UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
Mark one:
x ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the year ended December 31, 2006
Or
o TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from to
Commission file numbers:
001-32701
333-127115
EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICES CORPORATION
EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES L.P.
(Exact name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
Delaware |
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20-3738384 |
(State or other jurisdiction of |
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(IRS Employer |
6200 S. Syracuse Way |
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Suite 200 |
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Greenwood Village, CO |
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80111 |
(Address of principal executive offices) |
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(Zip Code) |
Registrants telephone number, including area code: 303-495-1200
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class |
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Name of each exchange on which registered |
Class A Common Stock, $.01 par value |
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New York Stock Exchange |
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes o No x
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Act. Yes o No x
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes x No o
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of the registrants knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment of this Form 10-K. o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer. See definition of accelerated filer and large accelerated filer in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
Large accelerated filer o |
Accelerated filerx |
Non-accelerated filer o |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes o No x
As of December 31, 2006, 9,262,853 shares of the Companys class A common stock, par value $0.01 per share, were outstanding. As of December 31, 2006, the aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates of the Company, computed by reference to the closing price for the registrants class A common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on such date was approximately $194.3 million (9,262,853 shares at a closing price per share of $20.98).
Shares of class A common stock outstanding at March 5, 20079,273,911; shares of class B common stock outstanding at March 5, 2007142,545; LP exchangeable units outstanding at March 5, 200732,107,500.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Certain portions of the registrants definitive proxy statement to be used in connection with its 2007 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and to be filed within 120 days of December 31, 2006 are incorporated by reference into Part III, Items 10-14, of this Form 10-K.
EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES CORPORATION
INDEX TO ANNUAL
REPORT
ON FORM 10-K
FOR
THE YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 2006
2
EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES CORPORATION
ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AND FACTORS THAT MAY AFFECT RESULTS
This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements give our current expectations or forecasts of future events. Forward-looking statements generally can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as may, will, expect, intend, estimate, anticipate, believe, project, or continue, or other similar words. These statements reflect managements current views with respect to future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties, both known and unknown. Our actual results may vary materially from those anticipated in forward-looking statements. We caution investors not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements.
Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to:
· the impact on our revenue of changes in transport volume, mix of insured and uninsured patients, and third party reimbursement rates,
· the adequacy of our insurance coverage and insurance reserves,
· potential penalties or changes to our operations if we fail to comply with extensive and complex government regulation of our industry,
· our ability to recruit and retain qualified physicians and other healthcare professionals, and enforce our non-compete agreements with our physicians,
· our ability to generate cash flow to service our debt obligations,
· the cost of capital expenditures to maintain and upgrade our vehicle fleet and medical equipment,
· the loss of services of one or more members of our senior management team,
· the outcome of government investigations of certain of our business practices,
· our ability to successfully restructure our operations to comply with future changes in government regulation,
· the loss of existing contracts and the accuracy of our assessment of costs under new contracts,
· the high level of competition in our industry,
· our ability to maintain or implement complex information systems,
· our ability to implement our business strategy,
· our ability to successfully integrate strategic acquisitions, and
· our ability to comply with the terms of our settlement agreements with the government.
These factors are not exhaustive, and new factors may emerge or changes to the foregoing factors may occur that could impact our business. Except to the extent required by law, we undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
Readers should review carefully Item 1A, Risk Factors and Item 7, Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for a more complete discussion of these and other factors that may affect our business.
3
Company Overview
Emergency Medical Services Corporation (EMSC, we, us, our, or the Company) is a leading provider of emergency medical services in the United States. We operate our business and market our services under the AMR and EmCare brands, which represent American Medical Response, Inc. and EmCare Holdings Inc., respectively. AMR, with more than 50 years of operating history, is the leading provider of ambulance services in the United States based on net revenue and number of transports. EmCare, with more than 30 years of operating history, is the leading provider of outsourced emergency department staffing and related management services in the United States, based on number of contracts with hospitals and affiliated physician groups. Approximately 87% of our net revenue for the twelve months ended December 31, 2006 (referred to herein as fiscal 2006) was generated under exclusive contracts. During fiscal 2006, we provided emergency medical services to approximately 10 million patients in more than 2,000 communities nationwide and generated net revenue of $1.934 billion, of which AMR and EmCare represented 61% and 39%, respectively. All references in this Item to number of contracts and employees are as of December 31, 2006.
We offer a broad range of essential emergency medical services through our two business segments:
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AMR |
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EmCare |
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Core Services: |
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Pre- and post-hospital medical transportation |
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Hospital-based physician services
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Emergency (911) ambulance transports |
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Emergency department staffing and related management services |
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Non-emergency ambulance transports |
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Hospitalist, radiology and inpatient services |
Customers: |
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Communities |
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Hospitals |
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Government agencies |
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Independent physician groups |
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Healthcare facilities |
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Attending medical staff |
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Insurers |
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National Market Position: |
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#1 provider of ambulance transports |
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#1 provider of outsourced emergency department services |
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8% share of total ambulance market |
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7% share of emergency department services market |
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21% of private provider ambulance market |
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10% of outsourced emergency department services market |
Number of Contracts at December 31, 2006: |
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2,900 non-emergency transport arrangements |
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Volume for year ended December 31, 2006: |
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4
General Development of our Business
American Medical Response, Inc., or AMR, was founded in 1992 through the consolidation of several well-established regional ambulance companies, and since then has grown through more than 200 acquisitions. In February 1997, AMR merged with another leading ambulance company and became the largest ambulance service provider in the United States.
EmCare Holdings Inc., or EmCare, was founded in Dallas, Texas, in 1972 and initially grew by providing emergency department staffing and related management services to larger hospitals in the Texas marketplace. EmCare then expanded its presence nationally, primarily through a series of acquisitions in the 1990s.
AMR and EmCare were acquired by Laidlaw International, Inc., previously Laidlaw Inc. (Laidlaw), in 1997 and became wholly-owned subsidiaries.
Effective January 31, 2005, an investor group led by Onex Partners LP and Onex Corporation (Onex), and including members of our management, purchased our operating subsidiariesAMR and EmCarefrom Laidlaw through a holding company, Emergency Medical Services L.P., or EMS LP, a limited partnership formed at the time of this acquisition. See Note 1to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in Part II, Item 8 of this Form 10-K.
From the completion of our acquisition of AMR and EmCare, we operated through the holding company, EMS LP, until the formation of EMSC, which is a Delaware corporation. A re-organization was effected concurrently with our initial public offering of common stock on December 21, 2005, which resulted in AMR, EmCare and EMS LP becoming subsidiaries of EMSC, and EMSC controlling 100% of the voting power of EMS LP. We own 22.7%, and Onex owns 77.3%, of the equity in EMS LP. Onexs equity interest is held through LP exchangeable units that are immediately exchangeable for, and substantially equivalent to, our class B common stock.
Description of our Business
Emergency Medical Services Industry
We operate in the ambulance and emergency department services markets, two large and growing segments of the emergency medical services market. By law, most communities are required to provide emergency ambulance services and most hospitals are required to provide emergency department services. Emergency medical services are a core component of the range of care a patient could potentially receive in the pre-hospital and hospital-based settings. Accordingly, we believe that expenditures for emergency medical services will continue to correlate closely to growth in the U.S. hospital market and that the following key factors will continue to drive growth in our emergency medical services markets:
· Increase in outsourcing. Communities, government agencies and healthcare facilities are under significant pressure both to improve the quality and to reduce the cost of care. The outsourcing of certain medical services has become a preferred means to alleviate these pressures.
· Favorable demographics. The growth and aging of the population will be a significant demand driver for healthcare services, and we believe it will result in an increase in ambulance transports, emergency department visits and hospital admissions.
· The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that the number of Americans over 65 will increase to 39 million by 2010 from 31 million in 1990. It is also expected that Americans over the age of 65 will increase from one in eight Americans in 2000 to one in five by 2030.
5
· Increased federal funding for disaster preparedness and other federal programs. The United States government has increased its focus on our nations ability to respond quickly and effectively to emergencies, including both terrorist attacks and natural disasters. Federal programs, such as Homeland Security, FEMA and funding for services for undocumented aliens, have made increased funding available for emergency services.
Additional factors that may affect the emergency medical services industry are described elsewhere in this report. See Item 1A, Risk FactorsRisk Factors Related to Healthcare Regulation and BusinessRegulatory Matters.
Ambulance Services
We believe the ambulance services market represents annual expenditures of approximately $13 billion. The ambulance services market is highly fragmented, with more than 14,000 private, public and not-for-profit service providers accounting for an estimated 36 million ambulance transports in 2004. There are a limited number of regional ambulance providers and we are one of only two national ambulance providers.
Ambulance services encompass both 911 emergency response and non-emergency transport services, including critical care transfers, wheelchair transports and other inter-facility transports. Emergency response services include the dispatch of ambulances equipped with life support equipment and staffed with paramedics and/or emergency medical technicians, or EMTs, to provide immediate medical care to injured or ill patients. Non-emergency services utilize paramedics and/or EMTs to transport patients between healthcare facilities or between facilities and patient residences. Given demographic trends, we expect the total number of ambulance transports to continue to grow at a steady rate of 1% to 2% per year.
911 emergency response services are provided primarily under long-term contracts with communities and government agencies. Non-emergency services generally are provided pursuant to non-exclusive contracts with healthcare facilities, managed care and insurance companies. Usage tends to be controlled by the facility discharge planners, nurses and physicians who are responsible for requesting transport services. Non-emergency services are provided primarily by private ambulance companies. Quality of service, dependability and name recognition are critical factors in winning non-emergency business.
Emergency Department Services
We believe the physician reimbursement component of the emergency department services market represents annual expenditures of approximately $10 billion. There are approximately 4,725 hospitals in the United States that operate emergency departments, of which approximately 67% of these hospitals outsource their physician staffing and management for this department. The market for outsourced emergency department staffing and related management services is highly fragmented, with more than 800 national, regional and local providers. We believe we are one of only five national providers.
Between 1994 and 2004, the total number of patient visits to hospital emergency departments increased from 93.4 million to 110.2 million, an increase of 18%. At the same time, the number of hospital emergency departments declined 12%. As a result, the average number of patient visits per hospital emergency department increased substantially during that period. We believe these trends are resulting in an increased focus by hospitals on their emergency departments. As the per hospital demand for emergency department visits continues to increase, we believe that more hospitals will turn to well-established providers, such as EmCare, which have a demonstrated track record of improving productivity and efficiency while providing high quality care.
6
Business Segments and Services
We operate our business and market our services under our two business segments: AMR and EmCare. We provide ambulance transport services in 36 states and the District of Columbia and provide services to emergency department and hospitalist programs in 39 states.
The following is a detailed business description for our two business segments.
American Medical Response, Inc., or AMR, is the leading provider of ambulance services in the United States. AMR and our predecessor companies have a long history in emergency medical services, having provided services to some communities for more than 50 years. As of December 31, 2006 we had an 8% share of the total ambulance services market and a 21% share of the private provider ambulance market. During fiscal 2006, AMR treated and transported approximately 3.5 million patients in 36 states utilizing more than 4,400 vehicles that operated out of more than 200 sites. AMR has approximately 3,100 contracts with communities, government agencies, healthcare providers and insurers to provide ambulance transport services. AMRs broad geographic footprint enables us to contract on a national and regional basis with managed care and insurance companies.
For fiscal 2006, approximately 58% of AMRs net revenue was generated from emergency 911 ambulance services, which include treating and stabilizing patients, transporting the patient to a hospital or other healthcare facility and providing attendant medical care en-route. Non-emergency ambulance services, including critical care transfer, wheelchair transports and other interfacility transports, accounted for 31% of AMRs net revenue for the same period, with the balance generated from the provision of training, dispatch centers and other services to communities and public safety agencies.
As derived from our annual consolidated or combined financial statements found elsewhere in this report, AMRs revenues, income from operations, and total assets were as follows for each of the periods indicated (amounts in thousands):
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As of and for the |
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Year |
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Eleven months |
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Five months |
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Year |
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ended |
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ended |
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ended |
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ended |
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December 31, |
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December 31, |
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January 31, |
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August 31, |
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2006 |
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2005 |
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2005 |
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2004 |
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Net revenue |
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$ |
1,189,447 |
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$ |
1,059,725 |
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$ |
455,059 |
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$ |
1,054,800 |
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Income from operations |
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37,647 |
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49,314 |
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17,465 |
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41,928 |
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Total assets |
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817,715 |
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807,874 |
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645,441 |
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628,635 |
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See Item 7, Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations for further information on AMRs financial results.
We provide substantially all of our ambulance services under our AMR brand name. We operate under other names when required to do so by local statute or contractual agreement.
Services
We provide a full range of emergency and non-emergency ambulance transport and related services, which include:
Emergency Response Services (911). We provide emergency response services primarily under long-term exclusive contracts with communities and hospitals. Our contracts typically stipulate that we must respond to 911 calls in the designated area within a specified response time. We utilize two types of ambulance unitsAdvanced Life Support, or ALS, units and Basic Life Support, or BLS, units. ALS units,
7
which are staffed by two paramedics or one paramedic and an emergency medical technician, or EMT, are equipped with high-acuity life support equipment such as cardiac monitors, defibrillators and oxygen delivery systems, and carry pharmaceutical and medical supplies. BLS units are generally staffed by two EMTs and are outfitted with medical supplies and equipment necessary to administer first aid and basic medical treatment. The decision to dispatch an ALS or BLS unit is determined by our contractual requirements, as well as by the nature of the patients medical situation.
Under certain of our 911 emergency response contracts, we are the first responder to an emergency scene. However, under most of our 911 contracts, the local fire department is the first responder. In these situations, the fire department typically begins stabilization of the patient. Upon our arrival, we continue stabilization through the provision of attendant medical care and transport the patient to the closest appropriate healthcare facility. In certain communities where the fire department historically has been responsible for both first response and emergency services, we seek to develop public/private partnerships with fire departments rather than compete with them to provide the emergency transport service. These partnerships emphasize collaboration with the fire departments and afford us the opportunity to provide 911 emergency services in communities that, for a variety of reasons, may not otherwise have outsourced this service to a private provider. In most instances, the provision of emergency services under our partnerships closely resembles that of our most common 911 contracts described above. The public/private partnerships lower our costs by reducing the number of full-time paramedics we would otherwise require. We estimate that the 911 contracts that encompass these public/private partnerships represented approximately 17% of AMRs net revenue for fiscal 2006.
Non-Emergency Transport Services. We provide transportation to patients requiring ambulance or wheelchair transport with varying degrees of medical care needs between healthcare facilities or between healthcare facilities and their homes. Unlike emergency response services, which typically are provided by communities or private providers under exclusive or semi-exclusive contracts, non-emergency transportation usually involves multiple contract providers at a given facility, with one or more of the competitors designated as the preferred provider. Non-emergency transport business generally is awarded by a healthcare facility, such as a hospital or nursing home, or a healthcare payor, such as an HMO, managed care organization or insurance company.
Non-emergency transport services include: (i) inter-facility critical care transport, (ii) wheelchair and stretcher-car transports, and (iii) other inter-facility transports.
· Critical care transports are provided to medically unstable patients (such as cardiac patients and neonatal patients) who require critical care while being transported between healthcare facilities. Critical care services differ from ALS services in that the ambulance may be equipped with additional medical equipment and may be staffed by one of our medical specialists or by an employee of a healthcare facility to attend to a patients specific medical needs.
· Wheelchair and stretcher-car transports are non-medical transportation provided to handicapped and certain non-ambulatory persons in some service areas. In providing this service, we use vans that contain hydraulic wheelchair lifts or ramps operated by drivers who generally are trained in cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR.
· Other inter-facility transports, that require advanced or basic levels of medical supervision during transfer, may be provided when a home-bound patient requires examination or treatment at a healthcare facility or when a hospital inpatient requires tests or treatments (such as magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, testing, CAT scans, dialysis or chemotherapy treatment) available at another facility. We use ALS or BLS ambulance units to provide general ambulance services depending on the patients needs.
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Other Services. In addition to our 911 emergency and non-emergency ambulance services, we provide the following services:
· Dispatch Services. Our dispatch centers manage our own calls and, in certain communities, also manage dispatch centers for public safety agencies, such as police and fire departments, aeromedical transport programs and others.
· Event Medical Services. We provide medical stand-by support for concerts, athletic events, parades, conventions, international conferences and VIP appearances in conjunction with local and federal law enforcement and fire protection agencies. We have contracts to provide stand-by support for numerous sports franchises, as well as for various NASCAR events, Hollywood production studios and other specialty events.
· Managed Transportation Services. Managed care organizations and insurance companies contract with us to manage various of their medical transportation-related needs, including call-taking and scheduling, management of a network of transportation providers and billing and reporting through our internally developed systems.
· Paramedic Training. We own and operate National College of Technical Instruction, or NCTI, the largest paramedic training school in the United States and the only accredited institution of its size, with over 500 graduates each year.
· Air Ambulance Services. We own Air Ambulance Specialists, Inc., a company that arranges world-wide air ambulance transportation.
Medical Personnel and Quality Assurance
Approximately 72% of our 18,000 employees have daily contact with patients, including approximately 5,100 paramedics, 7,600 EMTs and 300 nurses. Paramedics and EMTs must be state-certified to transport patients and perform emergency care services. Certification as an EMT requires completion of a minimum of 140 hours of training in a program designated by the United States Department of Transportation, such as those offered at our training institute, NCTI. Once this program is completed, state-certified EMTs are then eligible to participate in a state-certified paramedic training program. The average paramedic program involves over 1,000 hours of academic training in advanced life support and assessment skills.
In most communities, local physician advisory boards develop medical protocols to be followed by paramedics and EMTs in a service area. In addition, instructions are conveyed on a case-by-case basis through direct communications between the ambulance crew and hospital emergency room physicians during the administration of advanced life support procedures. Both paramedics and EMTs must complete continuing education programs and, in some cases, state supervised refresher training examinations to maintain their certifications.
