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Taking the temperature of health care valuations.


Valuators must use a broad picture approach.

The health care industry has undergone significant change over the last decade, which has affected delivery of services, payment mechanisms and the organizational structure This article has no lead section.

To comply with Wikipedia's lead section guidelines, one should be written.
 of providers. It's it's  

1. Contraction of it is.

2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its.


it's it is or it has
it's be ~have
 no secret consolidations and reduced government reimbursements have an ongoing impact on the health care industry. Because of the specific characteristics and unique attributes of each industry segment, CPAs who perform health care valuations have tended to specialize--in physician practices, for example, or not-for-profit Not-for-profit

An organization established for charitable, humanitarian, or educational purposes that is exempt from some taxes and in which no one in profits or losses.
 hospitals. Health care industry valuation is a growing practice niche that provides an opportunity for CPAs to exercise the communication, research and analytical analytical, analytic

pertaining to or emanating from analysis.


analytical control
control of confounding by analysis of the results of a trial or test.
 skills that go beyond traditional accounting. To ensure their clients do not operate in a vacuum in the face of industry trends, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000.  valuators need to know the fundamentals in a variety of segments and understand the current demand for services, the forces affecting, reimbursement Reimbursement

Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses has incurred.
 and opportunities for growth in the health care segment being analyzed an·a·lyze  
tr.v. an·a·lyzed, an·a·lyz·ing, an·a·lyz·es
1. To examine methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations.

2. Chemistry To make a chemical analysis of.

3.
.

WHAT PROMPTS AN INDEPENDENT VALUATION?

Throughout a company's lifecycle, certain events or business necessities--such as ownership transition, compliance and strategic planning--may require an independent appraisal of its capital structure. Typically, the business owner's goal is to integrate strategic and financial plans and optimize optimize - optimisation  investments. Companies seek valuation experts to obtain independent opinions of their value, the fairness of certain transactions and the implications of strategic business decisions, such as discontinuing a product line, selling a division or acquiring a competitor. Management also may seek to better understand how its business value is allocated across different business segments and the key determinants, or "drivers," of value. Thus a valuation can provide insight into which segments of the business create larger portions of value within the total operation, which segments are weak or should be divested and whether other segments should be acquired to enhance profitability.

Sometimes the law requires independent valuations. The IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  mandates them for gift and estate tax purposes, such as gifting of shares in a privately held company privately held company

A firm whose shares are held within a relatively small circle of owners and are not traded publicly.
 by the owner to relatives. The Department of Labor requires them for qualified retirement plans, such as employee stock ownership plans, at the time of installation of the plan and then for annual updates. Bankruptcy bankruptcy, in law, settlement of the liabilities of a person or organization wholly or partially unable to meet financial obligations. The purposes are to distribute, through a court-appointed receiver, the bankrupt's assets equitably among creditors and, in most  is yet another situation in which independent valuation work is needed.

PICK THE RIGHT VALUATION APPROACH

In many situations the law or contracts mandate the standard of value for the valuation; sometimes, the parties involved in the transaction stipulate stip·u·late 1  
v. stip·u·lat·ed, stip·u·lat·ing, stip·u·lates

v.tr.
1.
a. To lay down as a condition of an agreement; require by contract.

b.
 the standard. In a health care valuation, valuators weigh basic operating characteristics: the services provided, how services are reimbursed, patient referral sources, service area covered, regulatory compliance, cost containment cost containment,
n the features of a dental benefits program or of the administration of the program designed to reduce or eliminate certain charges to the plan.
 and utilization management Utilization management is the evaluation of the appropriateness, medical need and efficiency of health care services procedures and facilities according to established criteria or guidelines and under the provisions of an applicable health benefits plan. . They ask the client to provide pertinent PERTINENT, evidence. Those facts which tend to prove the allegations of the party offering them, are called pertinent; those which have no such tendency are called impertinent, 8 Toull. n. 22. By pertinent is also meant that which belongs. Willes, 319.  information to estimate the value of the provider or its underlying assets (see "Get the Right Data") and then choose one of three traditional valuation approaches--income, market or cost--that works best for a particular assignment. All three approaches use fair market valuation. Mark O. Dietrich, CPA, ABV ABV Above
ABV Alcohol By Volume
ABV Abuja, Nigeria (airport code)
ABV Assault Breacher Vehicle
ABV Accredited Business Valuation specialist
ABV Auxiliary Building Ventilation
ABV Annual Buy Value
ABV Air Bleed Valve
, of Dietrich & Wilson, PC, an accounting firm specializing in business valuations and health care consulting in Framingham, Massachusetts Framingham is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts. As of the 2000 census, the population was 66,910, making it the most populous town in New England. The 2005 population estimate is 65,598. , says, "In any valuation transaction subject to regulatory review (and most are), fair market value is almost certain to be the required standard of value."
Get The Right Data

Valuators use checklists to ensure
compliance with professional standards
and adequate documentation.
Clients typically supply the following
for a business valuation:

[] Five years of historical financial
statements.

[] Five years of projected financial
statements, with a business plan, if
available.

[] Transaction documents, where
applicable (shareholder buyouts via
company repurchases or employee
stock ownership plans).

[] Organization chart, key management
resumes and staff appraisals.

[] Articles of incorporation and
other corporate documents.

[] On-site due diligence, including
a report on the facilities tour and
key management interviews.

[] Ownership structure.

