US Healthcare Reform and Shared Services
Free Online Articles Directory
Why Submit Articles?
Top Authors
Top Articles
FAQ
ABAnswers
0 && $.browser.msie ) {
var ie_version = parseInt($.browser.version);
if(ie_version Login
Register
Hello
My Home
Sign Out
Email
Password
Remember me?
Lost Password?
Home Page > Business > Outsourcing > US Healthcare Reform and Shared Services
US Healthcare Reform and Shared Services
Posted: May 10, 2010 |Comments: 0
|
]]>
The ongoing and increasingly rancorous debate over healthcare reform in the US is clearly set to define at least the first part of President Obama’s time in office. While as yet the precise terms of the proposed reforms – let alone their success – have yet to be determined, it is obvious that their intentions are historically significant and that, if adopted, they would have a radical impact throughout the healthcare sector and far beyond. This potential impact has substantial implications for the shared services and outsourcing space both within healthcare and, longer-term, across every other sector, by virtue of the changes reform would precipitate in a range of areas including insurance provision and the nature of employee contributions and benefits.
It’s simply premature to give a full assessment of the specific ramifications of reform – or the failure to achieve it – but even at this comparatively early stage some of the potential consequences for shared services and outsourcing are beginning to coalesce. It’s hard to envisage, for example, any substantial increase in state spending on healthcare and the growth in related infrastructure which would follow, without assuming that shared services would form at least part of the solution: even without healthcare reform, of course, the move to a more streamlined and efficient government touted by President Obama both before and since his election will rely in no small part on an adoption of many of the principles which have seen shared services become such a pillar of both private- and public-sector service provision, and it would be near-incomprehensible were any new healthcare structure to be erected without recourse to similar means.
“In line with the Presidential mandate for a more efficient government, many believe that the opportunity for shared services within the Federal Government is promising,” says Dave Adams of management consultants ScottMadden. “Given the value that shared services can deliver and solid examples of successful federal shared services organizations already in operation, the timing is right to pursue shared services as the government-wide model for delivery of mission support services.”
Indeed, the expertise developed within shared services – both public and private – over the last two decades may well prove invaluable when applied to some of the more vexing organizational and process-related issues thrown up by healthcare reform on any significant scale. While reform presumably could be enacted without involving the shared services community, the question would inevitably arise: why? If the idea remains to “ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country”, it seems almost self-evident that the US stands to benefit hugely from the invaluable experience of shared services leaders who have for years faced many of the same challenges – albeit on a smaller scale – that would stand in the way of imposing true reform onto a system which already sucks in such a vast portion of federal spending.
Linda Merritt, research director at NelsonHall, believes that the time has come for shared services heavy hitters to step up to the plate. “Major SS&O players have the opportunity to be seen as thought leaders and join the national debate. For example, the design of the new health records system should take into consideration all of the end-to-end processes and interfaces [that] will connect to it, including employer benefits administration, claims and billings, and compliance with regulation and legislation requirements and reporting. Healthcare providers’ cost of completing claims and payment processes requirements for every insurance carrier adds directly and significantly to the cost of healthcare through complexity and confusion.
“While other parts of the health care debate are higher profile,” she adds, “the cost of excessive administrative complexity consumes billions of dollars that could be used to provide and expand health care. And who knows more about streamlining administrative processes to increase quality, functionality at a lower cost than leading SS&O providers?”
Such streamlining isn’t a mere “nice-to-have”, but an absolutely essential part of any potential reform process. The violently polarizing nature of the debate thus far has demonstrated that this is a matter of the greatest significance both socially and politically: in Washington, President Obama has come down to earth with a bump and knows that pushing reform through Congress is going to be a task requiring every ounce of his political clout, and if he is to win this battle a major aspect of his strategy must be to demonstrate that state intervention into healthcare will be carried out as efficiently – as cost-efficiently – as possible. Every last penny will be protested by the more reactionary elements within Congress: the ability to prove that new state infrastructure will be developed along best-practice lines, and with excess fat trimmed to a microscopic level, could literally mean the difference between success and failure.
