Opportunity Cost of Vitreoretinal Surgeries

Author:

Leung Ella H.1,Patel Shriji2,Reddy Rahul3,Boucher Nick4,Sharma Chakshu4,Blim Jill5,Ferrone Philip J.6,Hahn Paul7ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Georgia Retina, Atlanta, GA, USA

2. Department of Ophthalmology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA

3. Department of Ophthalmology, University of Arizona, Phoenix, AZ, USA

4. Vestrum Health, Naperville, IL, USA

5. American Society of Retina Specialists, Chicago, IL, USA

6. Vitreoretinal Consultants of New York, Great Neck, NY, USA

7. NJRetina, Teaneck, NJ, USA

Abstract

Purpose: To compare physician reimbursements for vitreoretinal surgeries with office-based patient care. Methods: A theoretical model was performed comparing physician work reimbursements for the 10 most common vitreoretinal surgeries with office-based work relative value units (wRVUs) that could have been generated during the same global time period. The reference physician was modeled at 40 patients per 8-hour workday. A lower volume physician and higher volume physician were modeled at 30 patients/day and 50 patients/day, respectively. The reimbursement rates and allocated times for surgery were based on the 2021 values set by Medicare, and the average wRVU per office visit was based on 2021 real-world data from the Vestrum Retinal Healthcare Database. Results: In the reference case, performing any of the 10 most common vitreoretinal surgeries was associated with an opportunity cost with a weighted mean of 49% (range, 40%-68%) relative to lost office productivity. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) allocated a weighted mean intraservice time of 73 minutes; however, the reference physician would have to complete the surgery with a weighted average of 5 minutes (range, −31-12 minutes) for surgical wRVUs to equal office-based reimbursements. Performing these 10 surgeries was associated with a 25% opportunity cost even for the lower volume physician and 61% for the higher volume physician. Probability sensitivity analysis with a range of conditions identified opportunity costs from surgery in over 99% of simulated scenarios. Conclusions: Medicare reimbursements for the physician work component of vitreoretinal surgeries represented a significant opportunity cost for the physician relative to office-based patient care of equivalent time, especially for busier physicians. The model did not explore practice overhead and professional liability insurance, which are factored separately by CMS and may influence the opportunity cost depending on utilization. The average threshold surgery times for surgical reimbursements to equal office-based reimbursements may be difficult to achieve.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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