February 19, 2024
As care continues to migrate from inpatient to outpatient settings, forward-thinking health systems are looking to expand their outpatient portfolios by enhancing their ambulatory surgery center (ASC) platform.
Many systems are rethinking their desire to bring in a partner to assist in building out their network, as a successful ASC joint venture is much easier said than done. In many respects, an ASC joint venture strategy is fundamentally a physician partnership strategy.
When health systems forge ASC joint ventures with Compass, they entrust us to develop, manage, and grow their ambulatory surgery footprint. The Compass team becomes the health system’s extension in the market—both with physician partners and with patients. Our partnership approach handles this trust with the seriousness—and agility—it warrants.
Experience has taught us that six essential elements are the bedrock for high-performing ASC partnerships, and we work diligently with our partners to put them into place.
Use these metrics to assess your own health system’s readiness for an ASC strategy.
Health systems typically have much more to leverage, as well as value trade ability with commercial payers, so the health system partner in the ASC joint venture should take the lead on negotiating rates with payers.
Pre-negotiated, outpatient ‘ready’ rates position the ASC platform for success, enabling steady growth throughout the market. Getting this structure into place is an evolution. It involves value-based conversations with key commercial payers regarding the overall benefit of developing such an ASC platform.
With a committed strategy, this value becomes apparent as the health system commits to migrating key specialties into the more cost-effective ASC setting. Creating a platform of facilities with more efficiency, lower costs, lower capital spend, and (in most cases) more effective outcomes all result in greater patient satisfaction.
As with all ASCs, surgeons should be permitted to own interest in the joint venture—even surgeons currently employed by the health system. This is the bedrock of a successful ASC strategy.
Surgeon ownership requires the health system to assess current compensation alongside the ancillary revenue that comes from ASC ownership. This strategic planning is worthwhile. Physician ownership has proven itself time and again to be the best practice in this space.
When physicians have ownership—as well as governance, leadership, and decision-making opportunities—the ASC joint venture, and the overall partnership, are stronger.
ASC partnerships are most successful when partners begin with an initial project and ramp up from that initial effort. While a partnership should begin with a broad joint venture strategy “end in mind,” it is imperative to start somewhere to get the ball rolling and create momentum.
We find that an initial focus (a specific market or a specific ASC project, for example) provides momentum and offers insight into how the partners can work together to build on initial efforts and expand into a much broader relationship.
Many hospitals invest in ASCs because migrating simpler procedures to ASC settings creates capacity for the hospital to take on more complex cases
Such case migration is good for the ASC joint venture and good for the health system’s overall market share and patient care strategy. For this reason, market leaders’ compensation plans should reward success throughout the market, not just within the existing hospital’s “four walls.”
If market leaders are penalized financially when cases migrate from the hospital to the ASC, they will inevitably create roadblocks that obstruct the joint venture’s success. This alignment with market leadership is imperative to the success of the overall strategy and speed to market.
No one person can accomplish a successful ASC joint venture. It takes a collective group of people all working in concert to make that happen. These people work in the health system, in physician partner medical offices, at ASC management companies, and at equity partners.
But the joint venture should rely on one key health system leader for the final decision clarity that brings health system employees into alignment and eliminates conflicts by providing understood pathways to success. A health system COO might take on this role, for example.
Health systems that attempt to run the ASC out of the hospital’s operational infrastructure are often doomed to fail.
A separate ASC infrastructure allows staff, technology, and systems to laser-focus on ASC operations and run as lean as possible, thus optimizing the odds of success.
Where is your health system on the continuum of these 6 foundational elements? Contact us, and let's have a discussion to help you assess your ASC joint venture readiness.