[] Business description (history,
products, markets, suppliers, customers,
competitors, industry outlook).


The following are some examples of how fair market valuation approaches are applied:

Income approach. Value is based on historical or projected income and valuators commonly use the discounted cash flow (DCF DCF

See: Discounted Cash Flows
) method to determine it. The discount rate reflects the return an investor would demand from a company's stock and incorporates perceived investment risk based on the company's size as well as its market sensitivity. The valuator may use the DCF method to show how the entity's value changes over a five-to-ten-year time period.

Until standard setters develop separate business valuation standards, Dietrich advises CPAs to carefully study the definitions of projection and forecast in the AICPA AICPA

See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
 Guide for Prospective Financial Information. "A projection is defined as a what-if scenario, while a forecast represents management's best estimate of its most likely course of action and the most likely outcome of a business's operations. Clearly, CPAs should use a forecast as the basis for a valuation conclusion," says Dietrich.

While there are several acceptable variations of performing individual steps within the DCF method, the critical steps that valuators must perform are:

* Develop financial statement projections.

* Determine free cash flows of the business.

* Determine the appropriate discount rate.

* Calculate residual value Residual value

Usually refers to the value of a lessor's property at the time the lease expires.


residual value

The price at which a fixed asset is expected to be sold at the end of its useful life.
 (value of the company at the end of the forecast).

Calculate the present value of the free cash flows of the forecast period and residual value.

Exhibit 1, page 82, illustrates the final steps of the DCF method, subsequent to forecast development, calculation of free cash flows, and discount rate determination. The forecast development projects a hypothetical Hypothetical is an adjective, meaning of or pertaining to a hypothesis. See:
  • Hypothesis
  • Hypothetical
  • Hypothetical (album)
 company's operating cash flows Operating cash flow

Earnings before depreciation minus taxes. Measures the cash generated from operations, not counting capital spending or working capital requirements.
 for 2001-2006 (including the terminal year which represents the anticipated long-term Long-term

Three or more years. In the context of accounting, more than 1 year.


long-term

1. Of or relating to a gain or loss in the value of a security that has been held over a specific length of time. Compare short-term.
 performance of the company based on management expectations and the industry outlook). The valuator determined the company's residual value (the value of the company at the end of the forecasted period) using the Gordon Growth model Gordon Growth Model

A model for determining the intrinsic value of a stock, based on a future series of dividends that grow at a constant rate. Given a dividend per share that is payable in one year, and the assumption that the dividend grows at a constant rate forever (in
, which assumes the cash flows of the company will grow at a constant rate after the terminal year (other methods of determining the residual value include applying a market-place multiple to the terminal year cash flow). The valuator discounted the residual value and the interim cash flows back to their present value using an appropriate discount rate to capture the risks as well as the perceived return an investor would demand for investing in the company.
Exhibit 1: ABC's of the DCF Method

                           Projection    Projection   Projection
                             Dec-01        Dec-02       Dec-03

Operating free cash flow   $ 1,000,000   $1,100,000   $1,200,000

Assumptions:
Discount rate                    16.0%
Long-term growth rate
  (perpetuity)                    5.0%
PV of operating free
  cash flows               $ 4,438,276
PV of residual value       $ 5,778,840
Enterprise value (as of
  December 31, 2000)       $10,217,117

                                  Projection   Projection    Terminal
                                    Dec-04       Dec-05        Year

Operating free cash flow          $1,300,000   $1,400,000   $1,475,000

Assumptions:
Discount rate
Long-term growth rate                            Residual value(*)
  (perpetuity)                                     = $14,079,545
PV of operating free
  cash flows
PV of residual value
Enterprise value (as of
  December 31, 2000)

(*) Residual value (using Gordon Growth model) = [terminal year cash
flow x (1 + growth rate)]/[discount rate - growth rate]

= [$1,475,000 x (1 + .05)]/[.16 - .05]

= $14,079,545


The valuator obtained the discount rate by using a variation of the capital asset pricing model Capital asset pricing model (CAPM)

An economic theory that describes the relationship between risk and expected return, and serves as a model for the pricing of risky securities.
 (CAPM CAPM

See: Capital asset pricing model


CAPM

See capital-asset pricing model (CAPM).
): (discount rate = risk free rate + (beta x equity risk premium)). Beta represents the volatility of the market. The enterprise value of the company was approximately $10.2 million as of December 31, 2000. The enterprise value does not represent the equity value, but rather the total value (equity plus debt) of the company.

After determining the enterprise value, the CPA may calculate the equity value (stock price) of a company, including the removal of the company's debt component. In addition, he/she may apply a minority interest discount or premium for control, as well as a discount for the lack of marketability Marketability

A negotiable security is said to have good marketability if there is an active secondary market in which it can easily be resold.


marketability

The ease with which an investment may be bought and sold in the secondary market.
 (primarily for private companies).

Physician practices: The income approach is preferable for valuing physicians' practices, and valuators use the DCF method for analyzing a practice's fee-for-service fee-for-ser·vice
adj.
Charging a fee for each service performed.
 and capitated revenue (a dollar payment per patient per unit of time that covers specific services and administrative costs administrative costs,
n.pl the overhead expenses incurred in the operation of a dental benefits program, excluding costs of dental services provided.
). Traditionally, valuators performed medical practice valuations for physician buy/sell agreements, divorce litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
 and estate planning Estate Planning

The overall planning of a person's wealth, including the preparation of a will and the planning of taxes after the individual's death.

