Feb
17

Physician dispensing comes to Connecticut

Inflated costs for employers and insurers, higher taxes for state residents, and riskier medical treatment for injured workers – all are on the horizon if Connecticut Workers’ Compensation Commission Chairman Mastropietro allows physicians to dispense repackaged drugs to injured workers.
Mastropietro held a hearing yesterday where 4uDoctor attempted to convince all in attendance that the inflated cost of physician-dispensed repackaged drugs is actually a good deal.
Most weren’t buying their claims, nor should they. On the contrary, as their website states, 4uDoctor highlights their ability to”Generate significant additional ancillary revenue” for physicians.
4uDoctor’s claims for patient benefits are easily debunked.
There’s NO evidence that physician dispensing improves compliance, speeds return to work, or improves outcomes. None. Zilch. Nada. In fact, Chairman Mastropietro may want to focus on the patient safety issue; here’s why.
Work comp claimants are usually treated by docs that haven’t seen the claimant before the occupational injury; this almost always is the case in Connecticut where most employers can send injured workers to physicians who specialize in treating work comp conditions. While the WC doc certainly asks about prior medical history, current medications and the like, it is not uncommon for patients to forget which meds they take or be unable to accurately identify their drugs.
Not so big an issue if the claimant goes to their usual pharmacy, where the system will identify any potential conflicts and notify the dispensing pharmacist.
A bigger issue arises if the treating doc doesn’t get the full story, prescribes and dispenses meds that conflict with the claimants’ other meds. Then, the patient may be harmed, and because this harm comes as a result of treatment for a work comp injury, the employer is on the hook for any additional medical care.
To further rebut 4uDoctor’s argument for patient benefits, note that their dispensing is only for workers comp patients. Why can’t the docs’ other patients benefit from “improved compliance…convenience…confidentiality”? Perhaps it is because Medicare and group health plans won’t pay inflated prices, but work comp payers may be forced to (if the Commission doesn’t do the right thing).
.
What does this mean for you?
Physician dispensing drives up costs for employers, increases taxes, and kills jobs. This is little more than a big money-maker for a few, paid for by the rest of us.

If you agree, please pass this on to the Connecticut Workers Compensation Commission Chair at wcc.chairmansoffice@po.state.ct.us


Feb
17

The healthcare economist’s view

Jason Shafrin’s hosting this fortnight’s edition of Health Wonk Review, covering issues from birth control to Sen Santorum’s health care platform.
One notable entry is Maggie Mahar‘s observations on the cost – or lack thereof of contraception: “A 2000 study by the National Business Group on Health estimates that not providing contraceptive coverage in employee health plans winds up costing employers 15% to 17% more than providing such coverage.”


Feb
16

Santorum on health care – fiscally conservative or not?

Now that Rick Santorum has grabbed the hot potato known as the ‘GOP presidential race front-runner‘, it’s time to learn about his stance on health care, his platform, and his history.
Let’s start with past history; while platforms and political statements are kinda interesting, it is always instructive to see what candidates did before they became candidates.
Before we dive in, let’s remember our guy Rick is an avowed small-government fiscal conservative. (SGC).
Got that? OK, off we go!
First, SGFC Santorum voted for Medicare Part D, even while acknowledging he didn’t like the lack of any funding for the handout to the elderly. FYI – Part D’s share of the nation’s debt is now over $16 trillion
While in the Senate, SGFC Santorum worked his butt off to to include extra spending in a Medicare overhaul for hospitals in Puerto Rico. The extra spending, funded by taxpayers to the tune of $400 million, would have directly benefited Universal Health Services, a hospital management company based in his home state of PA. Santorum wasn’t entirely successful but that didn’t stop him from reaping the benefits of the revolving door; according to newspaper accounts, “Within months of leaving the Senate, SGFC Santorum joined the board of Universal Health Services, where he collected $395,000 in director’s fees and stock options before resigning last year.”
Santorum’s platform is best characterized as “platitudinous” – rife with paeans to the wonders of the free market, personal choice, doctor-centric care and other blather, along with the standard rants describing “Obamacare” as “cruel”, “one-size-fits-all”, “job-destroying”. But there’s nothing substantive beyond calls for repealing Obamacare and making Medicaid a block-grant program.
Noticeably, the platform of this champion of the free market does NOT mention SGFC Santorum’s support for Paul Ryan’s Medicare voucher system. A more public acknowledgement would be unwelcome among the over-65 set, and likely wouldn’t endear him to his UHS buddies either.
Oh, Santorum does echo the usual Republican call to allow individuals to purchase insurance across state lines, as if this amazingly-naive approach would actually do anything to address cost or increase choice, while hypocritically denying states’ rights to control heath insurance within their borders (wait…isn’t Santorum in favor of states setting their own health care policies?)
One of the more trenchant reviews of Santorum’s platform is fromDavid Williams; his dissection of Santorum’s health care tenets is well worth considering:
“It’s interesting that he’s calling for universal, affordable access. Sounds a lot like the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). The only difference is this piece about “government bureaucrats.” I wonder what specific elements of PPACA he means by this -because I don’t see a lot of interference in “health care decisions” in the Act relative to the pre-PPACA days.
It’s hard to argue with the idea of “targeted” and “patient-centered” solutions. And actually, that’s the path taken by PPACA. Didn’t opponents criticize the length of the bill? A lot of that is because there are many different targeted approaches taken: some for individuals, others for small business, others for medium sized organizations, still others for large entities. Other targeted interventions are in place for high-risk patients…”
One last thing. SGFC Santorum also doesn’t believe in evolution.
Oh my.


