvement in prohibited fee-splitting arrangements.
  10. The quality of care in EM is threatened by the PPM industry, as their business methods have disillusioned the physicians.
  11. PPM companies do not necessarily seek to hire the most qualified emergency provider, and may prefer a less qualified, less expensive alternative.
  12. The PPM industry has created a spillover effect into the rest of EM practice such that closed books and fee-splitting occurs even among single hospital, physician-owned EM practices.

How Did We Get Here? Historical Aspects:

We would not be where we are today if the earlier generation of EM physicians had met this issue head on. As our specialty originated, a new breed of idealistic, patient-focused physicians emerged, that wanted to care for patients found on the streets, abusing drugs, subject to violence, etc. They did not choose EM for dreams of wealth and, unfortunately, were easy marks for another group of physicians, many who were “leaders” in the field, who saw the opportunity to make large sums of money by taking a piece of other physician’s professional fee in return for allowing that doctor to see patients in the ED where they held a contract. The more contracts, the more profit–and the multi-hospital ED contract management group, the PPM firms, were born.

The EM PPM industry is a byproduct of the rapid increase in emergency department utilization by the public in the 1950s and 1960s. Hospitals were confronted with the need to provide 24-hour physician coverage of ever-busier emergency departments. The use of unsupervised interns and residents in the off hours and on weekends to supplement daytime attending physician coverage was recognized as compromising patient care. In the early 1970s, a cottage industry arose that helped solve this dilemma for hospital administrators. Physician-created emergency department staffing agencies such as Coastal and Spectrum appeared on the scene and quickly became popular and profitable because of their promise to provide an emergency physician in the ED around the clock.

In the 1980s, the success of the emergency department staffing agencies led to further expansion and increased profits. Several of these groups became publicly traded companies or were acquired by publicly traded companies. The staffing role expanded beyond scheduling to include what was known as “contract management” services, which often included comprehensive coding and billing services. The staffing agencies of the 1970s had become central parts of the modern PPM industry.

EM is not the only specialty with the problem of one physician exploiting another. In other specialties, private group practice owners may deny partnership to younger physicians keeping them as employee status. What makes EM unique is that the major professional society, ACEP, sat by and allowed the unchecked growth of corporate EM, rather than guarding the interests of the practicing physicians. There were major conflicts of interest, as several ACEP Presidents were themselves corporate owners who made huge profits from these arrangements. For example, a former ACEP President made approximately $38 million dollars when he sold EmCare, his PPM, to Laidlaw, Inc. in 1996.

The influence of this generation of leaders is best evidenced by the methodical stripping of any ability of ACEP to intervene on the issue of the corporate practice of medicine. The original ACEP bylaws supported the practicing emergency physician against profiteers, stating “in the practice of medicine, a physician shall limit the source of his income to medical services actually rendered by him to his patients. He should neither pay nor receive a commission for referral of patients.” There was also a specific statement against CPOM: “the Emergency Physician shall not associate himself in any fashion with any institution which permits medical practice by other than a physician.”

Attempts to rouse the specialty to action were evident in a series of letters to the editor in the Annals of Emergency Medicine. However, in 1984, the ACEP Council Speaker wrote that ACEP could not “protect the little guys from the big guys.”1 A new round of attempts in the early 1990s by several of the founders of AAEM to convince ACEP to take action against the CPOM culminated in ACEP passing an anti-trust policy in 1994. ACEP’s new policy effectively paralyzed the organization from taking any action against the CPOM, stating ACEP could be threatened with $10 million dollars in fines (http://www.acep.org/practres.aspx?id=29112). Dr. Robert Simon predicted in a 1983 letter to the editor of Annals of Emergency Medicine,2 that the failure of any meaningful attempt on the part of ACEP to address the CPOM issue would lead to the rise of a new specialty society that would finally do so. AAEM was founded in 1993.