Notes:
Contrary to popular belief, estate planning involves much more than preparing a will, and it is not only for the
. Today, medical practices are larger and more complex, as are the valuations. CPAs will perform the valuation for clients for a number of reasons: a joint venture, group practice merger or practice acquisitions by nonphysician entities forming (or breaking) integrated delivery systems integrated delivery system Integrated provider Medical practice A coordinated health care system formed by physician groups and hospitals which ↑ efficiency and ↓ redundancy in providing health care; IDSs coordinate delivery of a broad range of health , which may include insurers, HMOs and government agencies.

Home health agencies: The DCF method will become more useful in valuing a home health agency as these entities develop a better understanding of their actual and expected future performance under Medicare's new prospective payment system (PPS (Packets Per Second) The measurement of activity in a local area network (LAN). In LANs such as Ethernet, Token Ring and FDDI, as well as the Internet, data is broken up and transmitted in packets (frames), each with a source and destination address. ), which became effective last October and reimburses service providers specific or predetermined pre·de·ter·mine  
v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines

v.tr.
1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance:
 amounts. Once the home health agencies are able to provide reliable income projections under PPS, valuators can recommend to their clients providing services at minimal costs to achieve profitability.

Market approach. This approach, which compares an entity with similar ones, allows the valuator to choose either the guideline guideline Medtalk A series of recommendations by a body of experts in a particular discipline. See Cancer screening guidelines, Cardiac profile guidelines, Gatekeeper guidelines, Harvard guidelines, Transfusion guidelines.  company methodology or the merger and acquisition methodology. Both valuation methods have many procedures in common. They are based on the capitalization rates Capitalization Rate

According to the Appraisal Institute, it is a method used to convert an estimate of a single year's income expectancy into an indication of value in one direct step, by dividing the income estimate by an appropriate rate.
 of health care providers, either publicly traded or recently sold, which are considered comparable to the company being valued (the subject company).

The guideline company methodology relies on the current market price of comparable publicly traded health care companies. The valuator determines the subject company's equity value by applying pricing ratios of publicly traded stocks to its relative performance. Valuators use the guideline company method to value these entities: hospital systems, nursing homes and home health care organizations. CPAs can also apply this method to diversified diversified (di·verˑ·s  health care delivery systems by including a review of the pricing multiples of several health care providers.

When comparing the subject company to publicly traded ones, valuators must adjust comparisons for differences in size, profitability, service mix, reimbursement sources and geographic diversity. For example, if the subject company had lower profitability and a smaller revenue base, then all else being equal, the CPA should apply lower pricing multiples to it rather than those suggested by the median multiples of the guideline companies. On the other hand, if the company has a mix of services with more growth potential or a higher concentration of private-pay reimbursement sources, that may warrant a higher multiple higher multiple Obstetrics Multigestation ≥ triplets: quadruplets, quintuplets, sextuplets, septuplets, octuplets, etc tuplets .

Exhibit 2, page 85, illustrates one example of how a valuator works with the guideline company methodology, using ten companies selected and analyzed for a comparison to the subject company. The valuator obtains the revenues, EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) A metric used to show a company's profitability, but not its cash flow. EBITDA became popular in the 1980s to show the potential profitability of leveraged buyouts, but has become , EBITDA margin and depreciation levels from SEC filings. Their market capital levels equal the number of shares outstanding for each company multiplied mul·ti·ply 1  
v. mul·ti·plied, mul·ti·ply·ing, mul·ti·plies

v.tr.
1. To increase the amount, number, or degree of.

2. Mathematics To perform multiplication on.
 by their respective stock price as of the valuation date of the subject company, and that number is added to their respective total capital debt balance. The valuator calculates pricing multiples of the guideline companies (market capital to revenues and market capital to EBITDA), selects the multiples to apply to the subject company's operating performance and makes adjustments based on various factors including size and profitability comparisons. For instance, the valuator chose a 20% reduction to the selected median multiples due to size differences--the subject company is considerably smaller than each of the guideline companies ($30 million in revenues vs. a median of $135 million for the guideline companies).
Exhibit 2: Where in the Marketplace World?

                                                  Market       Market
Guideline         Revenues   EBITDA    EBITDA   capital to   capital to
companies         ($000s)    ($000s)   margin    revenues      EBITDA

Acme, Inc.        $150,000    $6,750    4.5%        0.30         6.7
Pinnacle Corp.    $100,000    $2,500    2.5%        0.20         8.0
Premiere, Inc.    $120,000    $3,000    2.5%        0.25        10.0
Apex, Inc.        $250,000    $8,750    3.5%        0.30         8.6
Summit Company    $ 75,000    $1,875    2.5%        0.15         6.0
Tops, Inc.        $200,000    $9,000    4.5%        0.35         7.8
The Zenith Co.    $300,000    $9,000    3.0%        0.30        10.0
Peak Corp.        $ 50,000    $1,500    3.0%        0.25         8.3
Platinum Per-
  formance
  Group           $100,000    $2,500    2.5%        0.25        10.0
Numero Uno,
  Inc.            $150,000    $4,500    3.0%        0.20         6.7