We maintain a commitment to provide high quality pre- and post-hospital emergency medical care. In each location in which we provide services, a physician associated with a hospital we serve monitors adherence to medical protocol and conducts periodic audits of the care provided. In addition, we hold retrospective care audits with our employees to evaluate compliance with medical and performance standards.
Our commitment to quality is reflected in the fact that 16 of our dispatch centers across the country are accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Ambulance Services, or CAAS, representing 15% of the total CAAS accredited centers. CAAS is a joint program between the American Ambulance Association and the American College of Emergency Physicians. The accreditation process is voluntary and evaluates numerous qualitative factors in the delivery of services. We believe communities and managed care providers increasingly consider accreditation as one of the criteria in awarding contracts.
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Billing and Collections
Our internal patient billing services, or PBS, offices located across the United States invoice and collect for our services. We receive payment from the following sources:
· the federal and state governments, primarily under the Medicare and Medicaid programs,
· health maintenance organizations and private insurers,
· individual patients, and
· community subsidies and fees.
The table below presents the approximate percentages of AMRs net revenue from the following sources:
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Percentage of AMR |
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Year |
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Eleven months |
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Year |
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ended |
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ended |
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ended |
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December 31, |
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December 31, |
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August 31, |
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2006 |
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2005 |
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2004 |
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Medicare |
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31 |
% |
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31 |
% |
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33 |
% |
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Medicaid |
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6 |
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6 |
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6 |
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Commercial insurance/ managed care |
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47 |
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47 |
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45 |
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Self-pay |
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5 |
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5 |
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5 |
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Subsidies/ fees |
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11 |
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11 |
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11 |
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Total net revenue |
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100 |
% |
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100 |
% |
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100 |
% |
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See BusinessRegulatory MattersMedicare, Medicaid and Other Government Program Reimbursement for additional information on reimbursement from Medicare, Medicaid and other government-sponsored programs.
We have substantial experience in processing claims to third party payors and employ a billing staff trained in third party coverage and reimbursement procedures. Our integrated billing and collection systems allow us to tailor the submission of claims to Medicare, Medicaid and certain other third party payors and has the capability to electronically submit claims to the extent third party payors systems permit. This system also provides for tracking of accounts receivable and status pending payment.
Companies in the ambulance services industry maintain significant provisions for doubtful accounts compared to companies in other industries. Collection of complete and accurate patient billing information during an emergency service call is sometimes difficult, and incomplete information hinders post-service collection efforts. In addition, we cannot evaluate the creditworthiness of patients requiring emergency transport services. Our allowance for doubtful accounts generally is higher for transports resulting from emergency ambulance calls than for non-emergency ambulance requests. See Item 1A, Risk FactorsRisk Factors Related to Healthcare RegulationChanges in the rates or methods of third party reimbursements may adversely affect our revenue and operations.
State licensing requirements, as well as contracts with communities and healthcare facilities, typically require us to provide ambulance services without regard to a patients insurance coverage or ability to pay. As a result, we often receive partial or no compensation for services provided to patients who are not covered by Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance. The anticipated level of uncompensated care and uncollectible accounts is considered in negotiating a government-paid subsidy to provide for uncompensated care, and permitted rates under contracts with a community or government agency.
10
A significant portion of our ambulance transport revenue is derived from Medicare payments. The Balanced Budget Act of 1997, or BBA, modified Medicare reimbursement rates for emergency transportation with the introduction of a national fee schedule. The BBA provided for a phase-in of the national fee schedule by blending the new national fee schedule rates with ambulance service suppliers pre-existing reasonable charge reimbursement rates. The BBA provided for this phase-in period to begin on April 1, 2002, and full transition to the national fee schedule rates became effective on January 1, 2006. In some regions, the national fee schedule would have resulted in a decrease in Medicare reimbursement rates of approximately 25% by the end of the phase-in period. Partially in response to the dramatic decrease in rates dictated by the BBA in some regions, the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003, or the Medicare Modernization Act, established regional rates, certain of which are higher than the BBAs national rates, and provided for the blending of the regional and national rates until January 1, 2010. Other rate provisions included in the Medicare Modernization Act provided further temporary mitigation of the impact of the BBA decreases, including a provision that provided for 1% to 2% increases for blended rates for the period from January 1, 2004 through December 31, 2006. Because the Medicare Modernization Act relief is of limited duration, we will continue to pursue strategies to offset the decreases mandated by the BBA, including seeking fee and subsidy increases.
We estimate that the impact of the ambulance service rate decreases under the national fee schedule mandated under the BBA, as modified by the phase-in provisions of the Medicare Modernization Act, resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2004, of approximately $11 million, resulted in an increase in AMRs net revenue of approximately $16 million during calendar year 2005, and in a decrease in AMRs net revenue of approximately $17 million in 2006. Based upon the current Medicare transport mix, we expect a further decrease in our net revenue totaling approximately $2 million for the period 2007 through 2010. We have been able to substantially mitigate the phase-in reductions of the BBA through additional fee and subsidy increases. As a 911 emergency response provider, we are uniquely positioned to offset changes in reimbursement by requesting increases in the rates we are permitted to charge for 911 services from the communities we serve. In response, these communities often permit us to increase rates for ambulance services from patients and their third party payors in order to ensure the maintenance of required community-wide 911 emergency response services. While these rate increases do not result in higher payments from Medicare and certain other public or private payors, overall they increase our revenue.
See Regulatory MattersMedicare, Medicaid and Other Government Program Reimbursement for additional information on reimbursement from Medicare, Medicaid and other government-sponsored programs.
Contracts
Emergency Transport. As of December 31, 2006, we had 157 contracts with communities and government agencies to provide 911 emergency response services. Contracts with communities to provide emergency transport services are typically exclusive, three to five years in length and generally are obtained through a competitive bidding process. In some instances where we are the existing provider, communities elect to renegotiate existing contracts rather than initiate new bidding processes. Our 911 contracts often contain options for earned extensions or evergreen provisions. We have improved our contract retention rate to 99% for fiscal 2006 compared to 81% in fiscal 2001. In fiscal year ended December 31, 2006, our top ten 911 contracts accounted for approximately $301 million, or 25% of AMRs net revenue. We have served these ten customers on a continual basis for an average of 29 years.
Our 911 emergency response arrangements typically specify maximum fees we may charge and set forth minimum requirements, such as response times, staffing levels, types of vehicles and equipment, quality assurance and insurance coverage. Communities and government agencies may also require us to provide a performance bond or other assurances of financial responsibility. The rates we are permitted to
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charge for services under a contract for emergency ambulance services and the amount of the subsidy, if any, we receive from a community or government agency depend in large part on the nature of the services we provide, payor mix and performance requirements.
Non-Emergency Transport. We have approximately 2,900 arrangements to provide non-emergency ambulance services with hospitals, nursing homes and other healthcare facilities that require a stable and reliable source of medical transportation for their patients. These contracts typically designate us as the preferred ambulance service provider of non-emergency ambulance services to those facilities and permit us to charge a base fee, mileage reimbursement, and additional fees for the use of particular medical equipment and supplies. We have historically provided a significant portion of our non-emergency transports to facilities and organizations in competitive markets without specific contracts.
Non-emergency transports often are provided to managed care or insurance plan members who are stabilized at the closest available hospital and are then moved to facilities within their health plans network. We believe the increased prevalence of managed care benefits larger ambulance service providers, which can service a higher percentage of a managed care providers members. This allows the managed care provider to reduce its number of vendors, thus reducing administrative costs and allowing it to negotiate more favorable rates with healthcare facilities. Our scale and broad geographic footprint enable us to contract on a national and regional basis with managed care and insurance companies. We have contracts with large healthcare networks and insurers including Kaiser, Aetna, Healthnet, Cigna and SummaCare.
We believe that communities, government agencies, healthcare facilities, managed care companies and insurers consider the quality of care, historical response time performance and total cost to be among the most important factors in awarding and renewing contracts.
Dispatch and Communications
Dispatch centers control the deployment and dispatch of ambulances in response to calls through the use of sophisticated communications equipment 24 hours a day, seven days a week. In many operating sites, we communicate with our vehicles over dedicated radio frequencies licensed by the Federal Communications Commission. In certain service areas with a large volume of calls, we analyze data on traffic patterns, demographics, usage frequency and similar factors with the aid of System Status Management, or SSM technology, to help determine optimal ambulance deployment and selection. In addition to dispatching our own ambulances, we also provide dispatching service for 53 communities where we are not an ambulance service provider. Our dispatch centers are staffed by EMTs and other experienced personnel who use local medical protocols to analyze and triage a medical situation and determine the best mode of transport.
Emergency Transport. Depending on the emergency medical dispatch system used in a designated service area, the public authority that receives 911 emergency medical calls either dispatches our ambulances directly from the public control center or communicates information regarding the location and type of medical emergency to our control center which, in turn, dispatches ambulances to the scene. While the ambulance is en-route to the scene, the ambulance receives information concerning the patients condition prior to the ambulances arrival at the scene. Our communication systems allow the ambulance crew to communicate directly with the destination hospital to alert hospital medical personnel of the arrival of the patient and the patients condition and to receive instructions directly from emergency room personnel on specific pre-hospital medical treatment. These systems also facilitate close and direct coordination with other emergency service providers, such as the appropriate police and fire departments, that also may be responding to a call.
12
Non-Emergency Transport. Requests for non-emergency transports typically are made by physicians, nurses, case managers and hospital discharge coordinators who are interested primarily in prompt ambulance arrival at the requested pick-up time. We are also offering on-line, web-enabled transportation ordering to certain facilities. We use our Millennium software to track and manage requests for transportation services for large healthcare facilities and managed care companies.
Management Information Systems
We support our operations with integrated information systems and standardized procedures that enable us to efficiently manage the billing and collections processes and financial support functions. Our recently developed technology solutions provide information for operations personnel, including real-time operating statistics, tracking of strategic plan initiatives, electronic purchasing and inventory management solutions.
We have three management information systems that we believe have significantly enhanced our operationsour e-PCR technology, an electronic record-keeping system; our Millennium call-taking system, a call-taking application that tracks and manages requests for transportation services for large healthcare facilities and managed care companies; and our SSM ambulance positioning system, a technology which enables us to use historical data on fleet usage patterns to predict where our emergency transport services are likely to be required.
Sales and Marketing
Our 60-person sales and marketing team is focused on contract retention as well as generating new sales. Many new sales opportunities occur through referrals from our existing client base. These team members are frequently former paramedics or EMTs who began their careers in the emergency transportation industry and are therefore well-qualified to understand the needs of our customers. Our sales force is incentivized through a compensation package that includes base salary and bonus potential based on achieving specified performance targets.
We respond to requests for proposals that generally include demographic information of the community or facilities, response time parameters, vehicle and equipment requirements, the length of the contract, the minimum qualifications of bidders, billing information, selection criteria and the format to be followed in the bid. Prior to responding to a request for proposal, AMRs management team ensures that the proposal is in line with certain financial and service parameters. Management evaluates all aspects of each proposal, including financial projections, staffing models, resource requirements and competition, to determine how to best achieve our business objectives and the customer goals.
Risk Management
We train and educate all new employees about our safety programs including, among others, emergency vehicle operations, various medical protocols, use of equipment and patient focused care and advocacy. Our safety training also involves continuing education programs and a monthly safety awareness campaign. We also work directly with manufacturers to design equipment modifications that enhance both patient and clinician safety.
Our safety and risk management team develops and executes strategic planning initiatives focused on mitigating the factors that drive losses in our operations. We aggressively investigate and respond to all incidents we believe may result in a claim. Operations supervisors submit documentation of such incidents to the third party administrator handling the claim. We have a dedicated liability unit with our third party administrator which actively engages with our staff to gain valuable information for closure of claims. Information from the claims database is an important resource for identifying trends and developing future safety initiatives.
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We utilize an on-board monitoring system, RoadSafety, which measures operator performance against our safe driving standards. Our operations using RoadSafety have experienced improved driving behaviors within 90 days of installation. RoadSafety has been implemented in approximately 60% of our vehicles in emergency response markets.
Competition
Our predominant competitors are fire departments, with approximately 40% of the ambulance transport services market. Firefighters have traditionally acted as the first responders during emergencies, and in many communities provide emergency medical care and transport as well. In many communities we have established public/private partnerships, in which we integrate our transport services with the first responder services of the local fire department. We believe these public/private partnerships provide a model for us to collaborate with fire departments to increase the number of communities we serve.
Competition in the ambulance transport market is based primarily on:
· pricing,
· the ability to improve customer service, such as on-time performance and efficient call intake,
· the ability to recruit, train and motivate employees, particularly ambulance crews who have direct contact with patients and healthcare personnel, and
· billing and reimbursement expertise.
Our largest competitor, Rural/Metro Corporation, is the only other national provider of ambulance transport services and generates ambulance transport revenue less than half of AMRs net revenue. Other private provider competitors include Southwest Ambulance in Arizona and New Mexico, Acadian Ambulance Service in Louisiana and small, locally owned operators that principally serve the inter-facility transport market.
Insurance
Workers Compensation, Auto and General Liability. We have retained liability for the first $1 million to $2 million of the loss under these programs since September 1, 2001, managed either through ACE American Insurance Co. or Laidlaws captive insurance program. Generally, our umbrella policies covering claims that exceed our deductible levels have an annual cap of approximately $100 million. For periods prior to September 1, 2001, we were fully insured for our workers compensation, auto and general liability programs through Laidlaws captive insurance program.
Professional Liability. Since April 15, 2001, we have a self-insured retention for our professional liability coverage, which covers the first $2 million for the policy year ending April 15, 2002, and covers the first $5 to $5.5 million for policy periods after April 15, 2002. We have umbrella policies with third party insurers covering claims exceeding these retention levels with an aggregate cap of $10 million for each separate policy period. For periods prior to April 15, 2001, we are insured for our professional liability claims through third party insurers.
Environmental Matters
We are subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations relating to the presence of hazardous materials and pollution and the protection of the environment, including those governing emissions to air, discharges to water, storage, treatment and disposal of wastes, including medical waste, remediation of contaminated sites, and protection of worker health and safety. We believe our current operations are in substantial compliance with all applicable environmental requirements and that we maintain all material permits required to operate our business.
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Certain environmental laws impose strict, and under certain circumstances joint and several, liability for investigation and remediation of the release of regulated substances into the environment. Such liability can be imposed on current or former owners or operators of contaminated sites, or on persons who dispose or arrange for disposal of wastes at a contaminated site. Releases have occurred at a few of the facilities we lease as a result of historical practices of the owners or former operators. Based on available information, we do not believe that any known compliance obligations, releases or investigations under environmental laws or regulations will have a material adverse effect on our business, financial position and results of operations. However, there can be no guarantee that these releases or newly discovered information, more stringent enforcement of or changes in environmental requirements, or our inability to enforce available indemnification agreements will not result in significant costs.
Employees
The following is the break down of our employees by job classification as of December 31, 2006.
Job Classification |
|
|
|
Full-time |
|
Part-time |
|
Total |
|
||||
Paramedics |
|
|
3,290 |
|
|
|
1,818 |
|
|
5,108 |
|
||
Emergency medical technicians |
|
|
5,021 |
|
|
|
2,538 |
|
|
7,559 |
|
||
Nurses |
|
|
154 |
|
|
|
193 |
|
|
347 |
|
||
Support personnel |
|
|
4,383 |
|
|
|
641 |
|
|
5,024 |
|
||
Total |
|
|
12,848 |
|
|
|
5,190 |
|
|
18,038 |
|
Approximately 48% of our employees are represented by 42 collective bargaining agreements. Twenty-five of these collective bargaining agreements, representing approximately 3,700 employees, are subject to renegotiation in 2007. We believe we have a good relationship with our employees and have never experienced any union-related work stoppages.
EmCare is the largest provider of outsourced emergency department staffing and related management services to healthcare facilities in the United States. As of December 31, 2006, EmCare had a 7% share of the total emergency department services market and a 10% share of the outsourced emergency department services market. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006, EmCare had approximately 6.5 million patient visits in 39 states. EmCare has 378 contracts with hospitals and independent physician groups to provide emergency department and hospitalist staffing, management and other administrative services. We believe that EmCares successful physician recruitment and retention, high level of customer service and advanced risk management programs have resulted in an improvement in our contract retention rate from 74% in 2001 to 88% in fiscal 2006. We have added 127 net new contracts since 2001.
EmCare primarily provides emergency department staffing and related management services to healthcare facilities. We recruit and hire or subcontract with physicians and other healthcare professionals, who then provide professional services to the hospitals with whom we contract. We also have practice support agreements with independent physician groups and hospitals pursuant to which we provide unbundled management services such as billing and collection, recruiting, risk management and certain other administrative services.
In addition, we have become one of the leading providers of hospitalist services. A hospitalist is a physician who specializes in the care of acutely ill patients in an in-patient setting. While we have provided limited hospitalist services for the past 11 years, it is only in the last 3 years that we have focused on expanding this program, including through our acquisition in November 2006 of Clinical Staffing Solutions, or CSS, physician in-patient business serving 14 facilities in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. We have increased our hospitalist programs from 8 contracts as of August 31, 2003 to 51 contracts as of
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December 31, 2006, increasing our net revenue for this program from approximately $7.2 million in fiscal 2001 to approximately $41 million, or approximately 5.5% of EmCares net revenue, for fiscal 2006. As of December 31, 2006, we independently contracted with or employed 397 hospitalist physicians.
As derived from our annual consolidated or combined financial statements found elsewhere in this report, EmCares revenues, income from operations, and total assets were as follows for each of the periods indicated (amounts in thousands):
|
|
As of and for the |
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Year |
|
Eleven months |
|
Five months |
|
Year |
|
||||||
|
|
Ended |
|
ended |
|
ended |
|
ended |
|
||||||
|
|
December 31, |
|
December 31, |
|
January 31, |
|
August 31, |
|
||||||
|
|
2006 |
|
2005 |
|
2005 |
|
2004 |
|
||||||
Net revenue |
|
|
$744,758 |
|
|
|
$595,760 |
|
|
|
$241,120 |
|
|
$549,798 |
|
Income from operations |
|
|
70,056 |
|
|
|
34,065 |
|
|
|
3,225 |
|
|
28,046 |
|
Total assets |
|
|
446,590 |
|
|
|
443,435 |
|
|
|
338,069 |
|
|
320,964 |
|
See Item 7, Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations for further information on EmCares financial results.