Feb
15

Money buying bad policy – the Hawai’ian version

Florida appears poised to restrict overcharging for physician dispensing of repackaged drugs to workers comp patients, so dispensing companies are looking for greener pastures.
One that looks promising indeed is Hawai’i, where physician dispensing exploded onto the scene last year, with several physician offices jumping into the business. And these docs didn’t start out slowly; no, they enthusiastically entered into this new opportunity to “improve patient care and increase compliance” by prescribing and dispensing drugs to large numbers of workers comp patients. It is unclear whether this desire to improve patient care and increase compliance led these physicians to dispense drugs to their Medicare and group health patients; hopefully some enterprising legislators or reporters in the Aloha State will find out.
Outside of the palm trees, sandy beaches, and salutary climate, there are some eerie parallels between Florida and Hawai’i, specifically the early and aggressive lobbying – and political contributions – of companies and individuals profiting from physician dispensing.
We’ll focus on one individual in particular – Sen. Clayton Hee, a Democrat. Sen Hee happens to be Senate Judiciary and Labor Committee Chairman. That would be the Committee where a bill intended to cap the costs of physician dispensed drugs was tabled (and effectively killed for that session).
Hee raised more money than any of his colleagues during the six-month filing period ended Dec. 31, raking in $68,800.
More than half ($38 grand +/-) came from individuals and entities affiliated with, related to, employed by, or clients of “physician dispensing technology company” Automated Healthcare Solutions.

You’ve got to admire AHCS’ bipartisanship; Hee is an avowedly liberal Democrat, while AHCS’ contributions in Florida have gone to very conservative Republicans.
The $38 grand is peanuts compared to the $3 million spent by AHCS et al in an effort to keep their Florida business alive and prospering.
The bill has been “carried over” to this year’s session, and is currently making progress through the various committees. Unfortunately, it will end up before Senator Hee’s committee, where, in all likelihood, it will die for lack of attention. You can track the bill’s progress – or lack thereof — here.
What does this mean for you?
Physician dispensing of repackaged drugs is coming to your state, or more likely, is already there. If Florida caps the cost, you can be assured physician dispensing in your state is about to increase – by a lot.


Feb
13

Repeal of the mandate; Bad news for workers’ comp?