Median            $135,000              3.0%        0.25         8.2

Subject company   $ 30,000    $1,200    4.0%

                                                 Revenues      EBITDA

Selected mul-                                       0.25         8.2
  tiple adjust-                              x     90.0%  x     80.0%
  ment factor                                =      0.225 =      6.5
Subject company                               $30,000       $1,200
                                             x     22.5%  x      6.5
                                             = $6,750     = $7,840
Enterprise va-
  lue (average
  of unleve-
  raged indi-
  cators)                                      $7,295


The subject company, however, is on the higher end Coordinates:
For other places with the same name, see Billinge.
Higher End or Billinge Higher End is a district of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, in Greater Manchester, England.
 of profitability (4% EBITDA margin vs. the 3% median EBITDA margin). As such, a slightly offsetting 10% upward adjustment was applied to the market capital to revenues multiple. In general, the higher the profitability of a company, the higher the company's market capital to revenue multiple. The valuator then applied the adjusted multiples to the operating performance (revenues and EBITDA) of the subject company, calculated the average of the two outputs (approximately $7.3 million) and determined the appropriate enterprise value of the subject company.

As shown in exhibit 1, the valuator needs to remove the debt component from the enterprise value to arrive at the subject company's equity value. Since the stock prices utilized in determining the market capital for each guideline company represent the share prices of the guideline companies' stock, the enterprise value conclusions represent a minority interest (noncontrolling) basis. Also, while other critical factors exist in comparing the subject company with other companies (such as differences in growth prospects), only size and profitability were captured in exhibit 2.

In assessing single medical practices, CPAs may find that comparing them with publicly traded companies publicly traded company

A company whose shares of common stock are held by the public and are available for purchase by investors. The shares of publicly traded firms are bought and sold on the organized exchanges or in the over-the-counter market.
 is not particularly useful. The market capitalization rates Market capitalization rate

Expected return on a security. The market-consensus estimate of the appropriate discount rate for a firm's cash flow.
 of public companies that manage medical practices may reflect growth expectations that a single practice cannot duplicate DUPLICATE. The double of anything.
     2. It is usually applied to agreements, letters, receipts, and the like, when two originals are made of either of them. Each copy has the same effect.
; companies that manage medical practices are not in the business of actually providing health care. "The application of market multiples to medical practices using the guideline company methodology can produce unreliable indications of value, especially in light of recent turmoil in this sector of the financial markets," says CPA Michael Heaton, ABV, CVA CVA
abbr.
cerebrovascular accident


CVA,
n See accident, cerebrovascular.


CVA

cerebrovascular accident.

CVA Cerebrovascular accident, see there
, of Heaton & Eadie in Indianapolis, an accounting firm specializing in health care consulting.

The merger and acquisition method, or comparable transaction method, values a company's equity based on recent sales of comparable health care companies by applying pricing ratios based on individual sales transactions to the company's performance. This method is frequently used for valuations of home health agencies and nursing home agencies. The merger and acquisition method parallels the guideline companies method. However, instead of deriving the market capital of a guideline company to determine its respective pricing multiple, the CPA valuator uses the actual deal value paid in a selected transaction in which the acquired company shared similar operating characteristics to the subject company to be valued. The conclusions derived in this method represent value on a controlling interest controlling interest

The ownership of a quantity of outstanding corporate stock sufficient to control the actions of the firm. Controlling interest often involves ownership of significantly less than 51% of a firm's outstanding stock because many owners fail
 basis since the transactions used in the analysis reflect purchases of control. The conclusions derived from the guideline companies method, however, reflect a minority interest basis.

The merger and acquisition method works best for both parties to a potential business combination when the CPA can find enough similar transactions to make an accurate comparison--many transactions will give the CPA more insight than a smaller number, which limits the market comparison. The terms of the sale as well as the operating characteristics and the financial performance of the acquired company are critical pieces of information.

Medical practices are sometimes sold based on comparable operating characteristics such as revenues, full-time physicians and number of people with managed care contracts. But using the merger and acquisition methodology for medical practices "can produce bizarre valuation results," cautions Heaton, "especially if the comparison data are incomplete or do not disclose unique characteristics of the transaction, such as unusual compensation agreements subsequent to the merger."

Cost approach. Also called the net asset approach, this focuses on individual asset and liability values from the company's balance sheet adjusted to fair market value. CPAs may use the cost approach when the subject company has a heavy investment in tangible assets Tangible Asset

An asset that has a physical form such as machinery, buildings and land.

Notes:
This is the opposite of an intangible asset such as a patent or trademark. Whether an asset is tangible or intangible isn't inherently good or bad.
 or when operating earnings Operating Earnings

Profits after subtracting expenses such as marketing, cost of goods sold, administration and general operating costs from revenue.

Notes:
Tax and interest expenses are not subtracted - operating earnings are synonymous with EBIT (earnings before
 are insignificant relative to the value of the underlying assets. Comprehensive cancer centers, ambulatory surgery ambulatory surgery
n.
Surgery performed on a person who is admitted to and discharged from a hospital on the same day.


ambulatory surgery,
n
 units and imaging centers are typically valued based on assets. But as surgery centers transform into more mature operating businesses, "they generate more predictable cash flows, so using the cost approach becomes less appropriate," notes Heaton.