Services
We provide a full range of outsourced physician staffing and related management services for emergency department and hospitalist programs, which include:
Contract Management. We utilize an integrated approach to contract management that involves physicians, non-clinical business experts, and operational and quality assurance specialists. An on-site medical director is responsible for the day-to-day oversight of the operation, including clinical quality, and works closely with the hospitals management in developing strategic initiatives and objectives. The regional director of operations, which is a clinical position, provides systems analysis and improvement plans. A quality manager develops site-specific quality improvement programs, and a practice improvement staff focuses on chart documentation and physician utilization patterns. The regional-based management staff provides support for these efforts and ensures that each customers expectations are identified, that service plans are developed and executed to meet those expectations, and that the Companys and the customers financial objectives are achieved.
Staffing. We provide a full range of staffing services to meet the unique needs of each healthcare facility. Our dedicated clinical teams include qualified, career-oriented physicians and other healthcare professionals responsible for the delivery of high quality, cost-effective care. These teams also rely on managerial personnel, many of whom have clinical experience, who oversee the administration and operations of the clinical area. Ensuring that each contract is staffed with the appropriately qualified physicians and that coverage is provided without any service deficiencies is critical to the success of the contract. We believe that our approach to recruiting, staffing and scheduling provides us with a unique advantage in achieving these objectives.
Recruiting. Many healthcare facilities lack the dedicated resources necessary to identify and attract specialized, career-oriented physicians. We have committed significant resources to the development of EmSource, a proprietary national physician database that we utilize in our recruiting programs across the country. Our marketing and recruiting staff continuously updates our database of more than 800,000 physicians with relevant data and contact information to allow us to match potential physician candidates to specific openings based upon personal preferences. This targeted recruiting method increases the success and efficiency of our recruiters, and we believe significantly increases our physician retention rates. We actively recruit physicians through various media options including telemarketing, direct mail, conventions, journal advertising and our internet site.
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Scheduling. Our scheduling departments assist our medical directors in scheduling physicians and other healthcare professionals in accordance with the coverage model at each facility. We provide 24-hour service to ensure that unscheduled shift vacancies, due to situations such as physician illness and personal emergencies, are filled with alternative coverage.
Payroll Administration and Benefits. We provide payroll administration services for the physicians and other healthcare professionals with whom we contract to provide services at customer sites. Additionally, healthcare facilities benefit from the elimination of the overhead costs associated with the administration of payroll and, where applicable, employee benefits.
Customer Satisfaction Programs. We design and implement customized patient satisfaction programs for our hospital customers. These programs are designed to improve patient satisfaction through the use of communication, family inclusion and hospitality techniques. These programs are delivered to the clinical and non-clinical members of the hospital emergency department.
Other Services. We provide a substantial portion of our services to hospitals through our affiliate physician groups. There are situations in which hospitals and physicians are interested in receiving stand-alone management services such as billing and collection, scheduling, recruitment and risk management, and at times we unbundle our services to meet this need. Pursuant to these practice support agreements, which generally will have a term of one to three years, we provide these services to independent physician groups and healthcare facilities. During 2006, we had 16 practice support agreements which generated $10.3 million in net revenue.
Operational Assessments. We undertake operational assessments for our hospital customers that include comprehensive reviews of critical operational matrices, including turnaround times, triage systems, left without being seen, throughput times and operating systems. These assessments establish baseline values, develop and implement process improvement programs, and then we monitor the success of the initiatives. This is an ongoing process that we continually monitor and modify.
Practice Improvement. We provide ongoing comprehensive documentation review and training for our affiliated physicians. We review certain statistical indicators that allow us to provide specific training to individual physicians regarding documentation, and we tailor training for broader groups of physicians as we see trends developing in documentation-related areas. Our training focuses on the completeness of the medical record or chart, specific payor requirements, and government rules and regulations.
Risk Management
We utilize our risk management department, senior medical leadership and on-site medical directors to conduct aggressive risk management and quality assurance programs. We take a proactive role in promoting early reporting, evaluation and resolution of incidents that may evolve into claims. Our risk management function is designed to mitigate risk associated with the delivery of care and to prevent or minimize costs associated with medical professional liability claims and includes:
Incident Reporting Systems. We have established a comprehensive support system for medical professionals. Our Risk Management Hotline provides each physician with the ability to discuss medical issues with a peer. In the event of a negative patient outcome, the physician may discuss legal and medical issues in anticipation of litigation directly with an EmCare attorney experienced with medical malpractice issues.
Tracking and Trending Claims. We have an extensive claims database developed from our experience in the emergency department setting. From this database, we track multiple data points on each professional liability claim. We utilize the database to identify claim trends and risk factors so that we can better target our risk management initiatives. Each year, we target the medical conditions associated with our most frequent professional liability claims, and provide detailed education to assist our affiliated medical professionals in treating these medical conditions.
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Professional Risk Assessment. We conduct risk assessments of our medical professionals. Typically, a risk assessment includes a thorough review of professional liability claims against the professional, assessment of issues raised by hospital risk management and identification of areas where additional education may be advantageous for the professional.
Hospital Risk Assessment. We conduct risk assessments of potential hospital customers in conjunction with our sales and contracting process. As part of the risk assessment, registered nurses or physicians employed by us conduct a detailed analysis of the hospitals operations affecting the emergency department or hospitalist services, including the triage procedures, on-call coverage, transfer procedures, nursing staffing and related matters in an effort to address risk factors contractually during negotiations with potential customer hospitals.
Clinical Fail-Safe Programs. We review and identify key risk areas which we believe may result in increased incidence of patient injuries and resulting claims against us and our affiliated medical professionals. We continue to develop fail-safe clinical tools and make them available to our affiliated physicians for use in conjunction with their practice and to our customer hospitals for use as a part of their peer review process. These fail-safe tools assist physicians in identifying common patient attributes and complaints that may identify the patient as being at high risk for certain conditions (e.g., a heart attack).
Quality Improvement Programs. Our medical directors are actively engaged in their respective hospitals quality improvement committees and initiatives. In addition, we provide tools that provide guidance to the medical directors on how to conduct quality reviews of their physicians and help them track their physicians medical practices.
Physician Education Programs. Our wholly owned subsidiary, Emergency Medical Education Systems, Inc. (EMEDS), conducts physician education through risk management and board review conferences and on-line teaching modules. Our affiliated medical professionals can access EMEDS to obtain valuable medical information. Our internal continuing education services are fully accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education. This allows us to grant our physicians and nurses continuing education credits for internally developed educational programs at a lower cost than if such credits were earned through external programs. Our risk management department also provides other forms of education, including articles in the company newsletter that highlight current medical literature on important emergency medicine topics.
Proactive Professional Liability Claims Handling. We utilize a third party claims administrator to manage professional liability claims against companies and medical professionals covered under our insurance program. For each case, detailed reports are reviewed to ensure proactively that the defense is comprehensive and aggressive. Each professional liability claim brought against an EmCare affiliated medical professional or EmCare affiliated company is reviewed by EmCares Claims Committee, consisting of physicians, attorneys and company executives, before any resolution of the claim. The Claims Committee periodically instructs EmCares risk management department to undertake an analysis of particular physicians or hospital locations associated with a given claim.
Billing and Collections
We receive payment for patient services from:
· the federal and state governments, primarily under the Medicare and Medicaid programs,
· health maintenance organizations, preferred provider organizations and private insurers,
· hospitals, and
· individual patients.
18
The table below presents the approximate percentages of EmCares net revenue from the following sources:
|
|
Percentage of EmCare |
|
||||||||||
|
|
Year |
|
Eleven months |
|
Year |
|
||||||
Medicare |
|
|
18 |
% |
|
|
18 |
% |
|
|
17 |
% |
|
Medicaid |
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
3 |
|
|
Commercial insurance/ managed care |
|
|
53 |
|
|
|
54 |
|
|
|
53 |
|
|
Self-pay |
|
|
4 |
|
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
2 |
|
|
Subsidies/ fees |
|
|
22 |
|
|
|
22 |
|
|
|
25 |
|
|
Total net revenue |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
|
100 |
% |
|
See BusinessRegulatory MattersMedicare, Medicaid and Other Government Program Reimbursement for additional information on reimbursement from Medicare, Medicaid and other government-sponsored programs.
We code and bill for physician services through our wholly-owned subsidiary, Reimbursement Technologies, Inc. We utilize state-of-the-art document imaging and paperless workflow processes to expedite the billing cycle and improve compliance and customer service. Currently, at 58% of our customer locations, medical records and emergency department logs are scanned and transmitted electronically to us. We are in the process of transitioning additional customers to on-site scanning.
We do substantially all of the billing for our affiliated physicians, and we have extensive experience in processing claims to third party payors. We employ a billing staff of approximately 680 employees who are trained in third party coverage and reimbursement procedures. Our integrated billing and collection system uses proprietary software to tailor the submission of claims to Medicare, Medicaid and certain other third party payors and has the capability to electronically submit most claims to the third party payors systems. We forward uncollected accounts electronically to two outside collection agencies automatically, based on established parameters. Each of these collection agencies have on-site employees working at our in-house billing company to assist in providing patients with quality customer service.
Contracts
We have contracts with (i) hospital customers to provide professional staffing and related management services, (ii) healthcare facilities and independent physician groups to provide management services, and (iii) affiliated physician groups and medical professionals to provide management services and various benefits.
We deliver services to our hospital customers and their patients through two principal types of contractual arrangements. EmCare or a subsidiary most frequently contracts directly with the hospital to provide physician staffing and management services. In some instances, a physician-owned professional corporation contracts with the hospital to provide physician staffing and management services, and the professional corporation, in turn, contracts with us for a wide range of management and administrative services, including billing, scheduling support, accounting and other services. The professional corporation pays our management fee out of the fees it collects from patients, third party payors and, in some cases, the hospital customer. Our physicians and other healthcare professionals who provide services under these hospital contracts do so pursuant to independent contractor or employment agreements with us, or pursuant to arrangements with the professional corporation that has a management agreement with us. We
19
refer to all of these physicians as our affiliated physicians, and these physicians and other individuals as our healthcare professionals.
Hospital and Practice Support Contracts. As of December 31, 2006, EmCare provides services under 378 contracts. Generally, the agreements with the hospitals are awarded on a competitive basis, and have an initial term of three years with one-year automatic renewals and termination by either party on specified notice. We have improved our contract retention rate to 88% for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006, up from 74% in fiscal 2001.
Our contracts with hospitals provide for one of three payment models:
· we bill patients and third party payors directly for physician fees,
· we bill patients and third party payors directly for physician fees, with the hospital paying us an additional pre-arranged fee for our services, and
· we bill the hospitals directly for the services of the physicians.
In all cases, the hospitals are responsible for billing and collecting for non-physician-related services.
We have established long-term relationships with some of the largest healthcare service providers. None of these customers represent revenue that amounts to 10% of our total net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2006, or fiscal years ended December 31, 2005 or August 31, 2004. Our top ten hospital emergency department contracts represent $84.8 million, or 11%, of EmCares net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2006. We have maintained our relationships with these customers for an average of 16 years.
Affiliated Physician Group Contracts. In most states, we contract directly with our hospital customers to provide physician staffing and related management services. We, in turn, contract with a professional corporation that is wholly-owned by one or more physicians, which we refer to as an affiliated physician group, or with independent contractor physicians. It is these physicians who provide the medical professional services. We then provide comprehensive management services to the physicians. We typically provide professional liability and workers compensation coverage to our affiliated physicians.
Certain states have laws that prohibit or restrict unlicensed persons or business entities from practicing medicine. The laws vary in scope and application from state to state. Some of these states may prohibit us from contracting directly with hospitals or physicians to provide professional medical services. In those states, the affiliated physician groups contract with the hospital, as well as all medical professionals. We provide management services to the affiliated physician groups.
Medical Professional Contracts. We contract with healthcare professionals as either independent contractors or employees to provide services to our customers. The healthcare professionals generally are paid an hourly rate for each hour of coverage, a variable rate based upon productivity or other objective criteria, or a combination of both a fixed hourly rate and a variable rate component. We typically arrange for professional liability and workers compensation coverage for our healthcare professionals.
The contracts with healthcare professionals typically have one-year terms with automatic renewal clauses for additional one-year terms. The contracts can be terminated with cause for various reasons, and usually contain provisions allowing for termination without cause by either party upon 90 days notice. Agreements with physicians generally contain a non-compete or non-solicitation provision and, in the case of medical directors, a non-compete provision. The enforceability of these provisions varies from state to state.
20
Management Information Systems
We have invested in scalable information systems and proprietary software packages designed to allow us to grow efficiently and to deliver and implement our best practice procedures nationally, while retaining local and regional flexibility. We have developed and implemented several proprietary applications that we believe provide us with a competitive advantage in our operations.
Sales and Marketing
Contracts for outsourced emergency department and hospitalist services are obtained through strategic marketing programs and responses to requests for proposals. EmCares business development team includes Practice Development representatives located throughout the United States who are responsible for developing sales and acquisition opportunities for the operating group in his or her territory. A significant portion of the compensation program for these sales professionals is commission-based, based on the profitability of the contracts they sell. Leads are generated through regular marketing efforts by our business development group, our website, journal advertising and a lead referral program. Each Practice Development representative is responsible for working with the regional chief executive officer to structure and provide customer proposals for new prospects in their respective regions.
Emergency medicine practices vary among healthcare facilities. A healthcare facility request for proposal generally will include demographic information of the facility department, a list of services to be performed, the length of the contract, the minimum qualifications of bidders, billing information, selection criteria and the format to be followed in the bid. Prior to responding to a request for proposal, EmCares senior management ensures that the proposal is consistent with certain financial parameters. Senior management evaluates all aspects of each proposal, including financial projections, staffing model, resource requirements and competition, to determine how to best achieve our business objectives and the customer goals.
Competition
The market for outsourced emergency department staffing and related management services is highly fragmented, with more than 800 national, regional and local providers handling an estimated 115 million patient visits in 2004. There are more than 4,725 hospitals in the United States with emergency departments, of which approximately 67% currently outsource physician services. Of these hospitals that outsource, we believe approximately 53% contract with a local provider, 21% contract with a regional provider and 26% contract with a national provider.
Team Health is our largest competitor and has the second largest share of the emergency department services market with an approximately 5% share. The other national providers of outsourced emergency department services are Sterling Healthcare, National Emergency Service and the Schumacher Group.
Insurance
Professional Liability Program. For the period January 1, 2001 through December 31, 2006, our professional liability insurance program provided claims made insurance coverage with limits of $1 million per loss event, with a $3 million annual per physician aggregate, for all medical professionals whom we have agreed to cover under our professional liability insurance program. Our subsidiaries and affiliated corporate entities are provided with coverage of $1 million per loss event and share a $10 million annual corporate aggregate.
21
For the 2001 calendar year, Lexington Insurance Company provided the majority of the professional liability insurance coverage covering claims occurring and reported during the 2001 calendar year, subject to an aggregate policy limit of $10 million.
For the 2002 through 2006 calendar years, Columbia Casualty Company and Continental Casualty Company, collectively referred to as CCC, provided our professional liability insurance coverage. The CCC policies have a retroactive date of January 1, 2001, thereby covering all claims occurring during the 2001 calendar year but reported in each of the 2002 through 2005 calendar years. We also procured coverage on a regional basis under separate policies of insurance for the calendar years 2001 through 2006, and have comparable coverage in calendar year 2007.
Captive Insurance Arrangement. On December 10, 2001, we formed EMCA Insurance Company, Ltd., or EMCA, as a wholly owned subsidiary under the Companies Law of the Cayman Islands. EMCA reinsures CCC for all losses associated with the CCC insurance policies under the professional liability insurance program, and provides collateral for the reinsurance arrangement through a trust agreement.
Workers Compensation Program. For the period September 1, 2002 through August 31, 2004, we procured workers compensation insurance coverage for employees of EmCare and affiliated physician groups through Continental Casualty Company. Continental reinsures a portion of this workers compensation exposure, on both a per claim and an aggregate basis, with EMCA.
From September 1, 2004, EmCare has insured, and continues to insure, its workers compensation exposure through The Travelers Indemnity Company, which reinsures a portion of the exposure with EMCA.
Employees and Independent Contractors
The following is the break down of our active affiliated physicians, independent contractors and employees by job classification as of December 31, 2006.
Job Classification |
|
|
|
Full-time |
|
Part-time |
|
Total |
|
||||
Physicians |
|
|
1,124 |
|
|
|
1,559 |
|
|
2,683 |
|
||
Physician assistants |
|
|
187 |
|
|
|
161 |
|
|
348 |
|
||
Nurse practitioners |
|
|
97 |
|
|
|
108 |
|
|
205 |
|
||
Non-clinical employees |
|
|
1,119 |
|
|
|
193 |
|
|
1,312 |
|
||
Total |
|
|
2,527 |
|
|
|
2,021 |
|
|
4,548 |
|
We believe that our relations with our employees and independent contractors are good. None of our physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners or non-clinical employees are subject to any collective bargaining agreement.
We offer our physicians substantial flexibility in terms of type of facility, scheduling of work hours, benefit packages, opportunities for relocation and career development. This flexibility, combined with fewer administrative burdens, improves physician retention rates and stabilizes our contract base.
We believe the following competitive strengths position our Company to capitalize on the favorable trends occurring within the healthcare industry and the emergency medical services markets.
Leading, Established Provider of Emergency Medical Services. We are a leading provider of emergency medical services in the United States. We believe our track record of consistently meeting or exceeding our customers service expectations, coupled with our ability to leverage our infrastructure and technology to
22
drive increased productivity and efficiency, have contributed to our ability to retain existing and win new contracts.