If the requirement that every individual have health insurance is overturned by the Supreme Court, workers’ comp costs will increase over the near term and get worse from there.
If the mandate sticks, costs will likely moderate somewhat, then increase at a lower rate. Here’s why.
First, it may not be why you think; work comp costs won’t come down because people with health insurance are less likely to file WC claims (the theory being those without insurance are more likely to try and get comp to cover a non-occupational injury). In fact, studies indicate those with insurance are less likely to file a comp claim, although the correlation appears to be statistical and not causal. For a more in-depth discussion, click here. [opens pdf]
Healthier claimants
What may well be the most significant long-term impact of reform is the likelihood that workers will be healthier, their underlying conditions and comorbidities will be addressed by their health plan, and therefore comp payers won’t have to pay for treatment of those conditions in order to resolve the work injury. Think diabetes and surgery…
This is particularly true for smaller employers in states such as Texas and Florida which have large proportions of working-age people with no health insurance; work comp insurers focused on small businsses may well find their outlook looking rosy under reform.
In addition, several studies (here and here) indicates those with health insurance tend to be healthier than those without. Healthier people heal faster, more good news for work comp.
Degenerative conditions
For some diagnoses, identifying the cause of the injury is becoming increasingly problematic. It is often difficult for a physician to determine the ’cause’ of back pain or dysfunction; it may, or may not be wholly or partially related to a work injury and different physicians often reach different conclusions about the cause of injury. While reform won’t clear up those medical mysteries overnight, it will reduce the need for comp payers to pay for what are clearly non-work-related conditions.
Less need to cost shift
Workers comp is the most profitable payer for many facilities; margins are much higher for comp than for Medicaid (which pays below cost) and Medicare (which pays right around cost). When more people have health insurance, there will be less need to shift cost to workers comp to cover the expense of providing care to the uninsured. Sure, the Accountable Care Act will not cover everyone, but it will cover about two-thirds of those currently without health insurance. And most of those newly-covered folks will be the employed (and dependents thereof).
There’s a complicating factor – or rather multiple factors that make the real picture a bit too muddy to clearly project the impact of reform on cost shifting. For example, Medicaid will expand significantly (in fact it already has). While that’s good because providers are now getting paid something for some portion of the care they use to do for free, it may well be that they deliver a lot more care to a lot more people – all at below-breakeven rates.
With that said, it remains to be seen if the mandate stays, goes, or, if it goes, takes the entire Accountable Care Act with it.
What does this mean for you?
Regardless, it is clear that the more people there are with health insurance coverage, the better it is for workers comp payers. And if the mandate goes away, the percentage of workers with health insurance will undoubtedly be less than if it doesn’t.


Feb
9

Opioids – one insurer’s (successful) approach

While many workers comp insurers and TPAs are lamenting the problems of overuse and abuse of opioids, some are actually implementing solutions. While no one can claim they’ve got this solved, there are some promising approaches.
One of the more sophisticated and comprehensive opioid programs was recently implemented by the Accident Fund and their subsidiaries. It involves early identification of opioids dispensed to claimants, rapid notification of adjusters, and peer-to-peer intervention in claims identified as high priority.
The program grew out of a research collaboration with the Occupational Medicine Division at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine that linked pharmacy data to claims data; the findings revealed a strong link between opioid use and extended disability duration. Equally important, the research team, led by the Accident Fund’s Jeffrey Austin White, determined the number of scripts for opioids “were increasing at a rate of 10% per year across the enterprise since 2006 and dominated the top 5 list of most used drugs by 2008.”
Accident Fund Holdings Inc. (the parent company of the Accident Fund, CompWest, United Heartland, and Third Coast Underwriters) is using an internally-developed software application called “Care Analytics” to monitor incoming pharmacy records in “near real-time”, looking for triggers and patterns that indicate a potential for abuse. When a potentially problematic transaction is flagged, the appropriate adjuster is immediately notified. Depending on the specifics of the claim and the transaction, a nurse case manager and/or the Medical Director may also be notified.
There’s a good deal of peer-to-peer intervention in the program, and to date its been quite successful. According to Paul Kauffman, RN and director of Accident’ Fund’s medical management programs, “Over 70% of our providers have been willing to adjust treatment protocols and monitor the use of opioids by our injured workers…over five percent [of claimants identified] have been weaned from narcotics and are already back to work.”
By no means is this an easy process, and it can be complicated by workers comp regulations and laws that don’t promote effective approaches to addressing opioid abuse and addiction in workers comp. This has to change; the Hopkins-Accident Fund research indicated that workers prescribed even one opioid had average total claims costs 4 to 8 times greater than claimants with similar claims who didn’t get opioids.
I should note that I’ve been working with Accident Fund and their affiliated companies for some time, however I was only tangentially involved in this program. That said, it is obvious that one of the key factors driving the success of this program has been strong and consistent support from senior management, in this case Chief Claims Officer Pat Walsh.
What does this mean for you?
Solving the opioid problem is absolutely realistic, but it requires strong senior management support, careful use of intelligent analytics, and coordination across multiple areas within the payer.