MAXIMIZING VALUE

CPAs who perform valuations in any of the health care segments ultimately want to produce a report for the client that identifies all the relevant variables, states assumptions and provides supporting calculations on the estimate of the value of the client's business (see "Steps to Performance Benchmarking"). Here are factors valuator's should consider when analyzing the various industry segments:
Steps to Performance Benchmarking

CPAs can use performance benchmarking
to find information or
trends (based on companies operating
in the same or similar industry) to apply
to the client company to help decide
whether to proceed with a
transaction. They offer a comparison
of operational characteristics of the
subject company vs. its peer group
companies and help establish a range of
values to apply to the subject company.

Here are some ways CpAs can
develop and use benchmarks.

Step 1: Select 8 to 10 peer group
companies based on similarity of
business and size, if possible. Evaluate
their revenue and reimbursement
sources because they may reveal why
some companies are more or less
profitable than the subject company.
For example, if a company derives a
majority of its revenue from private
rather than government sources,
then it is likely to be more profitable.

Step 2: Using the financial statements,
establish the normalized
earnings and adjust the companies'
historical financials to eliminate the
effects of nonoperating and nonrecurring
items (for example, litigation
expense, insurance settlement, severance
cost).

Step 3: Select appropriate benchmarks
to compare and track. The appropriate
time period may depend on
a number of factors: changes in the
regulatory environment, changes or
inconsistencies in the company's historical
operating performance and/or
the performance of the industry as a
whole, discussions with management
on the anticipated performance of
the company and industry. Some
common measures to track include:

* Market capital/sales: The sum of
market equity plus market debt
(outstanding debt plus preferred
debt/equity).

* Market capital/EBIT: Earnings before
interest and taxes.

* Market capital/EBITDA: earnings
before interest, taxes, depreciation
and amortization.

Other measurements include revenue
per bed (nursing homes or hospitals),
cost per visit (home health
care) or revenues per physician
(physician practice).

Step 4: Calculate the peer group
median for each of the selected
benchmarks. Medians are generally
better than averages (a mean) since
they eliminate or diminish numbers
significantly outside the range. An
average can be affected by just one
number in a group.

Step 5: Make size adjustments.
For example, the mom-and-pop
shop is evaluated differently from the
franchise. If the subject company is
significantly smaller than the peer
group, the valuator may need to adjust
the median multiples by lowering
them as much as 25% before
comparing them to the company's
performance measures.

Step 6: Compare the subject company's
financial strengths and weaknesses
to like entities in the industry.
The valuator and the business owner
should understand the underlying
drivers, such as profit margins or
higher growth rates, of these benchmarking
multiples to help establish
reasonable objectives and adjust operations
to attain them.


Hospitals. Traditionally, hospital valuations were based on price-per-bed multiples. Today, with outpatient services outpatient services Hospital-based services Managed care Medical and other services provided, to a nonadmitted Pt, by a hospital or other qualified facility–eg, mental health clinic, rural health clinic, mobile X-ray unit, free-standing dialysis unit Examples  generating a significant portion of the average hospital's revenue and occupancy rates Noun 1. occupancy rate - the percentage of all rental units (as in hotels) are occupied or rented at a given time
pct, per centum, percent, percentage - a proportion in relation to a whole (which is usually the amount per hundred)
 low, the price-per-bed multiple has lost its relevance, For similar reasons, valuations based on real estate holdings can be irrelevant in those situations where hospitals operate outpatient outpatient /out·pa·tient/ (-pa-shent) a patient who comes to the hospital, clinic, or dispensary for diagnosis and/or treatment but does not occupy a bed.

out·pa·tient
n.
 facilities at separate locations from their main facilities. CPAs instead should rely on earnings as a measure of value.

The value of a hospital depends on the scope of services it offers as well as on how much patients use them. The hospital's progress in developing lower-cost services and managing existing ones is an important determinant determinant, a polynomial expression that is inherent in the entries of a square matrix. The size n of the square matrix, as determined from the number of entries in any row or column, is called the order of the determinant.  of value, particularly as most hospitals shift to lower-cost services to remain competitive amid consolidations. Hospitals converting from not-for-profit to for-profit status need an independent opinion on the value of the entity.

Hospitals consolidate or merge to limit overhead, contain costs and address managed care pressures. Owners and management use valuations of them to determine equity allocation The apportionment or designation of an item for a specific purpose or to a particular place.

In the law of trusts, the allocation of cash dividends earned by a stock that makes up the principal of a trust for a beneficiary usually means that the dividends will be treated as
 post-transaction. Assume, for example, that hospital A merges with hospital B. If hospital A and hospital B are valued at $20 million and $30 million respectively, then the ownership of the merged entity would be allocated 40% to former shareholders of hospital A and 60% to those of hospital B.

The valuator must factor in the key value determinants, such as a broad array of services, flexible cost structures, tight utilization reviews u·til·i·za·tion review
n.
A process for monitoring the use, delivery, and cost-effectiveness of services, especially those provided by medical professionals.
 and good physician relationships. The valuator must also assess local market needs and the status of other hospitals competing for the same referrals. Using the DCF approach, a CPA can analyze a hospital under various operating scenarios. He or she can project varying revenue growth based on different assumptions about demographics The attributes of people in a particular geographic area. Used for marketing purposes, population, ethnic origins, religion, spoken language, income and age range are examples of demographic data. , competition and service pricing and can vary the operating margins Operating Margin

A ratio used to measure a company's pricing strategy and operating efficiency.

Calculated by:
 to incorporate overhead reductions or changes in service mix.