Significant Scale and Geographic Presence. We believe our significant scale and broad geographic presence provide a competitive advantage over local and regional providers in most areas, including our cost efficiencies and broad program offerings, our ability to enter into national and regional contracts with managed care organizations and insurance companies, and our ability to recruit and retain quality personnel.
Long-Term Relationships with Existing Customers. We believe our long-term, well-established relationships with communities and healthcare facilities enhance our ability to retain existing customers and win new contracts. AMR and EmCare have maintained relationships with their ten largest customers for an average of 29 and 16 years, respectively, and during that time have continually demonstrated an ability to meet and exceed contractual commitments.
Strong Financial Performance. One of the key factors our potential customers evaluate is financial stability. We believe the quality and breadth of our service offerings has allowed us to increase our net revenue at a faster rate than the market for emergency medical services. We believe our ability to demonstrate consistently strong financial performance will continue to differentiate our Company and provide a competitive advantage in winning new contracts and renewing existing contracts.
Focus on Risk Management. Our risk management initiatives are enhanced by the use of our professional liability claims database and comprehensive claims management. We analyze this data to demonstrate claim trends on a national, hospital, physician and procedure level, helping to manage and mitigate risk exposure. AMRs risk/safety program is aimed at reducing worker injuries through training and improved equipment, and increasing vehicle safety through the use of technology.
Investment in Core Technologies. We utilize technology as a means to enhance the quality, reduce the cost of our service offerings, more effectively manage risk and improve our profitability. AMR uses proprietary technology to improve chart documentation, determine transportation service levels and track response times and other data for hospitals. EmCare uses proprietary physician recruitment software to improve recruitment efficiency and retention rates.
Increase Revenue from Existing Customers. We believe our long track record of delivering excellent service and quality patient care, as well as the breadth of our services, creates opportunities for us to increase revenue from our existing customer base. We have established strategies aimed at assisting communities and facilities to manage their cost of emergency medical services.
Grow Our Customer Base. We believe we have a unique competency in the treatment, management and billing of episodic and unscheduled care. We believe our long operating history, significant scope and scale and leading market position provide us with new and expanded opportunities to grow our customer base.
Pursue Select Acquisition Opportunities. The emergency medical services industry is highly fragmented, with only a few large national providers, and presents opportunities for consolidation. We plan to pursue select acquisitions in our existing business segments, including acquisitions to enhance our presence in existing markets and our entry into new geographic markets. We will also explore the acquisition of complementary businesses and seek opportunities to expand the scope of services in which we can leverage our core competencies.
Utilize Technology to Differentiate Our Services and Improve Operating Efficiencies. We intend to continue to invest in technologies that broaden our services in the marketplace, improve patient care, enhance our billing efficiencies and increase our profitability.
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Continued Focus on Risk Management. We will continue to conduct aggressive risk management programs for loss prevention and early intervention. We will continue to develop and utilize clinical fail safes and use technology in our ambulances to reduce vehicular incidents.
Implement Cost Rationalization Initiatives. We will continue to rationalize our cost structure by aligning compensation with productivity, developing risk management initiatives that are focused on mitigating risk exposures, and eliminating costs in our national and regional corporate support structure.
As a participant in the healthcare industry, our operations and relationships with healthcare providers such as hospitals, other healthcare facilities and healthcare professionals are subject to extensive and increasing regulation by numerous federal and state government entities as well as local government agencies. Specifically, but without limitation, we are subject to the following laws and regulations.
Medicare, Medicaid and Other Government Reimbursement Programs
We derive a significant portion of our revenue from services rendered to beneficiaries of Medicare, Medicaid and other government-sponsored healthcare programs. For fiscal 2006, we received approximately 26% of our net revenue from Medicare and 5% from Medicaid. To participate in these programs, we must comply with stringent and often complex enrollment and reimbursement requirements from the federal and state governments. We are subject to governmental reviews and audits of our bills and claims for reimbursement. Retroactive adjustments to amounts previously reimbursed from these programs can and do occur on a regular basis as a result of these reviews and audits. In addition, these programs are subject to statutory and regulatory changes, administrative rulings, interpretations and determinations, all of which may materially increase or decrease the payments we receive for our services as well as affect the cost of providing services. In recent years, Congress has consistently attempted to curb federal spending on such programs.
Reimbursement to us typically is conditioned on our providing the correct procedure and diagnosis codes and properly documenting both the service itself and the medical necessity for the service. Incorrect or incomplete documentation and billing information, or the incorrect selection of codes for the level of service provided, could result in non-payment for services rendered or lead to allegations of billing fraud. Moreover, third party payors may disallow, in whole or in part, requests for reimbursement based on determinations that certain amounts are not reimbursable, they were for services provided that were not medically necessary, there was a lack of sufficient supporting documentation, or for a number of other reasons. Retroactive adjustments, recoupments or refund demands may change amounts realized from third party payors. Additional factors that could complicate our billing include:
· disputes between payors as to which party is responsible for payment,
· the difficulty of adherence to specific compliance requirements, diagnosis coding and various other procedures mandated by the government, and
· failure to obtain proper physician credentialing and documentation in order to bill governmental payors.
Due to the nature of our business and our participation in the Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement programs, we are involved from time to time in regulatory reviews, audits or investigations by government agencies of matters such as compliance with billing regulations and rules. We may be required to repay these agencies if a finding is made that we were incorrectly reimbursed, or we may lose eligibility for certain programs in the event of certain types of non-compliance. Delays and uncertainties in the reimbursement process adversely affect our level of accounts receivable, increase the overall cost of collection, and may adversely affect our working capital and cause us to incur additional borrowing costs. Unfavorable resolutions of pending or future regulatory reviews or investigations, either individually or in
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the aggregate, could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.
We establish an allowance for discounts applicable to Medicare, Medicaid and other third party payors and for doubtful accounts based on credit risk applicable to certain types of payors, historical trends, and other relevant information. We review our allowance for doubtful accounts on an ongoing basis and may increase or decrease such allowance from time to time, including in those instances when we determine that the level of effort and cost of collection of certain accounts receivable is unacceptable.
We believe that regulatory trends in cost containment will continue. We cannot assure you that we will be able to offset reduced operating margins through cost reductions, increased volume, the introduction of additional procedures or otherwise.
Ambulance Services Fee Schedule. In February 2002, the Health Care Financing Administration, now renamed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, issued the Medicare Ambulance Fee Schedule Final Rule, or Final Rule, that revised Medicare policy on the coverage of ambulance transport services, effective April 1, 2002. The Final Rule was the result of a mandate under the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, or BBA, to establish a national fee schedule for payment of ambulance transport services that would control increases in expenditures under Part B of the Medicare program, establish definitions for ambulance transport services that link payments to the type of services furnished, consider appropriate regional and operational differences and consider adjustments to account for inflation, among other provisions.
The Final Rule provided for a five-year phase-in of a national fee schedule, beginning April 1, 2002. Prior to that date, Medicare used a charge-based reimbursement system for ambulance transport services and reimbursed 80% of charges determined to be reasonable, subject to the limits fixed for the particular geographic area. The patient was responsible for co-pay amounts, deductibles and the remaining balance of the transport cost, if we did not accept the assigned reimbursement, and Medicare required us to expend reasonable efforts to collect the balance. In determining reasonable charges, Medicare considered and applied the lowest of various charge factors, including the actual charge, the customary charge, the prevailing charge in the same locality, the amount of reimbursement for comparable services, and the inflation-indexed charge limit.
On April 1, 2002, the Final Rule became effective. The Final Rule categorizes seven levels of ground ambulance services, ranging from basic life support to specialty care transport, and two categories of air ambulance services. Ground providers are paid based on a base rate conversion factor multiplied by the number of relative value units assigned to each level of transport, plus an additional amount for each mile of patient transport. The base rate conversion factor for services to Medicare patients is adjusted each year by the Consumer Price Index. Additional adjustments to the base rate conversion factor are included to recognize differences in relative practice costs among geographic areas, and higher transportation costs that may be incurred by ambulance providers in rural areas with low population density. The Final Rule requires ambulance providers to accept assignment on Medicare claims, which means a provider must accept Medicares allowed reimbursement rate as full payment. Medicare typically reimburses 80% of that rate and the remaining 20% is collectible from a secondary insurance or the patient. Originally, the Final Rule called for a five-year phase-in period to allow providers time to adjust to the new payment rates. The national fee schedule was to be phased in at 20% increments each year, with payments being made at 100% of the national fee schedule in 2006 and thereafter.
With the passage of the Medicare Modernization Act, temporary modifications were made to the amounts payable under the ambulance fee schedule in order to mitigate decreases in reimbursement in some regions caused by the Final Rule. The Medicare Modernization Act established regional fee schedules based on historic costs in each region. Effective July 1, 2004, in those regions where the regional fee schedule exceeds the national fee schedule, the regional fee schedule is blended with the national fee
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schedule on a temporary basis, until 2010. In addition to the regional fee schedule change, the Medicare Modernization Act included other provisions for additional reimbursement for ambulance transport services provided to Medicare patients. Among other relief, the Medicare Modernization Act provided for a 1% increase in reimbursement for urban transports and a 2% increase for rural transports for the remainder of the original phase-in period of the national ambulance fee schedule, through December 31, 2006.
We estimate that the impact of the ambulance service rate decreases under the national fee schedule, as modified by the provisions of the Medicare Modernization Act, resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2004 of approximately $11 million, resulted in an increase in AMRs net revenue of approximately $16 million during calendar year 2005, and resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue of approximately $17 million in 2006. Based upon the current Medicare transport mix, we expect a further decrease in our net revenue totaling approximately $2 million for the period 2007 through 2010. We cannot predict whether Congress may make further refinements and technical corrections to the law or pass a new cost containment statute in a manner and in a form that could adversely impact our business.
Local Ambulance Rate Regulation. State or local government regulations or administrative policies regulate rate structures in some states in which we provide ambulance transport services. For example, in certain service areas in which we are the exclusive provider of ambulance transport services, the community sets the rates for emergency ambulance services pursuant to an ordinance or master contract and may also establish the rates for general ambulance services that we are permitted to charge. We may be unable to receive ambulance service rate increases on a timely basis where rates are regulated or to establish or maintain satisfactory rate structures where rates are not regulated.
Medicare Physician Fee Schedule. Medicare pays for all physician services based upon a national fee schedule, or Fee Schedule, which contains a list of uniform rates. The payment rates under the Fee Schedule are determined based on: (1) national uniform relative value units for the services provided, (2) a geographic adjustment factor and (3) a conversion factor. Payment rates under the Fee Schedule are updated annually. The initial element in each years update calculation is the Medicare Economic Index, or MEI, which is a government index of practice cost inflation. The update is then adjusted up or down from the MEI based on a target-setting formula system called the Sustainable Growth Rate, or SGR. The SGR is a target rate of growth in spending for physician services which is intended to control the growth of Medicare expenditures for physicians services. The Fee Schedule update is adjusted to reflect the comparison of actual expenditures to target expenditures. Because one of the factors for calculating the SGR system is linked to the U.S. gross domestic product, the SGR formula may result in a negative payment update if growth in Medicare beneficiaries use of services exceeds GDP growth. Since 2002, the SGR formula has resulted in negative payment updates under the Fee Schedule which required Congress to take legislative action to reverse the scheduled payment cuts. In late 2006, Congress passed legislation to prevent a scheduled 5 percent cut in 2007 Medicare physician payments, and instead froze payment rates for one year. The Congressional Budget Office has predicted that Medicare physician payment rates would be reduced 10 percent in 2008 and the 2006 Medicare Trustees report predicts a total of nearly 40 percent in cuts by 2015. Unless Congress takes additional action in the future to modify or reform the mechanism by which the Fee Schedule payment rates are updated, significant reductions in Medicare reimbursement will continue to occur annually, and these reductions could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.
Medicare Reassignment. The Medicare program prohibits the reassignment of Medicare payments due to a physician or other healthcare provider to any other person or entity unless the billing arrangement between that physician or other healthcare provider and the other person or entity falls within an enumerated exception to the Medicare reassignment prohibition. Historically, there was no exception that allowed us to receive directly Medicare payments related to the services of independent contractor
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physicians. However, the Medicare Modernization Act amended the Medicare reassignment statute as of December 8, 2003 and now permits our independent contractor physicians to reassign their Medicare receivables to us under certain circumstances. In 2004, CMS promulgated regulations implementing this statutory change. The regulations impose two additional program integrity safeguard requirements on reassignments made under the independent contractor exception. These require that both the entity receiving payment and the physician be jointly and severally responsible for any Medicare overpayment to that entity; and the physician have unrestricted access to claims submitted by an entity for services provided by the physician. We have taken steps to ensure all reassignments by independent contractor physicians comply with these regulatory requirements.
Rules Applicable to Midlevel Practitioners. EmCare utilizes physician assistants and nurse practitioners, sometimes referred to collectively as midlevel practitioners, to provide care under the supervision of our physicians. State and federal laws require that such supervision be performed and documented using specific procedures. For example, in some states some or all of the midlevel practitioners chart entries must be countersigned. Under applicable Medicare rules, in certain cases, a midlevel practitioners services are reimbursed at a rate equal to 85% of the physician fee schedule amount and we do not bill separately for the supervising physicians services. However, when a midlevel practitioner assists a physician who is directly and personally involved in the patients care, we often bill for the services of the physician at the full physician fee schedule rates and do not bill separately for the midlevel practitioners services. We believe our billing and documentation practices related to our use of midlevel practitioners comply with applicable state and federal laws, but we cannot assure you that enforcement authorities will not find that our practices violate such laws.
Ambulance Rates Payable by Medicare HMOs. One of the changes made by ambulance fee schedule Final Rule was to require ambulance providers to accept assignment from Medicare and Medicare HMOs. Medicare HMOs are private insurance companies which operate managed care plans that enroll Medicare beneficiaries who elect to enroll in a plan in lieu of regular Medicare coverage. When a provider accepts assignment, it agrees to accept the rate established by Medicare as payment in full for services covered by Medicare or the Medicare HMO and to write off the balance of its charges. Prior to the implementation of the Final Rule, ambulance providers were not required to accept assignment and could obtain payment from Medicare patients or Medicare HMOs for the providers full charges, which typically are higher than the Medicare rate. When the requirement to accept assignment became effective on April 1, 2002, many Medicare HMOs continued to pay ambulance providers their full charges, even though they could have paid them the Medicare rate. Many Medicare HMOs subsequently have taken the position that the amount paid to such providers in excess of the Medicare rate constituted an overpayment that must be refunded by the provider. We have received such refund demands from some Medicare HMOs and, in order to minimize litigation costs, have agreed to partial repayment of amounts received from the plans in excess of the Medicare rate. We have no reason to believe that additional HMOs will make such demands, but we cannot assure you that there will be no further demands.
The SNF Prospective Payment System. Under the Medicare prospective payment system, or PPS, applicable to skilled nursing facilities (SNF), SNFs are financially responsible for some ancillary services, including certain ambulance transports, or PPS transports, rendered to certain of their Medicare patients. Ambulance companies must bill the SNF, rather than Medicare, for PPS transports, but may bill Medicare for other covered transports provided to the SNFs Medicare patients. Ambulance companies are responsible for obtaining sufficient information from the SNF to determine which transports are PPS transports and which ones may be billed to Medicare. The Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services, or the OIG, has issued two industry-wide audit reports indicating that, in many cases, SNFs do not provide, or ambulance companies and other ancillary service providers do not obtain, sufficient information to make this determination accurately. As a result, the OIG asserts that some PPS transports that should have been billed by ambulance providers to SNFs have
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been improperly billed to Medicare. The OIG has recommended that Medicare recoup the amounts paid to ancillary service providers, including ambulance companies, for such services. Although we believe AMR currently has procedures in place to correctly identify and bill for PPS transports, we cannot assure you that AMR will not be subject to such recoupments and other possible penalties.
Paramedic Intercepts. Medicare regulations permit ambulance transport providers to subcontract with other organizations for paramedic services. Generally, only the transport provider may bill Medicare, and the paramedic services subcontractor must receive any payment to which it is entitled from that provider. Based on these rules, in some jurisdictions we have established paramedic intercept arrangements in which we may provide paramedic services to a municipal or volunteer transport provider. Our subsidiary, AMR of South Dakota, previously entered into a settlement agreement with the United States government arising from allegations that we improperly billed Medicare for a small number of transports for which we performed paramedic intercept services, even though we were not the transport provider. Although we believe AMR currently has procedures in place to assure that we do not bill Medicare directly for paramedic intercept services we provide, we cannot assure you that enforcement agencies will not find that we have failed to comply with these requirements.
Patient Signatures. Medicare regulations require that providers obtain the signature of the patient or, if the patient is unable to provide a signature, the signature of a representative, prior to submitting a claim for payment from Medicare. An exception exists for situations where it is not reasonably possible to do so, provided that the reason for the exception is clearly documented. This requirement historically has been difficult for ambulance companies and other emergency medical services providers to meet, because even when the patient is competent, the exigency of the situation often makes it impracticable to obtain a signature. Although we believe AMR currently has procedures in place to assure that these signature requirements are met, we cannot assure you that enforcement agencies will not find that we have failed to comply with these requirements.
Physician Certification Statements. Under applicable Medicare rules, ambulance providers are required to obtain a certification of medical necessity from the ordering physician in order to bill Medicare for repetitive non-emergency transports provided to patients with chronic conditions, such as end-stage renal disease. For certain other non-emergency transports, ambulance providers are required to attempt to obtain a certification of medical necessity from a physician or certain other practitioners. In the event the provider is not able to obtain such certification within 21 days, it may submit a claim for the transport if it can document reasonable attempts to obtain the certification. Acceptable documentation includes any U.S. postal document (e.g., signed return receipt or Postal Service Proof of Service Form) showing that the ordering practitioner was sent a request for the certification. Although we believe AMR currently has procedures in place to assure we are in compliance with these requirements, we cannot assure you that enforcement agencies will not find that we have failed to comply.
