
Case Costing in the Surgery Center:
The Do’s and Don’ts That Can Make or Break Your Bottom
Line
By Donna Boyle
How
much does it cost your facility to perform a surgical case? Does that question
cause you to hesitate?
Although the answer seems easy, we are often unsure of our
response, and feel that no matter what the answer is, we first need to qualify
the meaning.
The traditional way to find your average expense per case
would be to divide your total expenses on your income statement by the number of
cases. Using a reasonable time period, this method gives you a pretty accurate
average of what you spent per case. And averages are good. Cost accounting is
not a precise science. It’s based on averages, allocations and “best
guesses.”
The Problem
This method, however, presents two problems.
First, it counts simply what you spent during the time period
of the cases. Consider the definition of expense: the cost of goods and services
used up in the process of obtaining revenue.1 It is possible that not everything
that was expensed was consumed. More importantly, however, it doesn’t really
help you understand the nature of your costs. How can you improve your
performance with such generalized information?
Detailed cost information provides you with the tools to
effectively conduct payor negotiations, engage in strategic business planning
and review your clinical pathways. It helps you make decisions such as whether
to expand the facility in order to accommodate new specialties, to close an
operating room or to hire more staff. It also helps you determine where your
operation may be slack, including poorly controlled inventory or under-utilized
labor. Clearly, management decisions made without sound data - decisions based
on a hunch or “I think” - are more likely to yield failure than success.
Of course, although case costing is important, it must also be
kept in perspective. You will never know to the penny the exact cost of any
given case. There are always unpredictable events, most of which are too
inconsequential to measure. Perhaps it was a particularly cold day and your
furnace ran like crazy. Maybe the patient needed to clarify a lot of demographic
information, so the intake process was prolonged. That being said, the inherent
problems in calculating cost do not justify avoiding it.
The Solution
Fortunately, computer software is now available to assist
surgery centers with accurate cost analysis. It may even be embedded in your
facility’s Management Information System (MIS). Although not necessary, this
setup is ideal because it can allocate costs to specific cases and analyze data
by case type or procedure. But to use it correctly and get reliable results, you
must understand the basic principles of cost analysis. Even the most
sophisticated software requires the user to identify both the cost elements and
how to measure them.
Knowing your cost elements can also guide your data
collection. Your MIS may provide components that you fail to utilize because you
never realized their importance.
Some systems can collect detailed time information for each
case, from pre-op to PACU to individual staff utilization.
Unfortunately, facilities may not bother to collect the data
because they don’t recognize the benefits.
Costing Methods
The most appropriate costing method for a surgery center is
Activity Based Costing (ABC). This method examines each activity necessary to
complete the surgery event. It originated in the early 1980s to facilitate
product cost management in manufacturing.
However, it has expanded to other industries as well. In the
words of its developer, Dr. Robert S. Kaplan, “ABC reveals the links between
performing particular activities and the demands those activities make on the
organization’s resources.”2
Absorption and direct costing can both be used with ABC.
Absorption costing includes fixed overhead as part of the product cost. It is
preferred in a surgery center because revenue from the product must cover all
costs, direct and indirect, fixed and variable.
If you identify each activity and the resources it requires,
you will know your business practices very well. This knowledge gives you the
power to effect positive changes.
We will consider five aspects of cost accounting:
1. Cost Allocation. All
cost-accounting methods use observation and allocation.
Allocation simply means to distribute or apportion. After
identifying activities, you use two determinants to allocate facility costs to
surgery cases: direct/indirect and time or case basis. From your utilization
studies, you can determine whether activities involve the surgery event directly
or indirectly, and if the activity is influenced by the amount of surgery time.
For example, scrub nurse cost would be direct (specific to that case) and
allocated by time, because the amount of time in the OR influenced that
particular labor cost. On the other hand, the cost of the medical chart would be
indirect (used by all cases) and allocated by case, since all cases use roughly
the same amount of materials. Facility overhead could be allocated by surgery
time, because items such as rent and insurance are time-based.
2. Cost Elements. In a surgery
center, there are four basic elements of cost. In simple terms they are:
- People to do the work (labor, often divided into clinical
and non-clinical) • Items for the surgery (supplies, services and
equipment)
- Items to run the facility (supplies, services and
equipment)
- The facility itself (overhead) Within these broad
categories lie myriad details. It is up to you to organize the details into
manageable divisions. Develop a short list of activity types. A quick glance
at your income statement will reveal one or two categories that constitute
the lion’s share of your expenses.
Concentrate on them; that’s where most of your money goes.
Although you may not agree with all of them, the following examples of
sub-categories reflect the ABC approach.
Labor. The traditional clinical vs.
nonclinical split isn’t necessary, but it helps discover if you have highly
paid licensed people doing activities for which less costly employees may
qualify.
Clinical:
- Direct patient care (surgery, pre-op, recovery)
- Clinical support (pick cases, chart, stock, outfit and
clean rooms)
- Paid breaks (scheduled breaks, down time between cases)
- Other (complete time sheets and reports, prepare staff
schedule, meetings, training)
- Benefits (payroll taxes, unemployment and health insurance,
pension, PTO) Non-Clinical:
- Patient-related clerical (admitting, medical records) •
Finance-related clerical (billing, collections, posting) • Other (complete
time sheets and reports, meetings, training, banking, mail) • Paid breaks
• Benefits (payroll taxes, unemployment and health insurance, pension,
PTO)
Items for Surgery. Apply the same idea to the supplies
and services used in surgery.