Health care valuators' practice of analyzing various operating scenarios, whether for illustrative il·lus·tra·tive  
adj.
Acting or serving as an illustration.



il·lustra·tive·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
 purposes or corporate planning, is not restricted only to hospitals but may be appropriate across various health care segments or other industries. Valuators will choose different scenarios for review by the subject company's management to help assess strategic objectives and understand the sensitivity related to a particular input or assumption. The matrix in exhibit 3, at right, shows a range of, values, derived from exhibit 1, from changes to the discount rate and the long-term growth rate, assuming all else is equal. For example, applying a discount rate and growth rate of 18% and 4%, respectively, to the scenario in exhibit 1, yields an enterprise value of approximately $8.7 million ($8.7 million = $4.2 million + $4.5 million; calculations are not shown but relate to present value of operating free cash flows and residual value, respectively).

Medical practices. In any analysis of a medical practice, the valuator should consider:

* Practice type.

* Specialty.

* Physician compensation.

* Facilities.

* Historical profitability.

* Current physician utilization (amount of time interacting with patients).

* Payment mix (breakdown of the company's revenues, whether from patients, third party insurance providers or government reimbursement).

* Physicians' ages, health and reputations.

* Quality of administrative staff (based on years of service, range of responsibilities and software experience).

* Market and competition.

Practice and specialty type may affect the valuation due to regulatory changes (whether recently implemented or soon to be effective), demographic trends such as shifts in population age or medical advances (intellectual, equipment), any of which may affect a practice's service and payor payor (payer) n. The one who must make payment on a promissory note.  mixes. Factors such as facilities and payment mix may affect the forecast provided by the subject medical practice. A practice relocation RELOCATION, Scotch law, contracts. To let again to renew a lease, is called a relocation.
     2. When a tenant holds over after the expiration of his lease, with the consent of his landlord, this will amount to a relocation.
 may be accompanied by higher rental costs, resulting in decreased operating margins. However, an anticipated increase in revenues as a result of the relocation may improve operating margins; a change in payment mix resulting from the payor demographics related to the relocation can affect anticipated earnings.

The amount of time a physician spends with a patient may be a factor of patient demand, service mix or the health or experience of the physician. Either consistent or erratic er·rat·ic  
adj.
1. Having no fixed or regular course; wandering.

2. Lacking consistency, regularity, or uniformity: an erratic heartbeat.

3.
 levels of historical profitability for a medical practice may have an impact on the CPA's assessment of the riskiness and reliability of the practice's future financial performance.

One of the most critical considerations in medical practice valuation, for buyer, seller and appraiser A person selected or appointed by a competent authority or an interested party to evaluate the financial worth of property.

Appraisers are frequently appointed in probate and condemnation proceedings and are also used by banks and real estate concerns to determine the market
, is the level and nature of physician compensation because it typically represents the largest expense. It is important for the valuator to examine compensation levels based on region, speciality and experience. The age and health of the physicians within a practice, as well as the quality of the administrative staff, may affect the discount rate applied to the cash flows in using the discounted cash flow methodology, due to changes in the level of perceived risk factors related to the particular medical practice.

Lucy Carter, CPA, of Horne CPA Group in Goodlettsville, Tennessee Goodlettsville is a city located in Tennessee. Goodlettsville was incorporated as a city in 1958 with a population of just over 3,000 residents. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 13,780. , says that the valuator must be aware of the state laws and rules and regulations affecting the valuation, and of its intended purpose. "Appraisals for transactions with institutional buyers, such as hospitals, may raise certain compliance questions, while transactions with not-for-profit entities and foundations incur To become subject to and liable for; to have liabilities imposed by act or operation of law.

Expenses are incurred, for example, when the legal obligation to pay them arises. An individual incurs a liability when a money judgment is rendered against him or her by a court.
 additional scrutiny from both the IRS and regulatory agencies regulatory agency

Independent government commission charged by the legislature with setting and enforcing standards for specific industries in the private sector. The concept was invented by the U.S.
 charged with monitoring fraud."

Nursing homes. When valuing a nursing home, a CPA must specifically address the service area covered, current and proposed changes affecting reimbursement sources, services offered and the attributes and condition of the company's facilities.

The valuator's analysis of the service area should highlight demand trends based on demographics. In many states nursing homes usually have very high occupancy levels because stringent state requirements restrict construction of new facilities. Another important factor in valuing nursing homes is the reimbursement source because reimbursement affects profitability. Since Medicaid Medicaid, national health insurance program in the United States for low-income persons; established in 1965 with passage of the Social Security Amendments and now run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. , a state-administered program, is the major reimbursement source for many nursing homes, the valuator's analysis must take into account the Medicaid programs in each state in which the nursing home operates. Thomas (language) Thomas - A language compatible with the language Dylan(TM). Thomas is NOT Dylan(TM).

The first public release of a translator to Scheme by Matt Birkholz, Jim Miller, and Ron Weiss, written at Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Laboratory runs
 Fulton, CPA, manager of Rosenfarb Winters, LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
, an accounting firm specializing in business valuations in Tinton Falls, New Jersey Tinton Falls is a Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the borough population was 15,053.

The borough was formed as New Shrewsbury
, says, "The long-term-care industry has suffered greatly in recent years with the majority of the big nursing home chains going out of business. Government regulations in this industry are now designed to protect the patient at the expense of health care facilities by increasing operating costs operating costs nplgastos mpl operacionales  and reporting requirements."