Coordination of Benefits Rules. When our services are covered by multiple third party payors, such as a primary and a secondary payor, financial responsibility must be allocated among the multiple payors in a process known as coordination of benefits, or COB. The rules governing COB are complex, particularly when one of the payors is Medicare or another government program. Under these rules, in some cases Medicare or other government payors can be billed as a secondary payor only after recourse to a primary payor (e.g., a liability insurer) has been exhausted. In some instances, multiple payors may reimburse us an amount which, in the aggregate, exceeds the amount to which we are entitled. In such cases, we are obligated to process a refund. If we improperly bill Medicare or other government payors as the primary payor when that program should be billed as the secondary payor, or if we fail to process a refund when required, we may be subject to civil or criminal penalties. Although we believe we currently have procedures in place to assure that we comply with applicable COB rules, and that we process refunds when we receive overpayments, we cannot assure you that payors or enforcement agencies will not find that we have violated these requirements.
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Consequences of Noncompliance. In the event any of our billing and collection practices, including but not limited to those described above, violate applicable laws such as those described below, we could be subject to refund demands and recoupments. If our violations are deemed to be willful, knowing or reckless, we may be subject to civil and criminal penalties under the False Claims Act or other statutes, including exclusion from federal and state healthcare programs. To the extent that the complexity associated with billing for our services causes delays in our cash collections, we assume the financial risk of increased carrying costs associated with the aging of our accounts receivable as well as increased potential for bad debts which could have a material adverse effect on our revenue, provision for uncompensated care and cash flow.
Federal False Claims Act
Both federal and state government agencies have continued civil and criminal enforcement efforts as part of numerous ongoing investigations of healthcare companies, and their executives and managers. Although there are a number of civil and criminal statutes that can be applied to healthcare providers, a significant number of these investigations involve the federal False Claims Act. These investigations can be initiated not only by the government but also by a private party asserting direct knowledge of fraud. These qui tam whistleblower lawsuits may be initiated against any person or entity alleging such person or entity has knowingly or recklessly presented, or caused to be presented, a false or fraudulent request for payment from the federal government, or has made a false statement or used a false record to get a claim approved. Penalties for False Claims Act violations include fines ranging from $5,500 to $11,000 for each false claim, plus up to three times the amount of damages sustained by the federal government. A False Claims Act violation may provide the basis for exclusion from the federally-funded healthcare programs. In addition, some states have adopted similar insurance fraud, whistleblower and false claims provisions.
The government and some courts have taken the position that claims presented in violation of the various statutes, including the federal Anti-Kickback Statute and the Stark Law, described below, can be considered a violation of the federal False Claims Act based on the contention that a provider impliedly certifies compliance with all applicable laws, regulations and other rules when submitting claims for reimbursement.
Federal Anti-Kickback Statute
We are subject to the federal Anti-Kickback Statute. The Anti-Kickback Statute is broadly worded and prohibits the knowing and willful offer, payment, solicitation or receipt of any form of remuneration in return for, or to induce, (1) the referral of a person covered by Medicare, Medicaid or other governmental programs, (2) the furnishing or arranging for the furnishing of items or services reimbursable under Medicare, Medicaid or other governmental programs or (3) the purchasing, leasing or ordering or arranging or recommending purchasing, leasing or ordering of any item or service reimbursable under Medicare, Medicaid or other governmental programs. Certain federal courts have held that the Anti-Kickback Statute can be violated if one purpose of a payment is to induce referrals. Violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute can result in exclusion from Medicare, Medicaid or other governmental programs as well as civil and criminal penalties, including fines of up to $50,000 per violation and three times the amount of the unlawful remuneration. Imposition of any of these remedies could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. In addition to a few statutory exceptions, the OIG has published safe harbor regulations that outline categories of activities that are deemed protected from prosecution under the Anti-Kickback Statute provided all applicable criteria are met. The failure of a financial relationship to meet all of the applicable safe harbor criteria does not necessarily mean that the particular arrangement violates the Anti-Kickback Statute. In order to obtain additional clarification on arrangements that may not be subject to a statutory exception or may not satisfy
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the criteria of a safe harbor, Congress established a process under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 in which parties can seek an advisory opinion from the OIG.
We and others in the healthcare community have taken advantage of the advisory opinion process, and a number of advisory opinions have addressed issues that pertain to our various operations, such as discounted ambulance services being provided to skilled nursing facilities, patient co-payment responsibilities, compensation methodologies under a management services arrangement, and ambulance restocking arrangements. In a number of these advisory opinions the government concluded that such arrangements could be problematic if the requisite intent were present. Although advisory opinions are binding only on HHS and the requesting party or parties, when new advisory opinions are issued, regardless of the requestor, we review them and their application to our operations as part of our ongoing corporate compliance program and endeavor to make appropriate changes where we perceive the need to do so. See Corporate Compliance Program and Corporate Integrity Obligations.
Health facilities such as hospitals and nursing homes refer two categories of ambulance transports to us and other ambulance companies: (1) transports for which the facility must pay the ambulance company, and (2) transports which the ambulance company can bill directly to Medicare or other public or private payors. In Advisory Opinion 99-2, which we requested, the OIG addressed the issue of whether substantial contractual discounts provided to nursing homes on the transports for which the nursing homes are financially responsible may violate the Anti-Kickback Statute when the ambulance company also receives referrals of Medicare and other government-funded transports. The OIG opined that such discounts implicate the Anti-Kickback Statute if even one purpose of the discounts is to induce the referral of the transports paid for by Medicare and other federal programs. The OIG further indicated that a violation may exist even if there is no contractual obligation on the part of the facility to refer federally funded patients, and even if similar discounts are provided by other ambulance companies in the same marketplace. Following our receipt of this Advisory Opinion in March of 1999, we took steps to bring our contracts with health facilities into compliance with the OIGs views. In 2006, we entered into a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice and a Corporate Integrity Agreement to settle allegations that certain of our hospital and nursing home contracts in effect in Texas in periods prior to 2002 contained discounts in violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute. See Item 3, Legal Proceedings.
The OIG has also addressed potential violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute (as well as other risk areas) in its Compliance Program Guidance for Ambulance Suppliers. In addition to discount arrangements with health facilities, the OIG notes that arrangements between local governmental agencies that control 911 patient referrals and ambulance companies which receive such referrals may violate the Anti-Kickback Statute if the ambulance companies provide inappropriate remuneration in exchange for such referrals. Although we believe we have structured our arrangements with local agencies in a manner which complies with the Anti-Kickback Statute, we cannot assure you that enforcement agencies will not find that some of those arrangements violate that statute.
Fee-Splitting; Corporate Practice of Medicine
EmCare employs or contracts with physicians or physician-owned professional corporations to deliver services to our hospital customers and their patients. We frequently enter into management services contracts with these physicians and professional corporations pursuant to which we provide them with billing, scheduling and a wide range of other services, and they pay us for those services out of the fees they collect from patients and third-party payors. These activities are subject to various state laws that prohibit the practice of medicine by corporations and are intended to prevent unlicensed persons from interfering with or influencing the physicians professional judgment and the sharing of professional services income with nonprofessional or business interests. Activities other than those directly related to the delivery of healthcare may be considered an element of the practice of medicine in many states. Under the corporate practice of medicine restrictions of certain states, decisions and activities such as scheduling, contracting,
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setting rates and the hiring and management of non-clinical personnel may implicate the restrictions on corporate practice of medicine. In such states, we maintain long-term management contracts with affiliated physician groups, which employ or contract with physicians to provide physician services. We believe that we are in material compliance with applicable state laws relating to the corporate practice of medicine and fee-splitting. However, regulatory authorities or other parties, including our affiliated physicians, may assert that, despite these arrangements, we are engaged in the corporate practice of medicine or that our contractual arrangements with affiliated physician groups constitute unlawful fee-splitting. In this event, we could be subject to adverse judicial or administrative interpretations, to civil or criminal penalties, our contracts could be found legally invalid and unenforceable or we could be required to restructure our contractual arrangements with our affiliated physician groups.
Federal Stark Law
We are also subject to a provision of the Social Security Act, commonly known as the Stark Law. Where applicable, this law prohibits a physician from referring Medicare patients to an entity providing designated health services if the physician or a member of such physicians immediate family has a financial relationship with the entity, unless an exception applies. The penalties for violating the Stark Law include the denial of payment for services ordered in violation of the statute, mandatory refunds of any sums paid for such services, civil penalties of up to $15,000 for each violation and twice the dollar value of each such service and possible exclusion from future participation in the federally-funded healthcare programs. A person who engages in a scheme to circumvent the Stark Laws prohibitions may be fined up to $100,000 for each applicable arrangement or scheme. Although we believe that we have structured our agreements with physicians so as to not violate the Stark Law and related regulations, a determination of liability under the Stark Law could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.
Other Federal Healthcare Fraud and Abuse Laws
We are also subject to other federal healthcare fraud and abuse laws. Under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, there are two additional federal crimes that could have an impact on our business: Healthcare Fraud and False Statements Relating to Healthcare Matters. The Healthcare Fraud statute prohibits knowingly and recklessly executing a scheme or artifice to defraud any healthcare benefit program, including private payors. A violation of this statute is a felony and may result in fines, imprisonment and/or exclusion from government-sponsored programs. The False Statements Relating to Healthcare Matters statute prohibits knowingly and willfully falsifying, concealing or covering up a material fact by any trick, scheme or device or making any materially false, fictitious or fraudulent statement in connection with the delivery of or payment for healthcare benefits, items or services. A violation of this statute is a felony and may result in fines and/or imprisonment. This statute could be used by the government to assert criminal liability if a healthcare provider knowingly fails to refund an overpayment.
Another statute, commonly referred to as the Civil Monetary Penalties Law, imposes civil administrative sanctions for, among other violations, inappropriate billing of services to federally funded healthcare programs, inappropriately reducing hospital care lengths of stay for such patients, and employing or contracting with individuals or entities who are excluded from participation in federally funded healthcare programs.
Although we intend and endeavor to conduct our business in compliance with all applicable fraud and abuse laws, we cannot assure you that our arrangements or business practices will not be subject to government scrutiny or be found to violate applicable fraud and abuse laws.
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Administrative Simplification Provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
The Administrative Simplification Provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA, required the Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, to adopt standards to protect the privacy and security of health-related information. All healthcare providers were required to be compliant with the new federal privacy requirements enacted by HHS no later than April 14, 2003. We believe we have taken reasonable measures to comply with these requirements.
The HIPAA privacy requirements contain detailed requirements regarding the use and disclosure of individually identifiable health information. Improper use or disclosure of identifiable health information covered by the HIPAA privacy regulations can result in the following civil and criminal penalties: (1) civil money penalties for HIPAA privacy violations are $100 per incident, to a maximum of $25,000, per person, per year, per standard violated; (2) a person who knowingly and in violation of the HIPAA privacy regulations obtains individually identifiable health information or discloses such information to another person may be fined up to $50,000 and imprisoned up to one year, or both; (3) if the offense is committed under false pretenses, the fine may be up to $100,000 and imprisonment for up to five years; and (4) if the offense is done with the intent to sell, transfer or use individually identifiable health information for commercial advantage, personal gain or malicious harm, the fine may be up to $250,000 and imprisonment for up to ten years.
In addition to enacting the foregoing privacy requirements, HHS issued a final rule creating security requirements for healthcare providers and other covered entities on February 20, 2003. The final security rule required covered entities to meet specified standards by April 25, 2005. The security standards contained in the final rule do not require the use of specific technologies (e.g., no specific hardware or software is required), but instead require healthcare providers and other covered entities to comply with certain minimum security procedures in order to protect data integrity, confidentiality and availability. We believe we have taken reasonable steps to comply with these standards.
HIPAA also required HHS to adopt national standards establishing electronic transaction standards that all healthcare providers must use when submitting or receiving certain healthcare transactions electronically. Although these standards were to become effective October 2002, Congress extended the compliance deadline until October 2003 for organizations, such as ours, that submitted a request for an extension. We believe we have taken reasonable steps to comply with these standards.
Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
Some of our operations may be subject to compliance with certain provisions of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and comparable statutes in many states. Under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, a third party collection company is restricted in the methods it uses to contact consumer debtors and elicit payments with respect to placed accounts. Requirements under state collection agency statutes vary, with most requiring compliance similar to that required under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. We believe we are in substantial compliance with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and comparable state statutes where applicable.
State Fraud and Abuse Provisions
We are subject to state fraud and abuse statutes and regulations. Most of the states in which we operate have adopted a form of anti-kickback law, almost all of those states also have adopted self-referral laws and some have adopted separate false claims or insurance fraud provisions. The scope of these laws and the interpretations of them vary from state to state and are enforced by state courts and regulatory authorities, each with broad discretion. Generally, state laws cover all healthcare services and not just those covered under a federally-funded healthcare program. A determination of liability under such laws could result in fines and penalties and restrictions on our ability to operate in these jurisdictions.
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Although we intend and endeavor to conduct our business in compliance with all applicable fraud and abuse laws, we cannot assure you that our arrangements or business practices will not be subject to government scrutiny or be found to violate applicable fraud and abuse laws.
Licensing, Certification, Accreditation and Related Laws and Guidelines
In certain jurisdictions, changes in our ownership structure require pre- or post-notification to governmental licensing and certification agencies. Relevant laws and regulations may also require reapplication and approval to maintain or renew our operating authorities or require formal application and approval to continue providing services under certain government contracts. For example, in connection with our acquisition of AMR from Laidlaw, two of our subsidiaries were required to apply for state and local ambulance operating authority in New York. See Item 1A, Risk FactorsRisk Factors Related to Healthcare RegulationChanges in our ownership structure and operations require us to comply with numerous notification and reapplication requirements in order to maintain our licensure, certification or other authority to operate, and failure to do so, or an allegation that we have failed to do so, can result in payment delays, forfeiture of payment or civil and criminal penalties.
We and our affiliated physicians are subject to various federal, state and local licensing and certification laws and regulations and accreditation standards and other laws, relating to, among other things, the adequacy of medical care, equipment, personnel and operating policies and procedures. We are also subject to periodic inspection by governmental and other authorities to assure continued compliance with the various standards necessary for licensing and accreditations. Failure to comply with these laws and regulations could result in our services being found to be non reimbursable or prior payments being subject to recoupment, and can give rise to civil or criminal penalties. We have taken steps we believe were required to retain or obtain all requisite licensure and operating authorities. While we have made reasonable efforts to substantially comply with federal, state and local licensing and certification laws and regulations and standards as we interpret them, we cannot assure you that agencies that administer these programs will not find that we have failed to comply in some material respects.
Because we perform services at hospitals and other types of healthcare facilities, we and our affiliated physicians may be subject to laws which are applicable to those entities. For example, our operations are impacted by the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act of 1986, which prohibits patient dumping by requiring hospitals and hospital emergency departments and others to assess and stabilize any patient presenting to the hospitals emergency department or urgent care center requesting care for an emergency medical condition, regardless of the patients ability to pay. Many states in which we operate have similar state law provisions concerning patient dumping. Violations of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act of 1986 can result in civil penalties and exclusion of the offending physician from the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
In addition to the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act of 1986 and its state law equivalents, significant aspects of our operations are affected by state and federal statutes and regulations governing workplace health and safety, dispensing of controlled substances and the disposal of medical waste. Changes in ethical guidelines and operating standards of professional and trade associations and private accreditation commissions such as the American Medical Association and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations may also affect our operations. We believe our operations as currently conducted are in substantial compliance with these laws and guidelines.
EmCares professional liability insurance program, under which insurance is provided for most of our affiliated medical professionals and professional and corporate entities, is reinsured through our wholly-owned subsidiary, EMCA Insurance Company, Ltd. The activities associated with the business of insurance, and the companies involved in such activities, are closely regulated. Failure to comply with applicable laws and regulations can result in civil and criminal fines and penalties and loss of licensure.
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While we have made reasonable efforts to substantially comply with these laws and regulations, and utilize licensed insurance professionals where necessary and appropriate, we cannot assure you that we will not be found to have violated these laws and regulations in some material respects.
Antitrust Laws
Antitrust laws such as the Sherman Act and state counterparts prohibit anticompetitive conduct by separate competitors, such as price fixing or the division of markets. Our physician contracts include contracts with individual physicians and with physicians organized as separate legal professional entities (e.g., professional medical corporations). Antitrust laws may deem each such physician/entity to be separate, both from EmCare and from each other and, accordingly, each such physician/practice is subject to antitrust laws that prohibit anti-competitive conduct between or among separate legal entities or individuals. Although we believe we have structured our physician contracts to substantially comply with these laws, we cannot assure you that antitrust regulatory agencies or a court would not find us to be non-compliant.
Corporate Compliance Program and Corporate Integrity Obligations
We have developed a corporate compliance program in an effort to monitor compliance with federal and state laws and regulations applicable to healthcare entities, to ensure that we maintain high standards of conduct in the operation of our business and to implement policies and procedures so that employees act in compliance with all applicable laws, regulations and Company policies. Our program also attempts to monitor compliance with our Corporate Compliance Plan, which details our standards for: (1) business ethics, (2) compliance with applicable federal, state and local laws, and (3) business conduct. We have an Ethics and Compliance Department whose focus is to prevent, detect and mitigate regulatory risks. We attempt to accomplish this mission through:
· providing guidance, education and proper controls based on the regulatory risks associated with our business model and strategic plan,
· conducting internal audits and reviews to identify any improper practices that may be occurring,
· resolving regulatory matters, and
· enhancing the ethical culture and leadership of the organization.
The OIG has issued a series of Compliance Program Guidance documents in which the OIG has set out the elements of an effective compliance program. We believe our compliance program has been structured appropriately in light of this guidance. The primary compliance program components recommended by the OIG, all of which we have attempted to implement, include:
· formal policies and written procedures,
· designation of a Compliance Officer,
· education and training programs,
· internal monitoring and reviews,
· responding appropriately to detected misconduct,
· open lines of communication, and
· discipline and accountability.
