CHICAGO, Feb. 16, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- Patient accounting systems (PAS) are some of the most sought-after solutions to help health systems drive efficiency. However, hospitals planning on undergoing a PAS conversion should expect to see disruption to their revenue cycles during and immediately following the conversion, according to new data released by Crowe Horwath LLP, one of the largest public accounting, consulting and technology firms in the U.S.
Crowe® Revenue Cycle Analytics (Crowe RCA) software generates finance and revenue-cycle benchmarking results for several key performance indicators (KPIs). The quarterly Crowe RCA Benchmarking Analysis, "Patient Accounting System Conversions: Challenges for Cash Collections and Revenue Cycle Performance," examined patient account transactional data from more than 500 hospitals through December 31, 2015.
In this report, Crowe analyzed the effects on cash collections and related KPIs of 32 acute care hospitals that completed a PAS conversion during the past three years. The data showed that most hospitals experienced significant disruption to revenue cycle metrics and to cash flows during the three months starting with the conversion. Accounts receivable days jumped from 52 days to more than 62 days. Billing and coding metrics experienced peak disruption in the first month. Discharged-not-final-billed (DNFB) days were up 86 percent and late charges rose by more than 600 percent.
Each hospital was evaluated in three phases: Phase I: pre-conversion baseline assessment, which gathered data for the six months prior to the conversion; Phase II: conversion, the three-month period beginning with the month of conversion; and Phase III: post-conversion monitoring, the nine months following Phase II.
"The effects of a PAS conversion can have a dramatic impact on a hospital's revenue cycle. Although the long-term benefits of system conversion might outweigh the short-term challenges of implementation, the additional costs associated with implementations can be substantial if they're not tightly managed," said Brian Sanderson, managing principal of Crowe healthcare services. "To lessen the financial and operational risks of a PAS conversion, hospitals should not consider this to be only a technology implementation – but rather an operational and financial implementation that includes stakeholders from key clinical departments as well as finance leadership. Along with this, detailed operational and financial metric baselines should be established and monitored throughout the process."
Additional findings include:
- Monthly cash collections for the hospitals, which had an average of 227 beds per hospital, averaged $485 million during Phase I. During Phase II, the cash collections dropped sharply and stayed below the baseline. In the month following conversion, cash collections reached a 12-month low of more than 20 percent below baseline collections.
- During Phase III, monthly cash shortfalls averaged less than 10 percent below the baseline. Not until the ninth month after conversion did cash collections return to normal.
- In order to determine the total net disruption to the hospitals' cash flow, Crowe aggregated monthly cash shortfalls throughout the post-conversion period. By the end of Phase II, the hospitals experienced a total cash shortfall of approximately $162 million. By the end of Phase III, the total cash shortfall only grew an additional $6 million to approximately $168 million for all three phases combined, or 35 percent of a single month's cash collection at baseline levels.
- Hospital performance varied greatly during Phase III. For many hospitals, the aggregate cash shortfall continued to increase steadily while several hospitals with stronger performances collected cash above the baseline level during Phase III.
- Overall post-conversion cash collection performance varied. Top performers, often those with a well-planned implementation strategy, experienced cash surpluses equal to 112 percent of baseline collections by the end of Phase III. Bottom performers experienced an aggregate cash shortfall nearly three times greater than the average at 195 percent below baseline collections, the equivalent of almost two months of collections.
Additionally, the Crowe RCA analysis provides up-to-date statistical information on payer mix, volume and net revenue per case. Findings from this quarter include:
- Traditional Medicaid continues to experience a shift from governmental administration to a managed care setting. Medicaid managed care ended 2015 1.6 percent higher than its portion of the final 2014 payer mix for Medicaid expansion states. Traditional Medicaid dropped 1.5 percent over the same period for expansion states.
- Inpatient admissions ended the year at levels below the end of 2014. In Medicaid expansion states, inpatient admissions for December 2015 were nearly 7 percent below December 2014. In nonexpansion states, inpatient admissions were down 3.5 percent compared to the prior year.
- Outpatient visits in 2015 also ended with a lower volume than that seen at the end of 2014. However, in contrast to inpatient volume, Medicaid expansion states experienced a smaller drop of approximately 2 percent, while nonexpansion states ended the year nearly 7 percent below December 2014 levels.
- Medicaid expansion and nonexpansion states experienced similar increases to inpatient net revenue per case when comparing December 2015 to December 2014. In both cohorts, hospitals experienced increases of just over 5 percent.
- Outpatient net revenue per case increased from December 2014 to December 2015. However, the increase was higher in nonexpansion states at 8.5 percent compared to a less than 7 percent increase in expansion states.
For more information or to download a copy of the Crowe RCA Benchmarking Analysis, please visit www.crowehorwath.com/benchmarking-release.
About the Crowe RCA Benchmarking Analysis
The Crowe RCA Benchmarking Analysis includes 580 distinct hospitals classified as acute, critical-access, rehabilitation, psychiatric or cardiovascular care facilities. The database contains information from hospitals in 37 states, with 20 or more facilities represented in Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Ohio, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin.
About Crowe Horwath
Crowe Horwath LLP (www.crowehorwath.com) is one of the largest public accounting, consulting and technology firms in the United States. Under its core purpose of "Building Value with Values®," Crowe uses its deep industry expertise to provide audit services to public and private entities while also helping clients reach their goals with tax, advisory, risk and performance services. With offices coast to coast and 3,000 personnel, Crowe is recognized by many organizations as one of the country's best places to work. Crowe serves clients worldwide as an independent member of Crowe Horwath International, one of the largest global accounting networks in the world. The network consists of more than 200 independent accounting and advisory services firms in more than 120 countries around the world.
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SOURCE Crowe Horwath LLP
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