Top Hospital CEOs: Reimbursement Cuts and New Payment Models are Greatest Challenges Facing the Industry
Press release from the issuing company
Thursday, September 8th, 2011
Reimbursement cuts and new payment models resulting from healthcare reform are the biggest challenges confronting hospitals, according to a survey of top hospital CEOs conducted by Thomson Reuters.
The survey asked CEOs of hospitals that won theThomson Reuters 100 Top Hospitals®award in 2011 to rate the key challenges they face over the next one to three years, the reasons for their success, and the importance of various industry issues.
The majority of hospital chiefs said reimbursement cuts and new payment models stemming from healthcare reform are the greatest challenges confronting their organizations in the years ahead. The top five challenges listed by survey respondents all have a connection to healthcare reform — decreased reimbursements, uncertainty about the advent of Accountable Care Organizations, continued cost reductions, changing physician alignment, and quality of care.
When asked to rate the factors that have driven their success, hospital CEOs most often cited a sustained focus on quality. Other success drivers cited frequently were strong leadership, developing a culture of excellence, and a strong relationship with medical staff.
The survey also asked executives to rank the importance of current topics in order of importance. They listed quality measurement, medical staff alignment, and cost reductions as the top three. These were also the three issues that hospital CEOs felt their organizations have made the most progress on.
The survey was conducted by phone fromApril 5 to May 12, 2011. All CEOs interviewed were heads of hospitals that won the Thomson Reuters 100 Top Hospitals award in 2011. The Thomson Reuters 100 Top Hospitals program evaluates performance in 10 areas: mortality; medical complications; patient safety; average patient stay; expenses; profitability; patient satisfaction; adherence to clinical standards of care; post-discharge mortality; and readmission rates for acute myocardial infarction (heart attack), heart failure, and pneumonia. The study has been conducted annually since 1993.