Our corporate compliance program is based on the overall goal of promoting a culture that encourages employees to conduct activities with integrity, dignity and care for those we serve, and in
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compliance with all applicable laws and policies. Notwithstanding the foregoing, we audit compliance with our compliance program on a sample basis. Although such an approach reflects a reasonable and accepted approach in the industry, we cannot assure you that our program will detect and rectify all compliance issues in all markets and for all time periods.
As do other healthcare companies which operate effective compliance programs, from time to time we identify practices that may have resulted in Medicare or Medicaid overpayments or other regulatory issues. For example, we have previously identified situations in which we may have inadvertently utilized incorrect billing codes for some of the services we have billed to government programs such as Medicare or Medicaid, or billed for services which may not meet medical necessity guidelines. In such cases, if appropriate, it is our practice to disclose the issue to the affected government programs and to refund any resulting overpayments. The government usually accepts such disclosures and repayments without taking further enforcement action, and we generally expect that to be the case with respect to our past and future disclosures and repayments. However, it is possible that such disclosures or repayments will result in allegations by the government that we have violated the False Claims Act or other laws, leading to investigations and possibly civil or criminal enforcement actions.
When the United States government settles a case involving allegations of billing misconduct with a healthcare provider, it typically requires the provider to enter into a Corporate Integrity Agreement, or CIA, with the OIG for a set period of years. As a condition to settlement of government investigations, certain of our operations are subject to two separate CIAs with the OIG for the period July 2004 through September 2011. As part of these CIAs, AMR is required to establish and maintain a compliance program that includes the following elements: (1) a compliance officer and committee, (2) written standards including a code of conduct and policies and procedures, (3) general and specific training and education, (4) claims review by an independent review organization, (5) disclosure program for reporting of compliance issues or questions, (6) screening and removal processes for ineligible persons, (7) notification of government investigations or legal proceedings, (8) establishment of safeguards applicable to our contracting processes and (9) reporting of overpayments and other reportable events. In addition to these CIAs, one of our other operations recently completed the term of a three year CIA.
If we fail or if we are accused of failing to comply with the terms of our existing CIAs, we may be subject to additional litigation or other government actions, including being excluded from participating in the Medicare program and other federal healthcare programs. If we enter into any settlements with the U.S. government in the future we may be required to enter into additional CIAs.
See Item 1A, Risk FactorsRisk Factors Related to Healthcare Regulation for additional information related to regulatory matters.
Our website address is www.emsc.net. Under the Investor Relations heading on our website we make available, free of charge, our annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, registration statements, proxy statements, and amendments to those reports filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act) as soon as reasonably practicable after such forms are electronically filed with or furnished to the SEC. The SEC maintains an internet website, www.sec.gov, that contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC. Copies of materials that we file with the SEC can also be obtained at the SECs Public Reference Room at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549. Information on the operation of the SECs Public Reference Room can be obtained by calling the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330.
Copies of our key corporate governance documents, code of ethics, and charters of our audit, compensation, compliance, and corporate governance and nominating committees are also available on
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our website www.emsc.net under the headings Corporate Governance and Code of Business Conduct and Ethics.
The website addresses for our business segments are www.amr.net and www.emcare.com.
Information contained on these websites is not part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K and is not incorporated in this Report by reference.
You should carefully consider the factors described below, in addition to the other information set forth in this Annual Report, when evaluating us and our business. Additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us or that we currently believe to be immaterial may also materially and adversely affect our business operations. Any of the following risks could materially adversely affect our business, financial condition or results of operations.
Risk Factors Related to our Capital Structure
The interests of our controlling stockholders may conflict with interests of other stockholders.
Onex Partners LP and other entities affiliated with Onex Corporation, which we refer to together as the Onex entities, own all of our outstanding LP exchangeable units, which are exchangeable at any time, at the option of the holder, for our class B common stock. Our class A common stock has one vote per share, while our class B common stock has ten votes per share (reducing to one vote per share under certain limited circumstances), on all matters to be voted on by our stockholders. Prior to the exchange for class B common stock, the holders of the LP exchangeable units will be able to exercise the same voting rights with respect to Emergency Medical Services as they would have after the exchange through a share of class B special voting stock. As a result, the Onex entities control approximately 97% of our combined voting power. Accordingly, the Onex entities exercise a controlling influence over our business and affairs and have the power to determine all matters submitted to a vote of our stockholders, including the election of directors, the removal of directors, and approval of significant corporate transactions such as amendments to our certificate of incorporation, mergers and the sale of all or substantially all of our assets. The Onex entities could cause corporate actions to be taken even if the interests of these entities conflict with the interests of our other stockholders. This concentration of voting power could have the effect of deterring or preventing a change in control of Emergency Medical Services that might otherwise be beneficial to our stockholders. Gerald W. Schwartz, the Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Onex Corporation, owns shares representing a majority of the voting rights of the shares of Onex Corporation.
Onex has the voting power to elect our entire board of directors and to remove any director or our entire board without cause.
Although our current board includes independent directors, so long as the Onex entities control more than 50% of our combined voting power we are exempt from the NYSE rule that requires that a board be comprised of a majority of independent directors. Onex may have a controlling influence over our board, as Onex has sufficient voting power to elect the entire board, and our certificate of incorporation permits stockholders to remove directors at any time with or without cause.
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As a holding company, our only material asset is our equity interest in EMS LP and our only source of revenue is distributions from EMS LP. Because the Onex entities have the voting power to control our board of directors, they could influence us, as the general partner of EMS LP, to take action at the level of EMS LP that would benefit the Onex entities and conflict with the interest of our class A stockholders.
We are a holding company, and we have no material assets other than our direct ownership of a 22.7% equity interest in EMS LP. EMS LP is our only source of cash flow from operations. The Onex entities hold their equity interest in us through LP exchangeable units of EMS LP. As our controlling stockholder, Onex could limit distributions to us from EMS LP, and cause us to amend the EMS LP partnership agreement in a manner that would be beneficial to the Onex entities, as limited partners of EMS LP, and detrimental to our class A stockholders.
Any decrease in our distributions from EMS LP would have a negative effect on our cash flow. In order to minimize this conflict, the EMS LP partnership agreement requires that the partnership reimburse us for all of our expenses, including all employee costs and the expenses we incur as a public company, and provides further that no distributions may be made to the Onex entities, as the holders of LP exchangeable units, unless we pay an economically equivalent dividend to all holders of our common stock.
The EMS LP partnership agreement provides that amendments to that agreement may only be proposed and authorized by us, as the general partner. The Onex entities could seek to influence our boards action with respect to any amendment and we, as the general partner of EMS LP, owe a fiduciary duty to the limited partners of the partnership. Our board also owes a fiduciary duty to our common stockholders. Because of the inherent conflict of interest we face between our fiduciary duty to our stockholders, including our class A stockholders, and the Onex entities, as limited partners in EMS LP, the EMS LP partnership agreement provides that, if there is any conflict of interest of the limited partners and our common stockholders, our board may, in the exercise of its business judgment, cause us to act in the best interests of our stockholders.
We are party to a management agreement with an affiliate of Onex which permits us to increase substantially the fee we pay to that affiliate.
The management agreement between our subsidiaries, AMR and EmCare, and an Onex affiliate provides that the annual fee may be increased from $1.0 million to $2.0 million, which amount represents a significant percentage of our net income. Such an increase would be detrimental to the interest of our class A stockholders if the fee were disproportionate to the benefit we derive from the services the Onex affiliate performs. In order to minimize this potential conflict of interest, the agreement requires that any increase in the fee be approved by a majority of the members of the boards of AMR and EmCare who are not affiliated with Onex. As long as the Onex entities control more than 50% of our combined voting power, they may be able to exercise a controlling influence over the election of the boards of AMR and EmCare.
Our substantial indebtedness could adversely affect our financial condition and our ability to operate our business.
We have a substantial amount of debt. At December 31, 2006, we had total debt of $479.8 million, including $226.5 million of borrowings under the term loan portion of our senior secured credit facility, $250.0 million of our senior subordinated notes and $1.5 million of capital lease obligations. We had no borrowings outstanding under our revolving credit facility and we had $29.9 million of letters of credit outstanding. In addition, subject to restrictions in the indenture governing our notes and the credit agreement governing our senior secured credit facility, we may incur additional debt.
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Our substantial debt could have important consequences to you, including the following:
· it may be difficult for us to satisfy our obligations, including debt service requirements under our outstanding debt,
· our ability to obtain additional financing for working capital, capital expenditures, debt service requirements or other general corporate purposes may be impaired,
· we must use a significant portion of our cash flow for payments on our debt, which will reduce the funds available to us for other purposes,
· we are more vulnerable to economic downturns and adverse industry conditions and our flexibility to plan for, or react to, changes in our business or industry is more limited,
· our ability to capitalize on business opportunities and to react to competitive pressures, as compared to our competitors, may be compromised due to our high level of debt, and
· our ability to borrow additional funds or to refinance debt may be limited.
Furthermore, all of our debt under our senior secured credit facility bears interest at variable rates. If these rates were to increase significantly, our ability to borrow additional funds may be reduced and the risks related to our substantial debt would intensify.
Servicing our debt will require a significant amount of cash. Our ability to generate sufficient cash depends on numerous factors beyond our control, and we may be unable to generate sufficient cash flow to service our debt obligations.
Our business may not generate sufficient cash flow from operating activities. The cash we require to meet contractual obligations in 2007, including our debt service, will total approximately $87 million. Our ability to make payments on and to refinance our debt and to fund planned capital expenditures will depend on our ability to generate cash in the future. To some extent, this is subject to general economic, financial, competitive, legislative, regulatory and other factors that are beyond our control. Lower net revenues, or higher provision for uncollectibles, generally will reduce our cash flow.
If we are unable to generate sufficient cash flow to service our debt and meet our other commitments, we may need to refinance all or a portion of our debt, sell material assets or operations or raise additional debt or equity capital. We cannot assure you that we could effect any of these actions on a timely basis, on commercially reasonable terms or at all, or that these actions would be sufficient to meet our capital requirements. In addition, the terms of our existing or future debt agreements may restrict us from effecting any of these alternatives.
Restrictive covenants in our senior secured credit facility and the indenture governing our senior subordinated notes may restrict our ability to pursue our business strategies.
Our senior secured credit facility and the indenture governing our senior subordinated notes limit our ability, among other things, to:
· incur additional debt or issue certain preferred stock,
· pay dividends or make distributions to our stockholders,
· repurchase or redeem our capital,
· make investments,
· incur liens,
· make capital expenditures,
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· enter into transactions with our stockholders and affiliates,
· sell certain assets,
· acquire the assets of, or merge or consolidate with, other companies, and
· incur restrictions on the ability of our subsidiaries to make distributions or transfer assets to us.
Our ability to comply with these covenants may be affected by events beyond our control, and any material deviations from our forecasts could require us to seek waivers or amendments of covenants, alternative sources of financing or reductions in expenditures. We cannot assure you that such waivers, amendments or alternative financings could be obtained, or, if obtained, would be on terms acceptable to us.
In addition, the credit agreement governing our senior secured credit facility requires us to meet certain financial ratios and restricts our ability to make capital expenditures or prepay certain other debt. We may not be able to maintain these ratios, and the restrictions could limit our ability to plan for or react to market conditions or meet extraordinary capital needs or otherwise restrict corporate activities.
If a breach of any covenant or restriction contained in our financing agreements results in an event of default, those lenders could discontinue lending, accelerate the related debt (which would accelerate other debt) and declare all borrowings outstanding thereunder to be due and payable. In addition, the lenders could terminate any commitments they had made to supply us with additional funds. In the event of an acceleration of our debt, we may not have or be able to obtain sufficient funds to make any accelerated debt payments.
Our obligations under our senior secured credit facility are secured by substantially all of our assets.
Our obligations under our senior secured credit facility are secured by liens on substantially all of our assets, and the guarantees of our subsidiaries under our senior secured credit facility are secured by liens on substantially all of those subsidiaries assets. If we become insolvent or are liquidated, or if payment under our senior secured credit facility or of other secured obligations are accelerated, the lenders under our senior secured credit facility or the obligees with respect to the other secured obligations will be entitled to exercise the remedies available to a secured lender under applicable law and the applicable agreements and instruments, including the right to foreclose on all of our assets.
Risk Factors Related to Our Business
We could be subject to lawsuits for which we are not fully reserved.
In recent years, physicians, hospitals and other participants in the healthcare industry have become subject to an increasing number of lawsuits alleging medical malpractice and related legal theories such as negligent hiring, supervision and credentialing. Similarly, ambulance transport services may result in lawsuits concerning vehicle collisions and personal injuries, patient care incidents and employee job-related injuries. Some of these lawsuits may involve large claim amounts and substantial defense costs.
EmCare procures professional liability insurance coverage for most of its affiliated medical professionals and professional and corporate entities. Beginning January 1, 2002, this insurance coverage has been provided by affiliates of CNA Insurance Company, which then reinsure the entire program, primarily through EmCares wholly-owned subsidiary, EMCA Insurance Company, Ltd., or EMCA. Workers compensation coverage for EmCares employees and applicable affiliated medical professionals is provided under a similar structure for the period. From September 1, 2004 to the closing date of our acquisition of AMR and EmCare, AMR obtained insurance coverage for losses with respect to workers compensation, auto and general liability claims through Laidlaws captive insurance company. AMR currently has a self-insurance program fronted by an unrelated third party. AMR retains the risk of loss
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under this coverage. Under these insurance programs, we establish reserves, using actuarial estimates, for all losses covered under the policies. Moreover, in the normal course of our business, we are involved in lawsuits, claims, audits and investigations, including those arising out of our billing and marketing practices, employment disputes, contractual claims and other business disputes for which we may have no insurance coverage, and which are not subject to actuarial estimates. The outcome of these matters could have a material effect on our results of operations in the period when we identify the matter, and the ultimate outcome could have a material adverse effect on our financial position, results of operations, or cash flows.
Our liability to pay for EmCares insurance program losses is collateralized by funds held through EMCA and, to the extent these losses exceed the collateral and assets of EMCA or the limits of our insurance policies, will have to be funded by us. Should our AMR losses with respect to such claims exceed the collateral held by Laidlaw in connection with our self-insurance program or the limits of our insurance policies, we will have to fund such amounts. See Item 1, BusinessAmerican Medical ResponseInsurance and BusinessEmCareInsurance.
The reserves we establish with respect to our losses covered under our insurance programs are subject to inherent uncertainties.
In connection with our insurance programs, we establish reserves for losses and related expenses, which represent estimates involving actuarial and statistical projections, at a given point in time, of our expectations of the ultimate resolution and administration costs of losses we have incurred in respect of our liability risks. Insurance reserves inherently are subject to uncertainty. Our reserves are based on historical claims, demographic factors, industry trends, severity and exposure factors and other actuarial assumptions calculated by an independent actuary firm. The independent actuary firm performs studies of projected ultimate losses on an annual basis and provides quarterly updates to those projections. We use these actuarial estimates to determine appropriate reserves. Our reserves could be significantly affected if current and future occurrences differ from historical claim trends and expectations. While we monitor claims closely when we estimate reserves, the complexity of the claims and the wide range of potential outcomes may hamper timely adjustments to the assumptions we use in these estimates. Actual losses and related expenses may deviate, individually and in the aggregate, from the reserve estimates reflected in our financial statements. If we determine that our estimated reserves are inadequate, we will be required to increase reserves at the time of the determination, which would result in a reduction in our net income in the period in which the deficiency is determined. See Item 7, Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of OperationsCritical Accounting PoliciesClaims Liability and Professional Liability Reserves and note 16 of the notes to our financial statements included in Item 8.
Insurance coverage for some of our losses may be inadequate and may be subject to the credit risk of commercial insurance companies.
Some of our insurance coverage, for periods prior to the initiation of our self-insurance programs as well as portions of our current insurance coverage, is through various third party insurers. To the extent we hold policies to cover certain groups of claims, but either did not obtain sufficient insurance limits, did not buy an extended reporting period policy, where applicable, or the issuing insurance company is no longer viable, we may be responsible for losses attributable to such claims. Furthermore, for our losses that are insured or reinsured through commercial insurance companies, we are subject to the credit risk of those insurance companies. While we believe our commercial insurance company providers currently are creditworthy, there can be no assurance that such insurance companies will remain so in the future.
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We are subject to decreases in our revenue and profit margin under our fee-for-service contracts, where we bear the risk of changes in volume, payor mix and third party reimbursement rates.
In our fee-for-service arrangements, which generated approximately 83% of our net revenue for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006, we, or our affiliated physicians, collect the fees for transports and physician services. Under these arrangements, we assume financial risks related to changes in the mix of insured and uninsured patients and patients covered by government-sponsored healthcare programs, third party reimbursement rates and transports and patient volume. In some cases our revenue decreases if our volume or reimbursement decreases, but our expenses may not decrease proportionately. See Risk Factors Related to Healthcare RegulationChanges in the rates or methods of third party reimbursements may adversely affect our revenue and operations. In addition, fee-for-service contracts have less favorable cash flow characteristics in the start-up phase than traditional flat-rate contracts due to longer collection periods.
We collect a smaller portion of our fees for services rendered to uninsured patients than for services rendered to insured patients. Our credit risk related to services provided to uninsured individuals is exacerbated because the law requires communities to provide 911 emergency response services and hospital emergency departments to treat all patients presenting to the emergency department seeking care for an emergency medical condition regardless of their ability to pay. We also believe uninsured patients are more likely to seek care at hospital emergency departments because they frequently do not have a primary care physician with whom to consult.
We may not be able to successfully recruit and retain physicians and other healthcare professionals with the qualifications and attributes desired by us and our customers.