Feb
8

Coventry’s 2011 financial results

Coventry Health announced their full-year 2011 results this morning; I’d have to sum it up as quite positive, driven primarily by big Medicaid and Medicare revenue increases. There’s no question where management is focused – with CMS programs accounting for half of the company’s revenue and essentially all of their growth, management’s focus on the call was almost exclusively on governmental programs with some discussion of the impact of health reform.
Most interesting was the continuation of lower medical utilization and lower medical costs into Q4, especially in the inpatient admissions and days across both Medicare and commercial populations. Chairman Alan Wise did note there’s been a slight uptick in physician utilization, but this was outweighed by the decline in facility services.
Geographically, it is increasingly clear Coventry is focusing on their core Midwest states, with expansions in governmental programs, deals with provider systems, and specifically successful efforts to increase their Medicaid business in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and (not strictly speaking a midwest state) Kentucky.
The commercial business is not faring as well, with essentially flat membership for the year; premium increases resulted in an 8% uptick in revenue. The work comp sector is not growing much – more on that below.
Coventry’s utilization trend was consistent with other payers, yet their overall cost trend is a couple points higher than other health plans at high single digits. This appears to be unit cost driven (no surprise), although CFO Randy Giles did state health reform increased trend by up to 200 basis points specifically from eliminating deductibles and copays for preventive services. Seems like an awful lot to me; I can’t see how preventive care deductibles and copays could possibly amount to 200 basis points in losses.
Coventry re-negotiated their Medco pharmacy contract (for their non-workers comp business) and got better terms and an extension, with Medicare through 2015 and commercial a year longer.
On the workers comp front, the loss of a large customer dropped revenue 3%; word is that was the ESIS contract. Management did note that the $1.1 billion in management services/fee revenue is higher margin and provides cash for investment and acquisition activities.
Charles Boorady did ask the only question about workers comp, asking what drove the loss of the large customer – Mike Barr [sp?]is the new manager of the overall services business so Wise deferred to him. WC is an area they’re looking to grow, as it is unregulated revenue it is a ‘great place to be’. Barr said they lost their second largest group due to a competitive environment, noting there was “nothing specific with WC that created the issue, as a line it runs well.” [paraphrase] He went on to note Coventry is centralizing some operations to consolidate especially in areas where there’s no network.
Management said that while Coventry lost the overall contract, some employers (likely administered by ESIS) are looking to come back and work directly with Coventry, and Coventry is working on those opportunities. In commenting on the work comp sector, Wise said it is a stable and slightly growing business, it is an accident based business and in tough environment it has continued to add revenue slightly and ebitda a bit. In response to a question, Barr said they lost the business on price.
What are the key takeaways?
Governmental business is increasingly important – and that’s where the focus will be for the foreseeable future.
Coventry’s trend seems to be just a tad higher than their larger competitors.
MLR rules and the effect thereof are still working their way thru the system; it will be interesting to see how small employers react when they get their rebate checks later this year.
Expect Coventry’s work comp sector to push hard to increase revenue from existing and add new customers.


Feb
7

Acquisitions in the offing?

Word is the recent flurry of acquisitions and mergers in the work comp services industry isn’t likely to taper off any time soon.
Genex is reportedly up for sale, Injured Workers Pharmacy has seemingly been in play for months, a major managed care firm may be in play, and there is significant activity on the part of investment firms looking to buy into the PBM space.
This comes on the heels of MSC’s purchase of complex care firm Total Medical Solutions, York’s purchase of JI Companies, and the sale of Paradigm Services to an investment firm (one without much experience in workers comp), all taking place just last month, not to mention 2011, a very active year for work comp deals.
Among the likely acquirers are investment firms eager to jump into what looks like a business ripe for consolidation and automation, as well as current players seeking to add assets and services to their portfolio of companies/products/services. Expect ISG Holdings to be especially active; with Stratacare and Bunch already onboard they are positioned well to expand into related service lines.
The spate of activity may slow for a bit as sellers seek higher valuations than the current 7x EBITDA (+/-) that is around average these days, this typically happens as owners see other deals done, want to get in on the gravy train, and believe their company offspring is more valuable than others they’ve seen sold. But, with the threat of an increase to capital gains coming at the end of this year, there’s a big incentive for owners to cash out now and save big dollars in tax expense.
What does this mean for you?
Perhaps a bit of distraction, which may open up opportunities for vendors/service companies who can stay focused on their customers’ needs.