But of course it’s not just the government which could turn to shared services as part of any reform process: the private-sector organizations making up such a significant part of both current and future healthcare systems will also be affected to an extent that has yet to be clarified. While many such companies have already adopted shared services to some degree, the advantages of the shared services model when it comes to increasing flexibility and scalability will be hard to ignore for those that haven’t – and even early adopters might look to diversify the services provided by their existing SSOs as new challenges demand new solutions across organizations. This will, of course, create added costs in the short term.
“One significant impact to consider is the need to evaluate how changes in legislation, policies, and/or procedures will impact existing processes, systems and re-tooling of workforce knowledge/skills. If the rules of the game change (and assuming that insurance providers will continue to play a critical role in healthcare) then providers must stand ready to quickly adapt their operations to meet these challenges,” explains Adams.
He continues: “Changes in the scope of work that shared services and/or outsource service providers have committed to providing to their customers will require investment in people, process and technology . Whether or not the cost of modifying operations to meet the new rules can be recovered through existing pricing mechanisms or service agreements is yet to be determined. The question of who pays will likely lead to interesting and challenging discussions between service providers and customers.”
“Interesting and challenging”, indeed, could be taken as a somewhat understated judgment on the entire reform environment. There are of course at least three groups for whom a third adjective pops up: “exciting”, perhaps, or even “appetizing”. Those three bodies are the consultants – who’ll undoubtedly be aiming for a tasty slice of the pie should any significant transformation to government architecture be called for; outsource providers, for similar reasons (although the landscape here is more complex); and shared services professionals.
The last group in particular stand to gain a great deal from any significant expansion of healthcare-related shared services, of course, for the simple reason that it would open up new employment possibilities at a time when the general trend has been towards job-cutting and rationalization even at quite senior levels. If it is indeed time as Linda Merritt suggests for shared services leaders to “join the national debate”, the reward may well be measurable in terms of many new roles within new or expanded shared services organizations or within ancillary sectors such as training or advisory services.
Furthermore, if the more radical elements of the proposed reforms manage to make it into law, existing SSOs within every American organization will have to accommodate and react to new legislative requirements affecting areas like general HR, payroll and compliance. This would presumably open up new opportunities for employment and/or advancement as firms look to recruit experienced talent to help them through the transition. All told, the potential number of new shared services jobs from any reform of healthcare that goes beyond the merely cosmetic could run into the thousands at least (although many of these would of course be entry-level positions). As such the prospect of healthcare reform on any significant scale should be a mouth-watering one for the shared services community which – lest we forget – has taken a bit of a battering since the onset of the financial crisis.
For the service-provider community the potential advantages are less clear-cut in that the government’s position on outsourcing (especially offshore outsourcing) has yet to crystallize despite the increasingly anti-outsourcing rhetoric which occasionally crept into Barack Obama’s campaign rhetoric.
As Adams explains, “the Administration has recently sent some strong messages regarding the effectiveness of outsourcing and there is a movement in place within the Federal Government to bring existing outsourced work back in-house… although [it is] not completely off the table given that outsourcing remains a viable solution for driving much needed efficiencies and cost savings.”
It’s unlikely that President Obama and his team would want to stir an already bubbling pot by trumpeting incessantly on about the potential benefits of outsourcing given the term’s negative connotations in the eyes of many in the electorate. However, outsourcing itself could be a handy weapon in the president’s armory against the more rabid opponents of reform in that it provides an opportunity to demonstrate that reform is not all about “big government” and taking control away from the private sector. It’s clearly too early to go too far down the line of such an argument; however it’s almost certain that despite his apparently anti-outsourcing stance on the campaign trail, President Obama will have to incorporate at least some outsourcing of services into his reform proposals (in many ways, indeed, outsourcing lies at the very heart of the planned reforms in the sense that the government will continue to outsource much of both delivery and insurance of healthcare to the private sector).
As a result, the major outsourcing providers are monitoring the situation in Washington extremely closely; whether or not US-based firms operating US-based delivery centers will have an advantage over their foreign-based competitors due to the political danger inherent in offshoring elements of such an already controversial policy remains to be seen, although some skeptics may believe that this should be taken as a given considering how important every congressional vote is to the overall success or failure of the mooted reforms.
