More health systems enter joint ventures with home health agencies

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HCA Healthcare purchased a majority stake in Brookdale Health Care Services last year. It has since divested 23 home health locations, 11 hospice and 13 therapy agencies across 22 states to LHC Group.

“The volume growth is not in inpatient, it’s in outpatient,” said Eb LeMaster, managing director at Ponder Co. “HCA, for instance, has ventured into some areas and retracted like home health, but I think you have to continue to look for different sources of income—some of which are more profitable than others.”

Jefferson Health and Bayada Home Health Care formed a joint venture last year to expand care throughout New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In January, Saint Alphonsus Health System in Boise, Idaho entered into a joint venture with Encompass Health, which also expanded another JV with Baptist Health in South Florida. LHC Group announced a home health joint venture last year with Texas Health Resources and Methodist Health System. Delaware-based ChristianaCare formed a hospice specific-JV with AccentCare last year.

Over the past five years, Alternate Solutions Health Network has inked partnerships with numerous health systems across Ohio, Florida, Michigan and Virginia to jointly own and operate home health and hospice agencies.

“Health systems are increasingly partnering with home health agencies and organizations across the care continuum to improve patient outcomes and quality,” Terry Fulmer, president of the John A. Hartford Foundation, wrote in an email to Modern Healthcare. “This is driven in part by value-based payment arrangements and the opportunities for savings when post-acute care is integrated for people with complex conditions.”

The regulatory framework for home health agencies changed in 2020 with the Patient-Driven Groupings Model. Broadly, it bases pay on patient characteristics rather than therapy hours and has eliminated requests for anticipated payments, which are essentially down payments for expected treatment.

One provision in PDGM changed payments from a 60-day episode to a 30-day period, which required more a more detailed accounting of patient conditions and more control over hospital to home health referral patterns, experts said.

This, in part, will likely lead to more consolidation and joint ventures across healthcare sectors, industry observers said, noting that staffing will be the main barrier.

“Mom-and-pop home health agencies are needing to consolidate and scale to keep up with administrative burden,” West Monroe’s Ray said. “Now that more health systems are venturing into home health, it will be interesting to see whether there is going to be a reawakening of doing it right internally, or if the JV model will progress.”

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