Our ability to recruit and retain affiliated physicians and other healthcare professionals significantly affects our performance under our contracts. In the recent past, our customer hospitals have increasingly demanded a greater degree of specialized skills, training and experience in the healthcare professionals providing services under their contracts with us. This decreases the number of healthcare professionals who may be permitted to staff our contracts. Moreover, because of the scope of the geographic and demographic diversity of the hospitals and other facilities with which we contract, we must recruit healthcare professionals, and particularly physicians, to staff a broad spectrum of contracts. We have had difficulty in the past recruiting physicians to staff contracts in some regions of the country and at some less economically advantaged hospitals. Moreover, we compete with other entities to recruit and retain qualified physicians and other healthcare professionals to deliver clinical services. Our future success in retaining and winning new hospital contracts depends on our ability to recruit and retain healthcare professionals to maintain and expand our operations.
Our non-compete agreements and other restrictive covenants involving physicians may not be enforceable.
We have contracts with physicians and professional corporations in many states. Some of these contracts, as well as our contracts with hospitals, include provisions preventing these physicians and professional corporations from competing with us both during and after the term of our relationship with them. The law governing non-compete agreements and other forms of restrictive covenants varies from state to state. Some states are reluctant to strictly enforce non-compete agreements and restrictive covenants applicable to physicians. There can be no assurance that our non-compete agreements related to affiliated physicians and professional corporations will not be successfully challenged as unenforceable in certain states. In such event, we would be unable to prevent former affiliated physicians and professional corporations from competing with us, potentially resulting in the loss of some of our hospital contracts.
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We are required to make significant capital expenditures for our ambulance services business in order to remain competitive.
Our capital expenditure requirements primarily relate to maintaining and upgrading our vehicle fleet and medical equipment to serve our customers and remain competitive. The aging of our vehicle fleet requires us to make regular capital expenditures to maintain our current level of service. Our capital expenditures totaled $60.4 million in the year ended December 31, 2006, and $48.9 million in the eleven months ended December 31, 2005. In addition, changing competitive conditions or the emergence of any significant advances in medical technology could require us to invest significant capital in additional equipment or capacity in order to remain competitive. If we are unable to fund any such investment or otherwise fail to invest in new vehicles or medical equipment, our business, financial condition or results of operations could be materially and adversely affected.
We depend on our senior management and may not be able to retain those employees or recruit additional qualified personnel.
We depend on our senior management. The loss of services of any of the members of our senior management could adversely affect our business until a suitable replacement can be found. There may be a limited number of persons with the requisite skills to serve in these positions, and we cannot assure you that we would be able to identify or employ such qualified personnel on acceptable terms.
Our revenue would be adversely affected if we lose existing contracts.
A significant portion of our growth historically has resulted from increases in the number of emergency and non-emergency transports, and the number of patient visits and fees for services we provide under existing contracts, and the addition of new contracts. Substantially all of our net revenue in the twelve months ended December 31, 2006 was generated under contracts, including exclusive contracts that accounted for approximately 87% of our fiscal 2006 net revenue. Our contracts with hospitals generally have terms of three years and the term of our contracts with communities to provide 911 services generally ranges from three to five years. Most of our contracts are terminable by either of the parties upon notice of as little as 30 days. Any of our contracts may not be renewed or, if renewed, may contain terms that are not as favorable to us as our current contracts. We cannot assure you that we will be successful in retaining our existing contracts or that any loss of contracts would not have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. Furthermore, certain of our contracts will expire during each fiscal period, and we may be required to seek renewal of these contracts through a formal bidding process that often requires written responses to a Request for Proposal (RFP). We cannot assure you that we will be successful in retaining such contracts or that we will retain them on terms that are as favorable as present terms.
We may not accurately assess the costs we will incur under new contracts.
Our new contracts increasingly involve a competitive bidding process. When we obtain new contracts, we must accurately assess the costs we will incur in providing services in order to realize adequate profit margins and otherwise meet our financial and strategic objectives. Increasing pressures from healthcare payors to restrict or reduce reimbursement rates at a time when the costs of providing medical services continue to increase make assessing the costs associated with the pricing of new contracts, as well as maintenance of existing contracts, more difficult. In addition, integrating new contracts, particularly those in new geographic locations, could prove more costly, and could require more management time, than we anticipate. Our failure to accurately predict costs or to negotiate an adequate profit margin could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.
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The high level of competition in our segments of the market for emergency medical services could adversely affect our contract and revenue base.
AMR. The market for providing ambulance transport services to municipalities, other healthcare providers and third party payors is highly competitive. In providing ambulance transport services, we compete with governmental entities (including cities and fire districts), hospitals, local and volunteer private providers, and with several large national and regional providers, such as Rural/Metro Corporation, Southwest Ambulance and Acadian Ambulance. In many communities, our most important competitors are the local fire departments, which in many cases have acted traditionally as the first response providers during emergencies, and have been able to expand their scope of services to include emergency ambulance transport and do not wish to give up their franchises to a private competitor.
EmCare. The market for providing outsourced physician staffing and related management services to hospitals and clinics is highly competitive. Such competition could adversely affect our ability to obtain new contracts, retain existing contracts and increase or maintain profit margins. We compete with both national and regional enterprises such as Team Health, Sterling Healthcare, The Schumacher Group and National Emergency Services Healthcare Group, some of which may have greater financial and other resources available to them, greater access to physicians and/or greater access to potential customers. We also compete against local physician groups and self-operated hospital emergency departments for satisfying staffing and scheduling needs.
Our business depends on numerous complex information systems, and any failure to successfully maintain these systems or implement new systems could materially harm our operations.
We depend on complex, integrated information systems and standardized procedures for operational and financial information and our billing operations. We may not have the necessary resources to enhance existing information systems or implement new systems where necessary to handle our volume and changing needs. Furthermore, we may experience unanticipated delays, complications and expenses in implementing, integrating and operating our systems, including the integration of our AMR and EmCare systems. Any interruptions in operations during periods of implementation would adversely affect our ability to properly allocate resources and process billing information in a timely manner, which could result in customer dissatisfaction and delayed cash flow. We also use the development and implementation of sophisticated and specialized technology to differentiate our services from our competitors and improve our profitability. The failure to successfully implement and maintain operational, financial and billing information systems could have an adverse effect on our ability to obtain new business, retain existing business and maintain or increase our profit margins.
If we fail to implement our business strategy, our financial performance and our growth could be materially and adversely affected.
Our future financial performance and success are dependent in large part upon our ability to implement our business strategy successfully. Our business strategy envisions several initiatives, including increasing revenue from existing customers, growing our customer base, pursuing select acquisitions, implementing cost rationalization initiatives, focusing on risk mitigation and utilizing technology to differentiate our services and improve profitability. We may not be able to implement our business strategy successfully or achieve the anticipated benefits of our business plan. If we are unable to do so, our long-term growth and profitability may be adversely affected. Even if we are able to implement some or all of the initiatives of our business plan successfully, our operating results may not improve to the extent we anticipate, or at all.
Implementation of our business strategy could also be affected by a number of factors beyond our control, such as increased competition, legal developments, government regulation, general economic conditions or increased operating costs or expenses. In addition, to the extent we have misjudged the
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nature and extent of industry trends or our competition, we may have difficulty in achieving our strategic objectives. Any failure to implement our business strategy successfully may adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations and thus our ability to service our debt. In addition, we may decide to alter or discontinue certain aspects of our business strategy at any time.
A successful challenge by tax authorities to our treatment of certain physicians as independent contractors could require us to pay past taxes and penalties.
As of December 31, 2006, we contracted with approximately 1,300 physicians as independent contractors to fulfill our contractual obligations to customers. Because we treat them as independent contractors rather than as employees, we do not (i) withhold federal or state income or other employment related taxes from the compensation that we pay to them, (ii) make federal or state unemployment tax or Federal Insurance Contributions Act payments (except as described below), (iii) provide workers compensation insurance with respect to such affiliated physicians (except in states that require us to do so even for independent contractors), or (iv) allow them to participate in benefits and retirement programs available to employed physicians. Our contracts with our independent contractor physicians obligate these physicians to pay these taxes and other costs. Whether these physicians are properly classified as independent contractors depends upon the facts and circumstances of our relationship with them. It is possible that the nature of our relationship with these physicians would support a challenge to our classification of them. If such a challenge by federal or state taxing authorities were successful, and the physicians at issue were instead treated as employees, we could be adversely affected and liable for past taxes and penalties to the extent that the physicians did not fulfill their contractual obligations to pay those taxes. Under current federal tax law, however, even if our treatment were successfully challenged, if our current treatment were found to be consistent with a long-standing practice of a significant segment of our industry and we meet certain other requirements, it is possible (but not certain) that our treatment of the physicians would qualify under a safe harbor and, consequently, we would be protected from the imposition of past taxes and penalties. In the recent past, however, there have been proposals to eliminate the safe harbor and similar proposals could be made in the future.
We may make acquisitions which could divert the attention of management and which may not be integrated successfully into our existing business.
We may pursue acquisitions to increase our market penetration, enter new geographic markets and expand the scope of services we provide. We cannot assure you that we will identify suitable acquisition candidates, that acquisitions will be completed on acceptable terms, that our due diligence process will uncover all potential liabilities or issues affecting our integration process, or that we will be able to integrate successfully the operations of any acquired business into our existing business. Furthermore, acquisitions into new geographic markets and services may require us to comply with new and unfamiliar legal and regulatory requirements, which could impose substantial obligations on us and our management, cause us to expend additional time and resources, and increase our exposure to penalties or fines for non-compliance with such requirements. The acquisitions could be of significant size and involve operations in multiple jurisdictions. The acquisition and integration of another business would divert management attention from other business activities. This diversion, together with other difficulties we may incur in integrating an acquired business, could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. In addition, we may borrow money or issue capital stock to finance acquisitions. Such borrowings might not be available on terms as favorable to us as our current borrowing terms and may increase our leverage, and the issuance of capital stock could dilute the interests of our stockholders.
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If Laidlaw is unwilling or unable to satisfy any indemnification claims made by us pursuant to the purchase agreements relating to the acquisition of AMR and EmCare, we will be forced to satisfy such claims ourselves.
Laidlaw has agreed to indemnify us for certain claims or legal actions brought against us arising out of the operations of AMR and EmCare prior to the closing date of the acquisition. If we make a claim against Laidlaw, and Laidlaw is unwilling or unable to satisfy such claim, we would be required to satisfy the claim ourselves and, as a result, our financial condition may be adversely affected.
Many of our employees are represented by labor unions and any work stoppage could adversely affect our business.
Approximately 48% of AMRs employees are represented by 42 collective bargaining agreements. Twenty-five of these collective bargaining agreements, representing approximately 3,700 employees, are subject to renegotiation in 2007. Although we believe our relations with our employees are good, we cannot assure you that we will be able to negotiate a satisfactory renewal of these collective bargaining agreements or that our employee relations will remain stable.
Risk Factors Related to Healthcare Regulation
We conduct business in a heavily regulated industry and if we fail to comply with these laws and government regulations, we could incur penalties or be required to make significant changes to our operations.
The healthcare industry is heavily regulated and closely scrutinized by federal, state and local governments. Comprehensive statutes and regulations govern the manner in which we provide and bill for services, our contractual relationships with our physicians and customers, our marketing activities and other aspects of our operations. Failure to comply with these laws can result in civil and criminal penalties such as fines, damages and exclusion from the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The risk of our being found in violation of these laws and regulations is increased by the fact that many of them have not been fully interpreted by the regulatory authorities or the courts, and their provisions are sometimes open to a variety of interpretations. Any action against us for violation of these laws or regulations, even if we successfully defend against it, could cause us to incur significant legal expenses and divert our managements attention from the operation of our business.
Our practitioners and our customers are also subject to ethical guidelines and operating standards of professional and trade associations and private accreditation agencies. Compliance with these guidelines and standards is often required by our contracts with our customers or to maintain our reputation.
The laws, regulations and standards governing the provision of healthcare services may change significantly in the future. We cannot assure you that any new or changed healthcare laws, regulations or standards will not materially adversely affect our business. We cannot assure you that a review of our business by judicial, law enforcement, regulatory or accreditation authorities will not result in a determination that could adversely affect our operations.
We are subject to comprehensive and complex laws and rules that govern the manner in which we bill and are paid for our services by third party payors, and the failure to comply with these rules, or allegations that we have failed to do so, can result in civil or criminal sanctions, including exclusion from federal and state healthcare programs.
Like most healthcare providers, the majority of our services are paid for by private and governmental third party payors, such as Medicare and Medicaid. These third party payors typically have differing and complex billing and documentation requirements that we must meet in order to receive payment for our services. Reimbursement to us is typically conditioned on our providing the correct procedure and diagnostic codes and properly documenting the services themselves, including the level of service provided, the medical necessity for the services, and the identity of the practitioner who provided the service.
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We must also comply with numerous other laws applicable to our documentation and the claims we submit for payment, including but not limited to (1) coordination of benefits rules that dictate which payor we must bill first when a patient has potential coverage from multiple payors; (2) requirements that we obtain the signature of the patient or patient representative, when possible, or document why we are unable to do so, prior to submitting a claim; (3) requirements that we make repayment to any payor which pays us more than the amount to which we are entitled; (4) requirements that we bill a hospital or nursing home, rather than Medicare, for certain ambulance transports provided to Medicare patients of such facilities; (5) reassignment rules governing our ability to bill and collect professional fees on behalf of our physicians; (6) requirements that our electronic claims for payment be submitted using certain standardized transaction codes and formats; and (7) laws requiring us to handle all health and financial information of our patients in a manner that complies with specified security and privacy standards. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersMedicare, Medicaid and Other Government Reimbursement Programs.
Governmental and private third party payors and other enforcement agencies carefully audit and monitor our compliance with these and other applicable rules, and in some cases in the past have found that we were not in compliance. We have received in the past, and expect to receive in the future, repayment demands from third party payors based on allegations that our services were not medically necessary, were billed at an improper level, or otherwise violated applicable billing requirements. See Item 3, Legal Proceedings. Our failure to comply with the billing and other rules applicable to us could result in non-payment for services rendered or refunds of amounts previously paid for such services. In addition, non-compliance with these rules may cause us to incur civil and criminal penalties, including fines, imprisonment and exclusion from government healthcare programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, under a number of state and federal laws. These laws include the federal False Claims Act, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 and other provisions of federal, state and local law.
In addition, from time to time we self-identify practices that may have resulted in Medicare or Medicaid overpayments or other regulatory issues. For example, we have previously identified situations in which we may have inadvertently utilized incorrect billing codes for some of the services we have billed to government programs such as Medicare or Medicaid. In such cases, if appropriate, it is our practice to disclose the issue to the affected government programs and to refund any resulting overpayments. Although the government usually accepts such disclosures and repayments without taking further enforcement action, it is possible that such disclosures or repayments will result in allegations by the government that we have violated the False Claims Act or other laws, leading to investigations and possibly civil or criminal enforcement actions. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersCorporate Compliance Program and Corporate Integrity Obligations.
If our operations are found to be in violation of these or any of the other laws which govern our activities, any resulting penalties, damages, fines or other sanctions could adversely affect our ability to operate our business and our financial results. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersFederal False Claims Act and BusinessOther Healthcare Fraud and Abuse Laws.
Changes in the rates or methods of third party reimbursements may adversely affect our revenue and operations.
We derive a majority of our revenue from direct billings to patients and third party payors such as Medicare, Medicaid and private health insurance companies. As a result, any changes in the rates or methods of reimbursement for the services we provide could have a significant adverse impact on our revenue and financial results.
Government funding for healthcare programs is subject to statutory and regulatory changes, administrative rulings, interpretations of policy and determinations by intermediaries and governmental funding restrictions, all of which could materially impact program coverage and reimbursements for both
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ambulance and physician services. In recent years, Congress has consistently attempted to curb spending on Medicare, Medicaid and other programs funded in whole or part by the federal government. State and local governments have also attempted to curb spending on those programs for which they are wholly or partly responsible. This has resulted in cost containment measures such as the imposition of new fee schedules that have lowered reimbursement for some of our services and restricted the rate of increase for others, and new utilization controls that limit coverage of our services. For example, we estimate that the impact of a national fee schedule promulgated in 2002, as modified by subsequent legislation, resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue for fiscal 2004 of approximately $11 million, resulted in an increase in AMRs net revenue of approximately $16 million for calendar 2005, and resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue of approximately $17 million in 2006. Based upon the current Medicare transport mix, we expect a further decrease in our net revenue totaling approximately $2 million for the period 2007 through 2010. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersMedicare, Medicaid and Other Government Reimbursement Programs.
In addition, state and local government regulations or administrative policies regulate ambulance rate structures in some jurisdictions in which we conduct transport services. We may be unable to receive ambulance service rate increases on a timely basis where rates are regulated, or to establish or maintain satisfactory rate structures where rates are not regulated.
We believe that regulatory trends in cost containment will continue. We cannot assure you that we will be able to offset reduced operating margins through cost reductions, increased volume, the introduction of additional procedures or otherwise. In addition, we cannot assure you that federal, state and local governments will not impose reductions in the fee schedules or rate regulations applicable to our services in the future. Any such reductions could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.
If current or future laws or regulations force us to restructure our arrangements with physicians, professional corporations and hospitals, we may incur additional costs, lose contracts and suffer a reduction in net revenue under existing contracts, and we may need to refinance our debt or obtain debt holder consent.
A number of laws bear on our contractual relationships with our physicians. There is a risk that state authorities in some jurisdictions may find that these contractual relationships violate laws prohibiting the corporate practice of medicine and fee-splitting prohibitions. These laws prohibit the practice of medicine by general business corporations and are intended to prevent unlicensed persons or entities from interfering with or inappropriately influencing the physicians professional judgment. They may also prevent the sharing of professional services income with non-professional or business interests. From time to time, including recently, we have been involved in litigation in which private litigants have raised these issues. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersFee-Splitting; Corporate Practice of Medicine.
Our physician contracts include contracts with individual physicians and with physicians organized as separate legal professional entities (e.g., professional medical corporations). Antitrust laws may deem each such physician/entity to be separate, both from EmCare and from each other and, accordingly, each such physician/practice is subject to a wide range of laws that prohibit anti-competitive conduct between or among separate legal entities or individuals. A review or action by regulatory authorities or the courts could force us to terminate or modify our contractual relationships with physicians and affiliated medical groups or revise them in a manner that could be materially adverse to our business. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersAntitrust Laws.