Some nursing homes have expanded into greater revenue-producing services, such as sub-acute, rehabilitative re·ha·bil·i·tate  
tr.v. re·ha·bil·i·tat·ed, re·ha·bil·i·tat·ing, re·ha·bil·i·tates
1. To restore to good health or useful life, as through therapy and education.

2.
 and other forms of specialty care. However, there are risks associated with specialty care, not the least of which is changing demand. The valuator must analyze the age, condition, capacity constants and ownership of each facility, as well as future capital expenditure requirements beyond routine maintenance.

Home health agencies. Changes in Medicare Medicare, national health insurance program in the United States for persons aged 65 and over and the disabled. It was established in 1965 with passage of the Social Security Amendments and is now run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.  reimbursement are also revolutionizing the home health industry. Under the newly implemented prospective payment system, home health care providers are reimbursed only a set amount for care provided to Medicare patients. This will likely force them to consolidate to achieve economies of scale. As a result, the industry may be transformed from a multitude of mom-and-pop shops to mostly large regional or national health care companies that can provide low-cost services.

Acquiring home health agencies has become attractive to hospitals, too. "The ability to be a full service organization and provide a continuum Continuum (pl. -tinua or -tinuums) can refer to:
  • Continuum (theory), anything that goes through a gradual transition from one condition, to a different condition, without any abrupt changes or "discontinuities"
 of care has driven hospitals to make acquisitions in the home health care industry. And the change in the reimbursement methodology to a prospective payment system has made certified See certification.  agencies more attractive than in the past years, which has affected current valuations," says Gary P. Carpenter, CPA, partner in charge of health care at Holtz Rubenstein & Co., LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol , in Melville, New York Melville is a hamlet and census-designated place in the town of Huntington in Suffolk County on Long Island, New York, in the United States. As of the 2000 census, 14,533 people resided there. .

In analyzing a home health agency, the valuator starts through discussion with management, then researches recent publications related to the segment and compares guideline company information obtained through SEC filings and press releases. The valuator obtains data from management about these factors:

* Service area demographics.

* State licensing and other requirements.

* Competition.

* Reimbursement sources.

* Referral sources.

* Service and case mix.

* Accounting and financial systems and controls.

* Quality of clinical staff.

* Cost structure and operational efficiency.

WATCH OUT FOR REGULATORY RISKS

When CPAs undertake health care valuations they must be mindful mind·ful  
adj.
Attentive; heedful: always mindful of family responsibilities. See Synonyms at careful.



mind
 of the state and federal regulations that affect the valuation process and its calculations. Inexperienced in·ex·pe·ri·ence  
n.
1. Lack of experience.

2. Lack of the knowledge gained from experience.



in
 valuators might overlook subtleties in any of the approaches that could lead to serious valuation errors. Dietrich offers a caveat regarding the use of traditional approaches because they do not always focus sufficiently on the analysis of revenues and related regulatory factors. For example, significant regulatory risks are associated with the earnings stream if the provider employs improper
In mathematics
  • Improper rotation
  • Improper integral
  • Improper fraction
  • Improper prior
  • Improper distribution
  • Improper point
  • Improper limits
Other
  • Improper English
  • Improper motion
  • Improper noun
 billing practices. In such a situation, whether the practice is inadvertent or deliberate, the value of the business may be worth less than cumulative penalties should the government conduct an investigation and find the provider liable. "Valuators are not accustomed to assuming an earnings stream may be at risk for civil or criminal fraud, changes in legislation at the state or federal level or subject to a re-allocation of government revenues to pay for new services, particularly those arising from technology," says Dietrich.

To keep abreast Verb 1. keep abreast - keep informed; "He kept up on his country's foreign policies"
keep up, follow

trace, follow - follow, discover, or ascertain the course of development of something; "We must follow closely the economic development is Cuba" ; "trace the
 of ever-changing regulations, CPAs must know where to access information and avail themselves of appropriate online services (see "Business Valuation Sites on the Web"). "Health care valuation is an extremely risky practice area due to civil and criminal statutes which are unique to the industry," observes Dietrich. "CPAs unfamiliar with these statutes, which cover such diverse areas as compensation plans in physician group practices and referrals between physicians, hospitals and home health agencies, are unlikely to identify problem areas which would affect their conclusion of value."
Business Valuation Sites on the Web

Justquotes
www.justquotes.com

A financial data search
engine offering current
and historical stock prices,
news, analysts' recommendations
and earnings estimates
from C-Net, Zacks,
Quicken, Morningstar,
Market Guide and other
sources.

Business.com Industry
Profiles
www.business.com/industry_profiles.index.asp

The profiles focus on how
the Internet has affected
the industry.

The Intellectual Property
Transaction Database
www.fvgi.com

A searchable database of
more than 3,000 transactions,
including data on
payments made for royalties
and licensing fees for
the use of trademarks,
patents, copyrights and
brand names provided by a
financial valuation consulting
firm.

Business Valuation
Resources
www.bvresources.com

Shannon Pratt's site includes
articles, regulations
and court cases on business
valuation topics with links
to bvlibrary.com and bvmarketdata.com.
Pratt also
publishes "Shannon Pratt's
Business Valuation Update"
and "Pratt's Stats."

CPA Net
www.cpa.net

Site devoted to valuation,
mergers and acquisitions,
taxation, strategic planning
and consulting with emphasis
on the health care
industry (maintained by
Dietrich & Wilson, PC).