Linda Merritt believes that allowing such political considerations to color the format and origin of service delivery within a reform package could prove counter-productive. “Well-meaning but misplaced restrictions could add in cost, just when the goal is to find ways to increase healthcare coverage at the lowest total cost to our economy. For example, tying government funding to restrictions on where work can be shored would impact the cost to design, develop and build the new technologies. The top candidates for design and development of such systems already use intelligent shoring to segment workflow by capability, capacity and cost globally,” she says.
You might say – and you’d be perfectly correct – that all this is supposition, and that the real substance of healthcare reform has yet to reveal itself. That is indeed the case; however, it doesn’t take a great mind to see that efficiency and cost-savings lie at the very heart of the solution to the great American healthcare system, and that shared services (and outsourcing) are now a mainstream method of achieving exactly those two aims. As such it’s hard to imagine a future incarnation of healthcare that doesn’t utilize shared services at least in part – and of course the greater the scale of government involvement in healthcare and the more radical the transformation, the more likely it is that some of the potential consequences considered here will indeed play out. As President Obama said in his address to Congress earlier this month, he has come “not to fear the future, but to shape it”: the shape of that future may yet be undecided, but it’s all but certain that shared services will play a significant role in shaping it.
_________________________________________________________________________
This article was first published on the Shared Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON) – Read it here: http://www.ssonetwork.com/topic_detail.aspx?id=5930&ekfrm=6&utm_source=ssonetwork.com&utm_medium=SMO&utm_campaign=DIRECTORIES&mac=SSON_External_Listing_2070
About The Shared Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON)
SSON is the largest and most established community of shared services and outsourcing professionals, with over 25,000 members.
SSON provides the roof under which key industry experts and organizations share their experience, knowledge and tools, and practitioner peers connect with other all over the world, both face to face and online.
SSON focuses on developing its members through providing training, tools, and networking opportunities. SSON staff works from international offices in New York, London, Singapore, Sydney, Berlin and Dubai to research current trends and developments in shared services.
More information visit the Shared Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON) website. Stay up to date with SSON’s latest twitter posts at twitter.com/ssonetwork, connect with global practitioners, providers and advisors on the Shared Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON) LinkedIn group and Sign up to receive SSON’s weekly updates today
Retrieved from “http://www.articlesbase.com/outsourcing-articles/us-healthcare-reform-and-shared-services-2337332.html”
(ArticlesBase SC #2337332)
Watch your traffic increase just by submitting articles with us, click here to get started.
Liked this article? Click here to publish it on your website or blog, it’s free and easy!
Jamie Liddell -
About the Author:
Jamie Liddell has worked in journalism since he was a 17-year-old cub reporter for The Tico Times, Costa Rica’s highly regarded English-language weekly newspaper. Holding an MA in English from Clare College, Cambridge University, Jamie came to the Shared Services & Outsourcing Network from the world of overseas property publishing where he worked on the industry’s best-selling publications for the UK and Ireland, and gave seminars at consumer and b2b exhibitions and conferences internationally.
]]>
Questions and Answers
Ask our experts your Outsourcing related questions here…
200 Characters left
How is the healthcare reform going to be paid for ?
How many democrats voted for healthcare reform ?
How is healthcare reform going to be paid for ?