Current State

Estimates regarding the extent of the PPM industry, including large publicly traded corporations and smaller regional PPMs, place more than half of the nation’s emergency departments in the hands of this industry. The two largest PPMs, EmCare and TeamHealth, employ over 4,000 emergency physicians each, representing ~ 30% of the estimated 30,000 emergency physicians practicing in the United States. Certain geographic markets (such as FL, MI, TX, NJ, DC) are so dominated by the PPM industry that they essentially control the only jobs available to graduating EM residents. It can be difficult to track exactly which company is where as many of the smaller PPM firms that have been acquired by the larger corporations and continue to use their original name, as described below:

  • EmCare
    Publicly traded on the NYSE (ticker: EMS). Venture capital firms are the largest shareholders.

    Major subsidiaries: Spectrum, MEPA, Synergon, Coordinated Health Services.

    Recent History: In February 2005, an investor group led by Onex Partners purchased AMR and EmCare from Laidlaw for $828.8 million. The company completed an initial public offering and was listed on the NYSE in December 2005.

    Both the CEO and President are non-physicians.

    The CEO was given a $12,691,032 bonus for assistance with the sale of the company from Laidlaw to Onex. The president was given a $2,270,002 bonus. The executive leadership has stock shares and stock options worth tens of millions of dollars.

  • TeamHealth
    Owned by the Blackstone Group, formerly a private equity firm that became a publicly traded company in 2007.

    Major subsidiaries: Fischer-Mangold, Northwest Emergency Physicians, Emergency Physicians Associates of New Jersey, Emergency Coverage Corp, Emergency Professional Services, InPhyNet, Daniel and Yeager, Northwest Emergency Physicians, Southeastern Emergency Physicians, Team Health West, Spectrum Healthcare.

Quality of Care

The modern emergency physician is not the itinerant emergency physician of the late 1960s and early 1970s. By and large the new breed of emergency physicians is career-committed to EM and want to establish roots in a community to raise their families. The modern emergency physician is not happy with the PPM industry. There is a great deal of dissatisfaction with what has become standard EM business practice, such as closed books and lack of job security. Job security is threatened not only by termination without cause provisions, but also by restrictive covenants that force the physician to leave the hospital if the PPM loses the ED contract. Disturbingly, 75% of board certified emergency physicians have felt financially exploited at some point in their career and 49% have considered leaving the field due to unfair business practices.2 Given the inherently stressful nature of EM practice, this added stress from business issues creates the possibility of high attrition among its practitioners. This loss of experienced providers will compromise patient care.

The PPM industry must satisfy the bottom line. The greatest line item expense for the PPM is the physician salary. Some PPMs are reluctant to hire the most qualified emergency physician, the board certified emergency physician, since they can hire a less qualified physician (or midlevel) for less. The staffing manual for Coastal, a PPM, identified board certified emergency physicians as high priced and encourages “weeding out” physicians with high salary. The classified job ads for many PPM firms routinely seek non-board certified emergency physicians.

The Rise and Role of AAEM

In 1992, James Keaney, MD, published “The Rape of Emergency Medicine” which detailed the unscrupulous inner aspects of the PPM industry, focusing on quality of care issues. The book was followed by two 20/20 specials on national television. Hundreds of emergency physicians throughout the country contacted Dr. Keaney, noting similar abuses, and began plans to create a new EM organization that was willing to support the individual emergency physician. In 1993, AAEM was formed to promote fair and equitable practice environments and to advocate for ABEM/AOBEM board certification. Dr. Keaney served as AAEM’s first President.

The premise is simple and pure. AAEM believes that the best form of practice for the patient, physician and the specialty is one in which the working physicians are the owners in an equal partnership. This is not a radical view, as virtually every state has prohibitions on for-profit corporations employing physicians. Ironically, one of the states with the strongest case and statutory law against CPOM is Texas, the headquarters of ACEP. A 1986 case from Texas, the Flynn Brothers matter states:

“Management contract and oral partnership agreement between medical services contractor and partner (lay entity, the Flynn Brothers, Inc.) of contractor, which gave partner 66.67 percent of profits of contractor’s medical practice despite lack of medical license by partner, which gave partner right to trade and commercialize on medical license of contractor, which gave partner right to select medical staff to work in hospitals under contract, and which allowed partner to encourage hospitals to contract with contractor, violated statute which prohibits aiding practice of medicine by any person, partnership, or corporation not duly licensed to practice medicine and, therefore, were illegal.”
(Vernon’s Ann. Texas Civ.St. art. 4495b, §§ 3.07(f), 3.08(15))

AAEM has clearly cut a different path for EM with the simple concept that the best form of practice for the patient, physician and the specialty is one in which the working physicians are the owners in an equal partnership. An excellent discussion of the need to strive for this status is found in an article by Fisher (3) and the title, “Future of the Emergency Physician: Subject or Citizen?”

AAEM has had many recent successes in combating the CPOM. In the summer of 2001, AAEM helped achieve a major victory by preventing one of the largest hospital systems in the country, Catholic Healthcare West, from creating a large emergency medicine PPM. In 2003, AAEM helped a group of California emergency physicians who were being sued by TeamHealth for continuing to work at their hospital (rather than leaving their job and their community) after TeamHealth lost the contract to another group. In 2005, AAEM helped emergency physicians in Rhode Island and in Indiana who were being sued in similar cases regarding unfair restrictive covenants.

In 2004, AAEM helped an emergency medicine group that had been serving a Minnesota hospital for 35 years from losing their contract to EmCare (in violation of Minnesota CPOM laws). In 2005, AAEM assisted 200 emergency physicians who were essentially left without any malpractice tail coverage after the bankruptcy of PhyAmerica, one of the largest PPMs (whose bankrupt assets (i.e. ED contracts) were bought by another PPM, Sterling). Currently, AAEM is engaged in two court cases against TeamHealth in the state of Texas related to the illegal CPOM. These efforts are supported by donations to the AAEM Foundation. For more details, visit the AAEM website at www.aaem.org.

Spill-Over Effects

The negative business practices of the emergency medicine PPM industry and their market domination has created aberrancies in the rest of EM practice. Justifying their means as better than the PPM companies, it is common for smaller physician-owned groups to also deny the non-owner physician access to what is billed and paid on their behalf with the same threat of job loss if the issue is pursued. Prolonged paths to equal partnership or the outright denial of such an opportunity constitute the small group variations on the fee-splitting schemes of the PPM industry. As small EM groups model unethical business practices from the large PPMs, the repercussions of the practices of the PPM companies have extended beyond the emergency departments they operate.

Summary

At the core of the problem with the corporate practice of EM is the complete reversal of the flow of the physician professional fee as opposed to what happens in other specialties. In much of EM, a business corporation controls the billing, collects the payment, and decides how much the physician will be paid. An industry that, in theory, should be a service to the physician, much like an accounting firm, is actually in control of the physician. The emergency physician loses his or her ability to serve as a check on deceptive or fraudulent billing practices and to avoid suspect fee-splitting arrangements.

AAEM was founded on two main issues, the importance of board certification and restoring ownership of the physician’s practice to the physician. The young emergency physician must understand the history of CPOM and the ramifications of corporate control on their future.

AAEM needs the resources of a growing membership to effectively advocate for the individual emergency physician working all night to help his or her patients. AAEM membership with support of the AAEM Foundation is important, and I strongly encourage you to take an active role in the Academy.

References

  1. Crowell RD. The Organization Is Us (letter). Ann Emerg Med 1984;13:981.
  2. Simon RS. Entrepreneurism in Emergency Medicine (letter). Ann Emerg Med 1983;12:722.
  3. Fisher BA, Wittlake WA. Future of the Emergency Physician: Subject or Citizen? Am J Emerg Med 2000:18:102-107.
  4. Plantz SH, Kreplick LW, Panacek EA, et al. A National Survey of Board-Certified Emergency Physicians: Quality of Care and Practice Structure Issues. Am J Emerg Med 1998;16:1-4

 

Share

Social Media PolicyWebsite Disclaimer

Cookie Notice

We use cookies to ensure you the best experience on our website. Your acceptance helps ensure that experience happens. To learn more, please visit our Privacy Notice.

OK