KnowX
www.knowx.com

Provides access to a wide
variety of public records
including stock ownership,
death records, bankruptcy
and lawsuits. KnowX also
offers background checks.

Valuation Case Library
www.gofcg.org

Has the full text of selected
tax court cases since 1998,
with related analysis of the
valuation issues involved in
estate and gift tax matters.

Ibbotson Associates
www.ibbotson.com

Has a business valuation
section offering information
on cost of capital by
industry, as well as betas
(market volatility) and risk
premia estimates (components
used to develop
capitalization rates based
on equity risk, fixed
income or size).

Trugman Valuation
Associates, Inc.
www.trugmanvaluation.com

Business valuation site
specializing in appraisals of
closely held businesses and
economic damages. Gary
R. Trugman is the author
of Understanding Business
Valuation: A Practical Guide
to Valuing Small to Medium-Sized
Businesses.

First Research
www.1stresearch.com

Publishes profiles on
more than 80 industries.
Each one includes a current
industry overview,
summarizes trends and
developments and identifies
threats, challenges and
opportunities.

CPA Net
www.cpanet.com

A resource directory of
over 800 Web sites for the
accounting profession.

Free Edgar
www.freeEdgar.com

This database of publicly
traded company filings
with the Securities and
Exchange Commission is
searchable by company
name, ticker symbol, SIC
code and full text.

USA Data
www.usadata.com

A collection of market
research, mailing lists and
industry reports. The
consultant reports section
contains thousands of
reports by leading industry
analysts.

Mercer Capital
Management
www.bizval.com

Home to an e-law electronic
newsletter as well as
other articles on business
valuation topics written by
the staff at Mercer Capital
Management.

--Compiled by Eva M. Lang

EVA M. LANG, CPA, ASA,
is chief operating officer,
Financial Consulting Group,
Los Angeles. Her e-mail
address is elang@lemay-lang-com.


ENORMOUS CHANGES

Managed care and health care reform have forced a dramatic restructuring restructuring - The transformation from one representation form to another at the same relative abstraction level, while preserving the subject system's external behaviour (functionality and semantics).  of the health care industry and blurred blur  
v. blurred, blur·ring, blurs

v.tr.
1. To make indistinct and hazy in outline or appearance; obscure.

2. To smear or stain; smudge.

3.
 the lines between the traditional segments. CPAs who perform health care valuations work in a very dynamic and challenging industry and must be aware of marketplace issues and changes affecting value determinations for their clients. Business valuation is not just plugging numbers into formulas; it is both science and art. Valuators must conduct more sophisticated valuations that address the regulatory environment and current industry trends of continued mergers, joint ventures and the breakup breakup

The division of a company into separate parts. The most famous breakup to date was the 1984 division of AT&T (formerly, American Telephone & Telegraph Company). This breakup was intended to increase competition in the communications industry.
 of existing affiliations. By examining internal and external factors relevant to the business and doing a thorough investigation, the health care valuator will develop the most probable and reliable value estimate.
Effects of Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 on Hospital Revenue

In billions of dollars

Year       Pre-BBA effects   After BBA enacted

1996            $100               $100
1997             102                 99
1998             105                 97
1999             107                 97
2000             110                 98
2001             113                 99
2002             116                101
Total            752                692
% change         16%                 1%

Annual Medicare revenue loss for all U.S, hospitals. Reductions in
Medicare reimbursements are revolutionizing the health care industry.

Source: Adapted from Greater New York Hospital Association for Health
Economics and Research, May 2000, www.gnyha.org.


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

* THE HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY HAS UNDERGONE significant change over the last decade, affecting delivery of services, payment mechanisms and providers' organizational structure. Throughout a company's lifecycle, certain events or business necessities--such as ownership transition, compliance with legal and regulatory issues and strategic planning--may require an independent appraisal of a business's capital structure.

* MANAGED CARE AND HEALTH CARE REFORM have forced a dramatic restructuring, of the health care industry and blurred the lines between the traditional segments. CPAs who perform health care valuations work in a very dynamic and challenging industry and must be aware of marketplace issues and changes affecting value determinations for their clients.

* IN CONDUCTING A HEALTH CARE VALUATION, valuators analyze basic operating characteristics: how services are provided and reimbursed, patient referral sources, service area covered, regulatory compliance, cost containment and utilization management. Valuators ask their clients for pertinent information, then choose one of three traditional valuation approaches--income, market or cost--that works best for a particular assignment.

* CPAs WHO PERFORM VALUATIONS in any of the health care segments ultimately want to produce a report for the client that identifies all the relevant variables, states assumptions and provides supporting calculations on the estimate of the value of the client's business. The valuator must be aware of local market needs, too.

LOREN GARRUTO, CFA (Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986) Signed into law in 1986, the CFA was a significant step forward in criminalizing unauthorized access to computer systems and networks. The Act applies to "federal interest computers" that include any system used by the U.S. , is managing director of the Cleveland office of Valuemetrics, Inc. Her e-mail address See Internet address.

e-mail address - electronic mail address
 is l.garruto@valuemetrics.com. OLIVER LOUD is an analyst in Valuemetrics' Atlanta office; his e-mail address is o.loud@valuemetrics.com. He would like to thank Marc Hansberger, vice-president, for his assistance.
COPYRIGHT 2001 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Loud, Oliver
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2001
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