Feb
6

Employment, Economic Recovery, Workers Comp and Group Health

Friday’s news that the nation added over a quarter-million private-sector jobs in January [opens pdf] was good news indeed for health plans, workers comp insurers, service companies. But January wasn’t the only bright spot; the report indicated a lot more jobs were added last quarter than previously thought, and the unemployment rate fell by two-tenths of a point.
Since August, the unemployment rate has fallen steadily from 9.1 percent to 8.3 percent, a significant – and encouraging – improvement.
Here are a few key indicators.
– employment in architecture and engineering grew by 7000 jobs, a likely harbinger of future growth in construction and manufacturing.
– construction employment increased by 21,000 after a jump of 31,000 in December
– manufacturing jumped by a whopping 50,000 jobs, much of it in durable goods such as automobiles
– November and December employment was higher than previously reported by 60,000 jobs
So, what are the implications for health plans and work comp payers and service providers?
More workers = more health plan members. We likely won’t see much growth for another couple of months, as many employers have extended their waiting periods for eligibility. However, the steady growth in jobs at small and large employers means organic premium growth with almost no added cost-of-sale.
Occupational injury rates akafrequency will trend up for some months as new employees tend to get injured more often than their more experienced, thoroughly-trained, and knowledgeable co-workers. This means more claims for work comp insurers, and more work for the industries servicing work comp – think physical therapy, imaging, bill review and repricing, networks. Pharmacy will also tick up, but the PBMs are somewhat isolated from frequency trends by long time claimants high utilization.
Most encouraging is the overall increase in employment over the last 22 months.


Feb
4

UPDATE – SWIF, MedRisk, and the PA Auditor General’s report

UPDATE – In response to a query, MedRisk informed me that my savings figure was misstated.
MedRisk reduced SWIF’s medical payout by $28.9 million below fee schedule from January 2009 to December 2012; the earlier post (below) indicated the reduction was $21.5 million below fee schedule. My original figure was obtained from Wagner’s report, which may not have included all months used by MedRisk.
Also, MedRisk informed me their total reduction below fee schedule was $21.1 million NET after MedRisk’s fees.
Original Post is below
Earlier this week, Pennsylvania’s Auditor General released a report entitled “Auditor General Jack Wagner Finds Poor Management Of State Workers’ Insurance Fund Contracts, Costing Taxpayers.”
Kind of a bold title, especially because that’s NOT what Auditor General Jack Wagner’s audit found.

I applaud the Auditor for initiating the audit, and it certainly seems like they dedicated a substantial amount of resources to the project. I’ve had a chance to read the Auditor General’s SWIF Audit report, and have gotten emails and calls from several people with different views. In point of fact, there appears to be some confusion about what the report says, and doesn’t say, along with a recommendation/finding that reflects a somewhat alarming lack of understanding about the workers compensation services business. In addition, the press release bears little resemblance to the report itself.
Briefly, there is quite a bit of discussion regarding SWIF processes and contractual issues, much of which is thoroughly and competently addressed in SWIF’s response to the Audit report. There is no allegation that MedRisk engaged in inappropriate behavior or operated unethically, in fact MedRisk saved SWIF $21.5 million below fee schedule, thereby dramatically reducing employers’ and taxpayers’ costs.