Rate this Article
vote(s)
0 vote(s)
Feedback
RSS
Print
Email
Re-Publish
Article Tags:
outsourcing, shared services, sson, us healthcare reform
Latest Outsourcing Articles
More from Jamie Liddell
Magnify.net has Plug-in For Movable Type
Magnify.net, the New York-based start-up which organizes video collections around specific interests on customized Web pages, has new plug-ins that will allow bloggers using Movable Type and WordPress to insert customized video directly into a blog post. Steve Rosenbaum the CEO says that the search and discovery technology of Magnify.net will easily curate relevant videos from multiple video sharing services.Today the company is planning to announce plug-ins. (03:12)
Blip.tv Creators to Appear on WNBC
Blip.tv’s content creators could land on-air on NBC in New York thanks to a slew of new distribution deals the video-sharing service struck last week, including one with NBC Local Media. Under that deal, some of blip.tv’s 50,000 Web shows could make their way up the food chain onto the NBC flagship station WNBC-TV in New York, Meredith McGinn, senior manager of special projects at WNBC, told Andy at the Blip.tv event last week. (02:20)
How to Create a Profitable Education Services Firm
In Chapter 3 of 14, MyFootpath.com founder J.T. Allen shares how he and his mother started the company to help others navigate education and how it has evolved into a focused, profitable education information services business built for growth. Ten years of experimentation has shaped MyFootpath.com’s business model into helping people find what comes next in life. (01:38)
Photo Editing Tips with Picnik #10 – Saving and Sharing Picnik Photos
Apparently understanding that no web site is an island, Picnik plays nice with many of the most popular photo sharing sites, social networks, blog services and so on. Picnik also makes it easy to save a copy of your picture to your computer, email photos to friends and so on. (01:55)
Getting Started with Yuuguu – #2 – Yuuguu Screen Sharing Preferences
Yuuguu is a smart, easy-to-use client that lets you share your desktop, offer control of your desktop, chat, audio conference, and more. You can configure other instant message accounts to work with Yuuguu, set your screen sharing options and more within the Yuuguu preferences. (02:30)
Vijay Rangineni, CEO, Mahindra Satyam BPO, Part II
Our series of interviews with the world’s sourcing powerhouses continues with Part 2 of an exclusive one-to-one with the man in the Mahindra Satyam BPO hotseat
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Outsourcingl
May 10, 2010
lViews: 119
Why You Might Want to Consider Business Outsourcing
There are tremendous opportunities for business outsourcing in today’s global economy. Globalism is primarily the cause of such a business strategy. Companies can now outsource their trade in a country on the other side of the planet.
By:
Jeremy Wintersl
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 26, 2011
Answers to the common questions about outsourcing
Following these pointers can ensure that you reduce the risk of wasting time and money in finding the right outsource freelancers that can deliver quality results.
By:
Jhengl
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 26, 2011
Radiology Coding Company in Tulsa
Using online resources is the easiest way to locate an established radiology coding company in Tulsa. A reliable radiology coding company in Tulsa ensures client-focused and customized solutions.
By:
Bob Krusel
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 26, 2011
Medical Billing and Coding as a Career
The field of medicine is ever growing, and administrative jobs such as medical billing and coding are in great demand. There are several training institutions that can teach you to become a professional in medical billing and coding, and will help you earn a steady income.
By:
Stephenl
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 26, 2011
Outsourcing Talents, Which Kind Would You Like To Be?
According to the statistic from Software and Service Outsourcing Colleague of CUIT, currently, software outsourcing talents are a “pyramid-shaped” pattern in China, 5% are architects, 35% are superior officers like Senior Software Engineer, Project Manager, CTO and technical director, the rest 60% are software programmers.
By:
Wade Fanl
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 25, 2011
Advantages of Outsourcing Commercial Cleaning Services
Outsourcing janitorial services provides a variety of benefits to business owners looking to reduce costs and maximize efficiency. Maintaining an in-house cleaning crew can take valuable time and resources away from growing your business. Outsourcing offers many advantages to business owners who want to focus on developing and supporting their business rather than concentrating on commercial cleaning and maintenance issues.
By:
John Loftusl
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 25, 2011
Marketing Law hunger to expose lies 10 car manufacturers – car manufacturers, Marketing – Automotive
First, to maintain bottom line, set the industry benchmark price Typical case: Accord Price is affected by supply and demand , is not entirely dependent on a car who cut prices
By:
xiaohe7383l
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 25, 2011
Printing in color density measurement types – color density measurement – Printing Industry
In printing technology, the color density measurement techniques are widely used in proofing and printing process of color inspection, color printing sample evaluation
By:
coquettishl
Business>
Outsourcingl
Apr 25, 2011
Q&A: Davide Laghi, Y6Sigma Solutions
Davide Laghi is the founder and MD of Y6Sigma Solutions Ltd., a consultancy and solutions provider based in Scotland in the UK and the winner of the Honorary Mention in the Thought Leader of the Year category at the 2008 Shared Services Excellence Awards. Ahead of his forthcoming presentation at the 9th Annual European Shared Services & Outsourcing Week in Budapest, SSON spoke with him about the effect of the current climate in shared services.
