The Legal Implications for Health Care's Bad Business Practices
Bad, or unethical, business practices have always been a concern for physicians
and health care organizations. But recent high-profile business catastrophes refocused
our attention on the responsibilities physicians must keep in mind when functioning
as officers or board members.
Following federal legislation arising from
the corporate scandals at Enron and WorldCom — and in light of the recent
litigation against health care organizations for fraud or unethical billing practices
— a review of potential ethical conflicts and pitfalls is important.
Case Study 1: I was merely doing my duty as a medical staff member
when I agreed to serve on the hospital's board of directors.
Dr. Smith,
the president of a local multispecialty clinic, was flattered and pleased to be
nominated to serve on the board of directors of his local hospital. Competent
in medical management from his tenure as a medical staff officer at the hospital
and his experiences at the clinic, Smith gladly accepted the board position.
While
serving on the board, Smith learned much about hospital governance and operations.
Additionally, his expertise on quality and patient care served the other non-medical
board members well because many operational and financial issues required both
clinical and non-clinical guidance.
While attending the annual spring board
of directors' retreat, Smith participated in many strategic planning discussions.
The hospital's census was declining and hospital management engaged a national
health care consulting firm to present the board with new ideas for producing
revenue.
The consulting firm studied both national and local health trends,
accessed both national and local utilization and demographic information, and
formulated three specific strategic opportunities to reverse the hospital's declining
revenues.
1.The first involved building facilities for a comprehensive oncology
program and recruiting both a medical and radiation oncologist.
2.The second
called for the alignment and merger with other hospitals in a 200-mile radius
to form a regional, multi-hospital corporation to achieve some economies of scale.
3.The final strategic opportunity called for development of an outpatient imaging
and surgery center.
As a practicing physician at the hospital, Smith raised
numerous issues regarding operational inefficiencies at the hospital, all of which,
if remedied, would cut costs and increase profitability. While Smith liked the
oncology program plan and was neutral on the regional merger concept, he did not
feel that the hospital should expand into what he felt was a physician outpatient
imaging and surgical market.
After lengthy discussions and analysis by hospital
management, the consultants and the board, however, it was decided that the best
strategic opportunity for the hospital would be to build and to operate an outpatient
imaging and surgery center.
Later the following summer, Smith's multispecialty
clinic held its own strategic planning meeting. Suffering from the same declining
revenues as the hospital, the clinic physicians began brainstorming ideas to enhance
their revenues. Several suggested building an outpatient imaging and surgery center.