Before I jump in, I’d note that MedRisk, the contractor providing bill review and network management services under contract to SWIF, is a consulting client. I called MedRisk to ask for their comments; they declined, except to note they had not been involved in the audit. This is surprising; the audit report has 7 findings related to MedRisk-SWIF involving contractual changes, systems programming, processing flows, file imports, bill review practices and the like, and at no time was MedRisk asked for their input.
Couple key issues. The Auditor General’s press release buried the lead, focusing on contractor MedRisk and SWIF’s management of the contractor, while giving short shrift to a much more costly issue, SWIF’s alleged mismanagement of a costly IT project. I’m puzzled by this; why did the press release focus first – and primarily – on the bill processing issue and not lead with the $70 million problem – the allegation that SWIF failed to adequately oversee a technology project?
I’d note that the audit report does the same; the IT project is the last issue on their list, with the first 7 points devoted to alleged issues with the SWIF-MedRisk contract.
Second key issue before we get into specifics. The Auditor opines that MedRisk should not process PPO bills; the report’s author seems to feel this is somehow unethical or inappropriate. The Auditor states that MedRisk should not have been allowed to do this and excoriates SWIF for allowing the practice, as if somehow this practice enables fraudulent behavior.
Here’s what the press release says:
“SWIF created a conflict of interest and the potential for fraud by allowing MedRisk to process its own in-network bills and by failing to ensure that MedRisk does not intentionally delay the processing of those bills.”
This is nonsensical. There is NO incentive for MR to delay processing.
Why would MedRisk delay processing of its own network bills? To intentionally anger MedRisk’s contracted providers? Cause them to submit more bills, thereby increasing administrative costs (which could not be passed on to SWIF)? Get those frustrated providers to call SWIF and complain? Get the benefit of float at today’s generous interest rates?
Again, I’m puzzled. Network managers – in work comp and many other lines of coverage – routinely process, reprice, review, and pay bills from their network providers. This is de facto common practice in the Pharmacy Benefit Management sector of Medicare, group, and workers comp and is quite common in the imaging, durable medical equipment, physical medicine, home health care, and transportation/translation areas within workers comp. There are literally dozens of companies operating this way throughout the workers comp industry, at private insurers, TPAs, state funds, and self-administered employers and governmental entities alike. I’ve never heard of this practice characterized as dangerous, potentially risky, or even unusual.
Now that we’ve covered those issues, we can delve into a couple specifics. Point One – SWIF paid about $2,500,000 in penalties for late payments to medical providers. Some cite this as a MedRisk issue, however MedRisk was not responsible for paying the vast majority of bills; SWIF was.
Which leads to Point Two. The contract obligated MedRisk to turn around complete clean bills in an average of ten days. The audit indicated some 90,000 bills, or about 24% of the total, took more than ten days to process. However, the auditor’s press release didn’t distinguish between the contractual commitment (average) vs the bills that took more than ten days (outliers). This is unfortunate, as it lead some to think MedRisk failed to comply with that contractual commitment. If 76% of bills were processed in ten days or fewer, it appears extremely likely MedRisk hit the target most of the time (we’d need to know the specific contract language and see data specific to those targets to be entirely sure).
Most of the bills processed in more than ten days hit at the very beginning of the contract implementation.
I find it curious that the Auditor makes up his own standard for timeliness, uses that made-up standard to impugn both SWIF and MedRisk, then in a later section blames SWIF for not holding MedRisk to actual, real, written contractual standards.
Next, MedRisk was obligated to deliver savings – below the state’s Fee Schedule – with specific targets for trauma bills and all other bills. The audit report noted MedRisk missed their target in one category – hospital trauma bills – by $800,000. A fair but at best a minor point; the fact is MedRisk saved SWIF $21.5 million dollars, after accounting for the shortfall in trauma savings. Here’s how Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor and Industry Julia Hearthway put it in her response to the Auditor:
“the contract with MedRisk has produced net savings of $21.5 million over the life of the contract…Based on the savings realized through the contract, SWIF would have been irresponsible to terminate the agreement based only on the trauma savings.”

What was NOT addressed in the Auditor’s press release was the fact that MedRisk hit or bettered its savings targets in the “all other” category, saving SWIF $21.5 million below fee schedule. And, the savings from the trauma, PT, pharmacy, imaging, and every other sector were rolled up and transferred to SWIF before any payments were made to MedRisk – if MedRisk didn’t hit the total target, they got paid nothing for savings.

The auditor also found fault with SWIF, asserting SWIF changed what it required MedRisk to do after the contract was awarded. A couple of changes may have led to reduced costs for MedRisk while others undoubtedly increased MedRisk’s cost and exposure to penalties. It is common for vendors and customers to find better, cheaper, and faster way to do things after they sit down and start working through the details. Moreover, any relationship should evolve as both partners see ways to improve processes, strip out unnecessary steps, and increase performance. Don’t know if this is the case in the SWIF – MedRisk example, but it is in most business relationships; as most readers know quite well, it’s just not possible to write a contract that covers every detail, especially when you’re structuring a relationship and business processes between two organizations new to each other where one is implementing a new computer system.
So.
– We have a vendor that delivers savings of $21,500,000 to SWIF’s employers and taxpayers.
– This same vendor uses an operational model that is standard throughout the industry, processes most bills in fewer days than required, and achieves its turn around time target the vast majority of the time.
– Yet the auditor’s report suggests that the contract should not have been renewed, and an entire new vendor selection process initiated.
I’d also note that SWIF’s response to the Audit addresses each of the issues, and bears reading (see pages 68 – 77), especially if one is looking for a balanced view. In sum, yes, there have been issues; anyone ever involved in a project like this would expect that. But no, there’s no illicit or inappropriate behavior, actions, intentions, or results.
And I just can’t understand why the Auditors never asked MedRisk for their input or feedback.