Supplies (surgical, anesthesia, other drugs, recovery,
disposable garments and bedding) Services (equipment rental, pharmacy)
Items to Run the Facility. Categorize the supplies and
services used in admitting, billing, registration and physician relations.
- Paper (claim forms, patient charts, forms and labels) •
Services (transcription, housekeeping, equipment rental)
- Communication (telephone, answering services, postage and
courier services)
- Legal (business taxes, license fees, dues and
subscriptions)
The Facility. Group all of your overhead cost elements.
- Site (facility rent, utilities, property taxes)
- Protection (liability and hazard insurance)
- Maintenance (grounds, security)
- Depreciation (plant and equipment)
- Amortization (leasehold, intangibles)
3. Inventory Control
The best way to manage supplies is by a perpetual inventory system. Of
course, you might wonder, who has time for that?
“Although the perpetual system is more costly than the
periodic system to implement, it facilitates better inventory planning and
control.
In the past, perpetual records were used primarily for
low-volume, high-cost items ...with computers, companies can conveniently store
and retrieve large amounts of data in a cost-effective manner.”3 Managing a
computerized perpetual system is more efficient than dealing with information
spread around on pick lists, preference cards, order cards, paper POs and
receiving documents.
Surgery center management information systems usually come
complete with inventory modules. Most provide some type of preference card to
manage the supplies used in each case, both to prepare the room and to record
usage. Under a perpetual inventory system, all supplies purchased are recorded
in the general ledger to the inventory asset account(s), and inventory reports
of supplies used provide the expense to be recorded in the general ledger. In
that way, the supply expense always matches the cost of supplies actually used
to generate the case revenue. Periodic physical counts reveal unrecorded
inventory loss or overage.
Even if you do not use perpetual inventory, you should still
perform periodic spot checks.
Don’t forget depreciation expense. How much does the
obsolete equipment in storage cost you? And what about that broken desk copier
in the back closet? Asset management is as important as inventory management.
4. Utilization Studies
Knowing the categories of expense does not automatically
provide you with useful data. Your payroll records may distinguish sick and
vacation leave, but they do not reflect paid breaks such as time spent on
morning and afternoon breaks, waiting for a case to start, changing clothes,
etc. Nor will your inventory system automatically distinguish items taken from
inventory from those used in cases. You will need to perform some studies on the
ground.
Ask yourself, “What is everybody doing?”
Follow your staff around for a while. Using your cost
categories, track their time (and modify your categories as needed). You may
find unidentified and unproductive paid time.
This provides you with two pieces of information.
First, if your staff spends x doing cases, you must add
y percent to cover these elusive activities. Secondly, you may find the
cause of down time: perhaps inefficiency is built into the placement of supplies
or documents, facility geography or the staff schedule itself.
Next, examine your inventory. See what items left the stock
room but were not used in cases. They may be lost because they are out of date,
spoiled, misplaced, or stolen. You can then determine a rough percentage of
clinical supply cost that is not used in cases. Using the Absorption Principle,
these costs belong to the cases performed because their revenue must cover those
as well as the direct costs.
5. General Ledger Design
If your general ledger chart of accounts matches your
costing model, cost is readily known. Each cost element and sub-category should
have its own ledger account.
Additionally, a separate account should be created for each
sub-category according to whether it is allocated by time or by case, directly
or indirectly. Then your expense information is organized and ready to plug into
your management information system.
Even if your MIS does not have a cost analyzer, you can enter
the information straight from your general ledger into a spreadsheet.
Knowing which items are direct and indirect, allocated per
case or per time, it is easy to develop your average cost per case.
Manually calculating cost per case by specialty or procedure
is much more difficult. To determine that cost, you need to know which items of
labor, supply and service expense, and equipment depreciation belong to
individual cases.
Assuming you scrupulously enter the data, your MIS can provide
that information, but to process it manually would be very time consuming.
Although the costing process can be labor intensive at first,
once the initial legwork is complete, you can set systems in place to capture
the necessary information on a routine basis. You will then have vastly improved
the tools that you need to manage your facility, to discover leaks in your
expense network and to make sound business decisions.
Donna Boyle is a senior business analyst for surgical
solutions at Source Medical, the leading provider of outpatient information
management solutions, with products installed in more than 3,500 facilities
nationwide. Boyle can be reached at (800) 719-1904 or via e-mail at: donna.boyle@sourcemed.net.
References:
1. Meigs WB, Johnson CE and Meigs RF.
Accounting: The Basis for Business Decisions.
McGraw-Hill, Inc., San Francisco, 1977, p. 78.
2. Piland NF, ed., Chart of Accounts for Health Care
Organizations, publication of Center for Research in Ambulatory Health Care
Administration, Englewood, 1999, p. 110.
3. Williams JR., Stanga KG and Holder WW.
Intermediate Accounting. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, San Diego, 1989,
p. 346
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