Print
Solutions May 2006
Feature
Article
Health
Care
Reviving
the Distributor In Health Care
American
Solutions for Business and IBSA
say strong sales from Novation
show distributors can compete
with the majors
By
LaShell Stratton
IN
BRIEF
Two
distributorships increase health
care sales by nearly 300 percent
in 2005 under the Novation contract,
showing that distributors can
compete with majors who once cornered
the market. The increase
in sales was accomplished by focusing
primarily on smaller hospitals
and non-acute care facilities.
It’s
been more than a year since Novation,
the leading group purchasing organization
in health care, initiated a contract
with distributorships American
Solutions for Business, International
Business Solutions Alliance LLC
(IBSA) and the direct-selling
manufacturer, The Relizon Company.
The
2004 announcement that Novation,
owned by health care alliances
VHA Inc. and University HealthSystem
Consortium (UHC), had made the
switch to purchasing print solutions
from distributors and a manufacturer
rather than solely from direct-sellers
was heralded as a validation for
the distributor side of the industry.
Prior to this, distributors rarely
gained access to GPO-contracted
hospital and medical facility
accounts.
“When
I started my distributorship it
was hard to get into hospitals,”
says Mark McKinney, president
and CEO of IBSA, based in Indianapolis.
“It still is if you’re
not a member of an alliance like
ours with a GPO contract.”
Both
American and IBSA report increases
in health care sales under the
Novation contract of nearly 300
percent more in 2005 than the
previous year. The companies view
these sales numbers as confirmation
that distributors can compete
with the direct-sellers in the
health care field. “We’re
tracking along at the same pace
as the majors with this,”
says Craig McLain, COO of American,
based in Glennwood, Minn. “We’re
happy and I’m sure Novation’s
happy.”
Novation
agrees. "Novation's contracts
with IBSA and American Solutions
for Business are growing and have
been very successful at meeting
the document management needs
of small and midsize VHA and UHC
member hospitals and non-acute
care facilities," said Barry
Campbell, senior product manager
at Novation.
Though
both distributors declined to
share exact 2005 sales numbers
under the Novation contract, the
GPO’s goal for American
this year is $10 million in sales,
according to McLain, and American
is on track to meet that target.
According to the GPO’s web
site, Novation represents $25
billion in annual purchases of
products and services that range
from business products to medical
and surgical equipment to environmental
services and facilities.
Focusing
on the Smaller Guys
American
and IBSA cite their focus on non-acute
facilities like outpatient clinics
and X-ray centers and mid-sized
to smaller hospitals as the reason
for most of the sales increase.
These facilities are growing in
number but are often underserved.
“We are a 530-person distributorship
with a lot of coverage in second
tier facilities,” McLain
says.
Under
the 3-year contract, with an option
of an additional two years, American
and IBSA were placed in the Tier
2 category that encouraged the
distributors to concentrate on
acquiring contracts with non-acute
clinics and hospitals with 250
beds or fewer. But Relizon, Dayton,
Ohio, (now a Workflow Management
Inc. subsidiary) was encouraged
to sell primarily to Tier 1 facilities:
acute clinics and large hospitals
with 250 beds or more. “That
is what they wanted us to focus
on but we’re not limited
to those customers,” McKinney
says. “We have a few customers
that include larger hospitals.”
Rodney
White, vice president of health
care sales for IBSA, says because
of the contract IBSA’s expanding
customer list now includes INTEGRIS
Health, a coalition of hospitals,
rehabilitation centers, physician
clinics, mental health facilities,
independent living centers and
home health agencies in Oklahoma,
Antelope Valley Hospital in Lancaster,
Calif., and a group of clinics
and non-acute physician practices
in Texas.
Brennan
Murphy, the Novation account manager
at American, says the Novation
contract also helped American
sell products and services to
El Centro Regional Medical Center,
a 165-bed general acute care facility
in El Centro, Calif.; the Albert
Lea Medical Center, 15 medical
units in southern Minnesota and
northern Iowa; and St. Vincent
Regional Medical Center in Sante
Fe, N.M., with a capacity of 268
licensed beds.
Making
a Push for the Traditional, Electronic
Murphy
says American provides products
in the 15 categories, the most
categories under the Novation
contract, but “we’ve
seen strong sales in forms, envelopes
and labels. We’ve even had
sales of promotional products,”
which major directs like Relizon
initially did not offer. McKinney
says that IBSA is focusing on
“making a big push to electronic
medical product sales.”