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Businessl
May 11, 2010
Sourcing Superstars: Hubert Giraud, Capgemini BPO
From its birth as a data processing and activity management entity in the late 1960s, the company that now bears the name Capgemini has bloomed into one of the world’s largest technology and professional services firms,……
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Outsourcingl
May 11, 2010
Ten Global Payroll Challenges (and How to Overcome Them)
Shared Services & Outsourcing Network ( SSON) takes a look at ten of the biggest challenges associated with moving to a global payroll
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Human Resourcesl
May 11, 2010
lViews: 414
Roundtable: Building the Case for HR Transformation
For HR Transformation to be successful, an organization needs to be very comfortable with the current model in place. SSON explored the attitudes of senior HR professionals at the 13th Annual Shared Services Week in Orlando
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Human Resourcesl
May 11, 2010
lViews: 279
Outsourcing Statutory Accounts, Tax & VAT Compliance to an External Partner
Case Study; CA, Inc & BDO Stoy Hayward Two years ago the European arm of CA, Inc (formerly Computer Associates) embarked on a large-scale finance transformation program aimed at bringing together over two dozen disparate local accounting organizations before implementing a single ERP system….
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Finance>
Accountingl
May 11, 2010
lViews: 175
Making the Link Between P2P and Working Capital to Create a Robust Governance Framework
One of the lesser-trumpeted consequences of the credit crunch has been a renewed (and some might say long overdue) attention paid to working capital management: with liquidity the watchword organizations have been scrambling to release potentially significant sums tied up in their P2P and O2C processes, with every saving going some distance to staving off a potentially business-critical shortage of cash…
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Outsourcingl
May 11, 2010
Top Ten Tips for Ensuring Buy-In from the Top
No matter how complicated, expansive or arduous the project, one of the biggest challenges facing any transformation program arises near the very beginning: ensuring full buy-in from the top. Many’s the program that’s begun in a rosy glow of optimism only to founder on the rocks of apathy (and occasionally, indeed, antipathy) from the C-suite – especially during tough times when executive attention is often, rightly or wrongly, focused elsewhere.
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Outsourcingl
May 11, 2010
Achieving True Globalization Through Global Payroll
Putting in place a global payroll system offers numerous advantages in terms of economies of scale, ease and accuracy of reporting, and the kind of general efficiency improvements that come along with any centralization program of this nature. But some of the secondary effects of such an implementation, while less obvious and less immediate, can have a profound impact on a global organization in the longer term….
By:
Jamie Liddelll
Business>
Human Resourcesl
May 11, 2010
lViews: 185
Add new Comment
Your Name: *
Your Email:
Comment Body: *
Verification code:*
* Required fields
Submit
Your Articles Here
It’s Free and easy
Sign Up Today
Author Navigation
My Home
Publish Article
View/Edit Articles
View/Edit Q&A
Edit your Account
Manage Authors
Statistics Page
Personal RSS Builder
My Home
Edit your Account
Update Profile
View/Edit Q&A
Publish Article
Author Box
Jamie Liddell has 57 articles online
Articles Categories
All Categories
Advertising
Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Beauty
Business
Careers
Computers
Education
Finance
Food and Beverage
Health
Hobbies
Home and Family
Home Improvement
Internet
Law
Marketing
News and Society
Relationships
Self Improvement
Shopping
Spirituality
Sports and Fitness
Technology
Travel
Writing
Agriculture
Ask an Expert
Business Ideas
Business Opportunities
Corporate
Customer Service
Entrepreneurship
Ethics
Franchise
Fundraising
Home Business
Human Resources
Industrial
International Business
Leadership
Management
Negotiation
Networking
Non Profit Organizations
Online Business
Organizational
Outsourcing
Presentation
Project Management
Public Company
Public Relations
Sales
Six Sigma
Small Business
Strategic Planning
Team Building
Training
]]>
Need Help?
Contact Us
FAQ
Submit Articles
Editorial Guidelines
Blog
Site Links
Recent Articles
Top Authors
Top Articles
Find Articles
Site Map
Mobile Version
Webmasters
RSS Builder
RSS
Link to Us
Business Info
Advertising
Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2011 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved.
