Background The growth of managed care presents a challenge toacademic medical centers, because the demand for the servicesof specialists is likely to continue decreasing. We estimatedthe number of enrollees the University of Michigan Medical Centerwould need in its health maintenance organization (HMO) systemin order to provide revenue equivalent to the total revenueit received for professional specialty care in 1992.
Methods Rates of utilization and payment were based on the medicalcenter's experience with managed care in 1992 in its independentpractice association HMO, in which 25,000 members had capitatedcoverage and received primary and all specialty care from universityphysicians, and 15,000 members received primary care and mostspecialty care from physicians outside the university. We assumedthat persons not enrolled in Medicare were all enrolled in managed-careplans. Primary care activity was excluded from the calculationsof expense, revenue, and numbers of faculty members.
Results If all specialty services were provided by the universityto HMO members, all the 21 specialties examined except obstetricsand gynecology and emergency services would require an enrollmentof more than 250,000 to support the 1992 level of professionalrevenue and maintain the number of faculty members. If universityservices were provided only for referrals from a loosely affiliatednetwork of community physicians in the HMO system, all the 19specialties examined except plastic surgery would require anHMO enrollment of more than 1 million. In a combined model inwhich all specialty services were provided to 100,000 HMO membersand network referrals were provided to 500,000 members, substantialchanges in faculty composition would be needed in all the departmentsstudied.
Conclusions Because of the large number of HMO members required,unless other changes occur, it is unrealistic to expect thatthe University of Michigan Medical Center could create an HMOor network large enough to support the specialty practice ofthe current number of faculty members at the 1992 level of financing.
Source Information
From the Office of the Dean (J.E.B., C.G.W., E.A.B., R.L.M.) and the Department of Internal Medicine (J.E.B.), University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor. Presented in part at the annual meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine, Washington, D.C., April 2729, 1994.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Billi at the Office of the Dean, M7300 Medical Science I Bldg., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0624.
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