“IBSA
understands that the print business
is changing and we understand
that new technology is coming
down the pipeline,” White
says. “So we thought it
was in our best interest and in
the best interest of our affiliates
to keep them informed and up-to-date
on these new technologies.”
In March, IBSA held a health care
boot camp for affiliates. Suppliers
of color-coded filing systems,
electronic medical records and
radio frequency identification
systems (RFIDs) put on seminars.
White
says part of the electronic medical
products push includes sales of
electronic medical records, a
growing market sector now that
the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
requires hospitals and physicians
to adopt stricter standards of
documenting medical records while
maintaining privacy of patients.
They are also required to transfer
more insurance information electronically.
“We have a vendor, Visionary
Medical Systems Inc. out of Tampa,
Fl., that specializes in physician
practice software and has a great
solution for EMR,” White
says. IBSA is also pushing RFID
technology to help maintain hospital
inventory. “The cheaper
chips or non-active chips can’t
be read outside of a range of
two feet,” he says. “But
the active chips, which can broadcast
at greater distances and are more
expensive, can be really useful
for capital security. For instance,
if you had a respiratory machine
valued at several thousand dollars,
it would be worth the investment
in a chip that could track that
piece of equipment within a hospital.”
Freelance
writer Katherine House contributed
to this report. LaShell Stratton
is an assistant editor of Print
Solutions magazine. Email your
comments to lstratton@PSDA.org.
Senate
Considers Placing Restrictions
on Hospital Group Purchasing Organizations
For
several years, Congress has considered
restricting the purchasing power
of health care GPOs. Some industry
leaders say those limits would
promote greater competition and
give hospitals and physicians
more access to an open marketplace.
Others argue that it will only
stifle competition and innovation.
Currently, three draft bills are
being considered by the Senate
Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust,
Competition Policy and Consumer
Rights that would place restrictions
on Health Care GPOs: “The
Medical Device Competition Act,”
“The Hospital Group Purchasing
Organization Reform Act,”
and “The Ensuring Competition
in Hospitals Purchasing Act.”
On
March 15, the subcommittee held
a hearing where both sides of
the industry, including the Healthcare
Group Purchasing Industry
Initiative (HGPII), of which Novation
is a member, and the Medical Device
Manufacturers Association (MDMA)
testified for and against the
proposed legislation.
“Hospitals
will directly suffer from this
straitjacket approach to group
purchasing that would result from
the bureaucracy created by these
bills,” wrote HGPII Chairman
Al LoBiondo. “A one-size-fits
all GPO framework would stifle
the current competitive environment
that encourages innovative solutions
and creative efforts to further
increase savings and improve clinical
outcomes.”
“Since
this process began in 2002, GPOs
have not seemed to take the subcommittee’s
request for reform seriously,”
testified Mark B. Leahey, executive
director of MDMA. “While
GPOs publish codes and develop
new initiatives that claim to
have reformed the industry, their
actions indicate otherwise. They
continue to contract in exclusionary
and anticompetitive ways, including
bundling across companies and
products, executing long-term
contracts, engaging in sole-source
contracts, awarding no-bid contracts,
collecting excessive fees and
preventing caregivers and hospitals
from access to a free and open
marketplace of competitive products.”
Novation
distributors American Solutions
for Business and International
Business Solutions Alliance LLC
(IBSA) said though they are keeping
an eye on legislation being considered
on Capitol Hill, neither expects
that what is currently before
the Senate would have any impact
on them for now.
“I
personally don’t think it
will affect us at this point in
time,” says Rodney White,
vice president of health care
sales for IBSA. “They’ve
been dealing with this issue for
about 10 years on the Hill. The
sticking point is that GPOs may
not allow smaller vendors, smaller
distributors, to compete but IBSA
is the best answer to that. We’re
funneling business to these distributors
across the country. If the government
shuts down GPOs, they’re
only going to hurt the people
they’re trying to help.”
“We
don’t anticipate any changes,”
says Craig McLain, COO of American.
“If anything, from our perspective
the proposed changes would be
positive for American Solutions
for Business. It opens the door
for more companies to compete.
But I think we’re already
starting to see it anyway with
what the GPOs are doing voluntarily.”
“Novation’s
efforts to work with small and
diverse suppliers and those that
manufacture new technology has
resulted in more than 150 supplier
and distributor agreements and
nearly $1.4 billion in annual
sales for the participating companies,”
said Novation in a statement issued
for this article. “Novation
will continue to lead efforts,
through its association with HGPII,
to avert legislation that would
jeopardize the way hospitals use
GPOs.”