Various licensing and certification laws, regulations and standards apply to us, our affiliated physicians and our relationships with our affiliated physicians. Failure to comply with these laws and regulations could result in our services being found to be non-reimbursable or prior payments being subject to recoupment, and can give rise to civil or criminal penalties. We are pursuing steps we believe we must take to retain or obtain all requisite licensure and operating authorities. While we have made
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reasonable efforts to substantially comply with federal, state and local licensing and certification laws and regulations and standards as we interpret them, we cannot assure you that agencies that administer these programs will not find that we have failed to comply in some material respects.
EmCares professional liability insurance program, under which insurance is provided for most of our affiliated medical professionals and professional and corporate entities, is reinsured through our wholly-owned subsidiary, EMCA Insurance Company, Ltd. The activities associated with the business of insurance, and the companies involved in such activities, are closely regulated. Failure to comply with the laws and regulations can result in civil and criminal fines and penalties and loss of licensure. While we have made reasonable efforts to substantially comply with these laws and regulations, and utilize licensed insurance professionals where necessary and appropriate, we cannot assure you that we will not be found to have violated these laws and regulations in some material respects.
Adverse judicial or administrative interpretations could result in a finding that we are not in compliance with one or more of these laws and rules that affect our relationships with our physicians.
These laws and rules, and their interpretations, may also change in the future. Any adverse interpretations or changes could force us to restructure our relationships with physicians, professional corporations or our hospital customers, or to restructure our operations. This could cause our operating costs to increase significantly. A restructuring could also result in a loss of contracts or a reduction in revenue under existing contracts. Moreover, if we are required to modify our structure and organization to comply with these laws and rules, our financing agreements may prohibit such modifications and require us to obtain the consent of the holders of such debt or require the refinancing of such debt.
Our contracts with healthcare facilities and marketing practices are subject to the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, and we recently entered into a settlement for alleged violations of that statute.
We are subject to the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, which prohibits the knowing and willful offer, payment, solicitation or receipt of any form of remuneration in return for, or to induce, the referral of business or ordering of services paid for by Medicare or other federal programs. Remuneration potentially includes discounts and in-kind goods or services, as well as cash. Certain federal courts have held that the Anti-Kickback Statute can be violated if one purpose of a payment is to induce referrals. Violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute can result in imprisonment, civil or criminal fines or exclusion from Medicare and other governmental programs.
In 1999, the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services, or the OIG, issued an Advisory Opinion indicating that discounts provided to health facilities on the transports for which they are financially responsible potentially violate the Anti-Kickback Statute when the ambulance company also receives referrals of Medicare and other government-funded transports from the facility. The OIG has clarified that not all discounts violate the Anti-Kickback Statute, but that the statute may be violated if part of the purpose of the discount is to induce the referral of the transports paid for by Medicare or other federal programs, and the discount does not meet certain safe harbor conditions. In the Advisory Opinion and subsequent pronouncements, the OIG has provided guidance to ambulance companies to help them avoid unlawful discounts. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersFederal Anti-Kickback Statute.
Like other ambulance companies, we have provided discounts to our healthcare facility customers (nursing home and hospital) in certain circumstances. We have attempted to comply with applicable law when such discounts are provided. However, the government alleged that certain of our hospital and nursing home contracts in effect in Texas in periods prior to 2002 contained discounts in violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, and in 2006 we entered into a settlement with the government regarding these allegations. The settlement included a CIA.
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There can be no assurance that other investigations or legal action related to our contracting practices will not be pursued against AMR in other jurisdictions or for different time frames. See Item 1, BusinessAmerican Medical ResponseLegal Matters. If we are found to have violated the Anti-Kickback Statute, we may be subject to civil or criminal penalties, including exclusion from the Medicare or Medicaid programs, or may be required to enter into settlement agreements with the government to avoid such sanctions. Typically, such settlement agreements require substantial payments to the government in exchange for the government to release its claims, and may also require us to enter into a CIA. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersCorporate Compliance Program and Corporate Integrity Obligations.
In addition to AMRs contracts with healthcare facilities, other marketing practices or transactions entered into by AMR and EmCare may implicate the Anti-Kickback Statute. Although we have attempted to structure our past and current marketing initiatives and business relationships to comply with the Anti-Kickback Statute, we cannot assure you that the OIG or other authorities will not find that our marketing practices and relationships violate the statute.
Changes in our ownership structure and operations require us to comply with numerous notification and reapplication requirements in order to maintain our licensure, certification or other authority to operate, and failure to do so, or an allegation that we have failed to do so, can result in payment delays, forfeiture of payment or civil and criminal penalties.
We and our affiliated physicians are subject to various federal, state and local licensing and certification laws with which we must comply in order to maintain authorization to provide, or receive payment for, our services. For example, Medicare and Medicaid require that we complete and periodically update enrollment forms in order to obtain and maintain certification to participate in programs. Compliance with these requirements is complicated by the fact that they differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and in some cases are not uniformly applied or interpreted even within the same jurisdiction. Failure to comply with these requirements can lead not only to delays in payment and refund requests, but in extreme cases can give rise to civil or criminal penalties.
In certain jurisdictions, changes in our ownership structure require pre- or post-notification to governmental licensing and certification agencies, or agencies with which we have contracts. Relevant laws in some jurisdictions may also require re-application or re-enrollment and approval to maintain or renew our licensure, certification, contracts or other operating authority. The change in corporate structure and ownership in connection with our initial public offering required us to give notice, re-enroll or make other applications for authority to continue operating in various jurisdictions or to continue receiving payment from their Medicaid or other payment programs.
While we have made reasonable efforts to substantially comply with these requirements, we cannot assure you that the agencies that administer these programs or have awarded us contracts will not find that we have failed to comply in some material respects. A finding of non-compliance and any resulting payment delays, refund demands or other sanctions could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.
If we fail to comply with the terms of our settlement agreements with the government, we could be subject to additional litigation or other governmental actions which could be harmful to our business.
In the last four years, we have entered into five settlement agreements with the United States government. In June 2002, one of our subsidiaries, AMR of Massachusetts, entered into a settlement agreement to resolve a number of allegations, including allegations related to billing and documentation practices. In February 2003, another subsidiary, AMR of South Dakota, entered into a settlement agreement to resolve allegations that it incorrectly billed for transports performed by other providers when an AMR paramedic accompanied the patient during transport, and that it billed for certain non-emergency
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transports using emergency codes. In July 2004, our subsidiary, American Medical Response West, entered into a settlement agreement in connection with billing matters related to emergency transports and specialized services. In August 2004, AMR entered into a settlement agreement on behalf of a subsidiary, Regional Emergency Services LP, or RES, to resolve allegations of violations of the False Claims Act by RES and a hospital system based on the absence of certificates of medical necessity and other non-compliant billing practices. In September 2006, AMR entered into a settlement agreement to resolve allegations that AMR subsidiaries provided discounts to healthcare facilities in Texas in periods prior to 2002 in violation of the Federal Anti-Kickback Statute. See Item 3, Legal Proceedings.
As part of the settlement AMR West entered into with the government, we entered into a Corporate Integrity Agreement, or CIA, which is still in effect. Pursuant to this CIA, we are required to establish and maintain a compliance program which includes, among other elements, the appointment of a compliance officer and committee, review by an independent review organization, and reporting of overpayments and other reportable events. In connection with the September 2006 settlement for AMR, we also entered into a CIA which requires us to maintain a compliance program which includes the training of employees and safeguards involving our contracting process nationwide (including tracking of contractual arrangements in Texas). AMR of Massachusetts entered into a CIA in connection with its June 2002 settlement, the term of which has expired. See Item 1, BusinessRegulatory MattersCorporate Compliance Program and Corporate Integrity Obligations.
We cannot assure you that the CIAs or the compliance program we have initiated has prevented, or will prevent, any repetition of the conduct or allegations that were the subject of these settlement agreements, or that the government will not raise similar allegations in other jurisdictions or for other periods of time. If such allegations are raised, or if we fail to comply with the terms of the CIAs, we may be subject to fines and other contractual and regulatory remedies specified in the CIAs or by applicable laws, including exclusion from the Medicare program and other federal and state healthcare programs. Such actions could have a material adverse effect on the conduct of our business, our financial condition or our results of operations.
If we are unable to effectively adapt to changes in the healthcare industry, our business may be harmed.
Political, economic and regulatory influences are subjecting the healthcare industry in the United States to fundamental change. We anticipate that Congress and state legislatures may continue to review and assess alternative healthcare delivery and payment systems and may in the future propose and adopt legislation effecting fundamental changes in the healthcare delivery system.
We cannot assure you as to the ultimate content, timing or effect of changes, nor is it possible at this time to estimate the impact of potential legislation. Further, it is possible that future legislation enacted by Congress or state legislatures could adversely affect our business or could change the operating environment of our customers. It is possible that changes to the Medicare or other government reimbursement programs may serve as precedent to similar changes in other payors reimbursement policies in a manner adverse to us. Similarly, changes in private payor reimbursement programs could lead to adverse changes in Medicare and other government payor programs which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.
Risk Factors Related to Our Corporate Governance
Our certificate of incorporation and our by-laws contain provisions that could discourage another company from acquiring us and may prevent attempts by our stockholders to replace or remove our current management.
Provisions of our certificate of incorporation and our by-laws may discourage, delay or prevent a merger or acquisition that stockholders may consider favorable, including transactions in which you might otherwise receive a premium for your shares. In addition, these provisions may frustrate or prevent any
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attempts by our stockholders to replace or remove our current management by making it more difficult for stockholders to replace or remove our current board of directors. These provisions include:
· providing for a classified board of directors with staggered terms,
· providing for the class B special voting stock which will be voted as directed by the Onex entities,
· providing for multi-vote shares of common stock which, upon exchange of LP exchangeable units, will be owned by the Onex entities,
· establishing advance notice requirements for nominations for election to the board of directors or for proposing matters that can be acted on by stockholders at stockholder meetings, and
· the authority of the board of directors to issue, without stockholder approval, up to 20 million shares of preferred stock with such terms as the Board of Directors may determine and an additional 54 million shares of common stock.
We are a controlled company within the meaning of the New York Stock Exchange rules and, as a result, qualify for, and intend to rely on, exemptions from certain corporate governance requirements.
Because the Onex entities own more than 50% of our combined voting power, we are deemed a controlled company under the rules of the New York Stock Exchange, or the NYSE. As a result, we qualify for, and rely upon, the controlled company exception to the board of directors and committee composition requirements under the rules of the NYSE. Pursuant to this exception, we are exempt from rules that would otherwise require that our board of directors be comprised of a majority of independent directors, and that our compensation committee and corporate governance and nominating committee be comprised solely of independent directors (as defined under the rules of the NYSE), so long as the Onex entities continue to own more than 50% of our combined voting power.
ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS
Not applicable.
We lease approximately 73,000 square feet in an office building at 6200 S. Syracuse Way, Greenwood Village, Colorado for the AMR and EMSC corporate headquarters and which also serves as one of AMRs billing offices. Our leases for our business segments are described below.
Facilities. In addition to the corporate headquarters, we also lease approximately 500 administrative facilities and other facilities used principally for ambulance basing, garaging and maintenance in those areas in which we provide ambulance services. We own 14 facilities used principally for administrative services and stationing for our ambulances. We believe our present facilities are sufficient to meet our current and projected needs, and that suitable space is readily available should our need for space increase. Our leases expire at various dates through 2017.
Vehicle Fleet. We operate approximately 4,400 vehicles. Of these, 3,300 are ambulances, 600 are wheelchair vans and 500 are support vehicles. As of December 31, 2006, we owned approximately 90% of our vehicles and leased the balance. We replace ambulances based upon age and usage, but generally every eight to ten years. The average age of our existing ambulance fleet is approximately five years. We primarily use in-house maintenance services to maintain our fleet. In those operations where our fleet is small and quality external maintenance services that agree to maintain our fleet in accordance with AMR standards are available, we utilize these maintenance services. We are exploring ways to decrease our
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overall capital expenditures for vehicles, including major refurbishing and overhaul of our vehicles to extend their useful life.
Facilities. We lease approximately 39,000 square feet in an office building at 1717 Main Street, Dallas, Texas, for certain of EmCares key support functions and regional operations. We also lease 22 facilities to house administrative, billing and other support functions for other regional operations. We believe our present facilities are sufficient to meet our current and projected needs, and that suitable space is readily available should our need for space increase. Our leases expire at various dates through 2014.
We lease approximately 106,000 square feet in a business park located at 1000 River Road, Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, for certain key billing and support functions. We believe our present facilities are sufficient to meet our current and projected needs, and that suitable space is readily available should our need for space increase. Our primary lease expires in 2009 with the right to renew for two additional terms of five years each.
We are subject to litigation arising in the ordinary course of our business, including litigation principally relating to professional liability, auto accident and workers compensation claims. There can be no assurance that our insurance coverage will be adequate to cover all liabilities occurring out of such claims. In the opinion of management, we are not engaged in any legal proceedings that we expect will have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, cash flows or results of our operations other than as set forth below.
From time to time, in the ordinary course of business and like others in the industry, we receive requests for information from government agencies in connection with their regulatory or investigational authority. Such requests can include subpoenas or demand letters for documents to assist the government in audits or investigations. We review such requests and notices and take appropriate action. We have been subject to certain requests for information and investigations in the past and could be subject to such requests for information and investigations in the future.
We are subject to the Medicare and Medicaid fraud and abuse laws, which prohibit, among other things, any false claims, or any bribe, kick-back, rebate or other remuneration, in cash or in kind, in return for the referral of Medicare and Medicaid patients. Violation of these prohibitions may result in civil and criminal penalties and exclusion from participation in the Medicare and Medicaid programs. We have implemented policies and procedures that management believes will assure that we are in substantial compliance with these laws, but we cannot assure you that the government or a court will not find that some of our business practices violate these laws.
During the first quarter of fiscal 2004 we were advised by the DOJ that it was investigating certain business practices at AMR including whether discounts in violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute were provided by AMR in exchange for referrals involving Medicare eligible patients. Specifically, the government alleged that certain of our hospital and nursing home contracts in effect in Texas in periods prior to 2002 contained discounts in violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute. We negotiated a settlement with the government pursuant to which we paid $9 million and obtained a release from the U.S. Government of all claims related to such conduct alleged to have occurred in Texas in periods prior to 2002. In connection with the settlement, we entered into a Corporate Integrity Agreement, or CIA, which will be effective for a period of five years beginning September 12, 2006. Pursuant to the CIA, we are required to maintain a compliance program which includes, among other elements, the appointment of a compliance officer and committee; training of employees nationwide; safeguards for our contracting processes nationwide, including tracking of contractual arrangements in Texas; review by an independent
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review organization and reporting of certain reportable events. Under the provisions of our purchase agreement for the acquisition of AMR, we and Laidlaw shared responsibility for the settlement amount and certain of the costs associated with the CIA. There can be no assurance that other investigations or legal action related to our contracting practices will not be pursued against AMR in other jurisdictions or for different time frames.
On December 13, 2005, a lawsuit purporting to be a class action was commenced against AMR in Spokane, Washington, in Washington State Court, Spokane County. The complaint alleges that AMR billed patients and third party payors for transports it conducted between 1998 and 2005 at a higher level than contractually permitted. The court has certified a class in this case, but the size and membership of the class has not yet been determined. At this time, AMR does not believe that any incorrect billings are material in amount.
AMR and the City of Stockton, California are parties to litigation regarding the terms and enforceability of a memorandum of understanding and a related joint venture agreement between the parties to present a joint bid in response to a request for proposals to provide emergency ambulance services in the County of San Joaquin, California. The suit was filed on June 28, 2005, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California. The parties were unable to agree on the final terms of a joint bid. AMR has been awarded the San Joaquin contract. While we are unable at this time to estimate the amount of potential damages, we believe that Stockton may claim as damages a portion of our profit on the contract or the profit Stockton might have realized had the joint venture proceeded.
On April 17, 2006, the Office of Inspector General for the United States Department of Health and Human Services, or OIG, finalized its draft report requesting that an AMR Massachusetts subsidiary reimburse the Medicare program for approximately $1.8 million in alleged overpayments from Medicare for services performed between July 1, 2002 and December 31, 2002. The OIG claims that these overpayments were made for services that did not meet Medicare medical necessity and reimbursement requirements. On December 10, 2006, we paid the $1.8 million in alleged overpayments. However, we continue to disagree with the OIGs finding and we have filed an administrative appeal. If we are successful in the administrative appeal we may be entitled to repayment of all or part of the $1.8 million.
EmCare entered into a settlement agreement with respect to June Belt, et al. v. EmCare, Inc., et al., (U.S. Ct. App.5th Cir.), brought by a number of nurse practitioners and physician assistants under the Fair Labor Standards Act. Pursuant to the settlement agreement, which the Court approved in January 2007, EmCare will pay $1.7 million in satisfaction of all claims in the lawsuit, which was accrued.
In December 2006, AMR received a subpoena from the United States Department of Justice, or DOJ. The subpoena requested copies of documents for the period from January 2000 through the present. The subpoena required us to produce a broad range of documents relating to the operations of certain AMR affiliates in New York. We are in the process of producing documents in response to the subpoena.
ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS
There were no matters submitted to a vote of security holders during the fourth quarter of the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006.
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ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANTS COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
Shares of our class A common stock have been trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), under the symbol EMS, since our initial public offering of such stock on December 16, 2005. There is no established market for our class B common stock or our LP exchangeable units. The following table details the high and low sales prices of our class A common stock during the year ended December 31, 2006.
|
|
HIGH |
|
LOW |
|
Year ended December 31, 2006: |
|
|
|
|
|
Fourth Quarter |
|
$21.81 |
|
$16.10 |
|
Third Quarter |
|
16.67 |
|
11.57 |
|
Second Quarter |
|
13.86 |
|
11.00 |
|
First Quarter |
|
14.40 |
|
12.17 |
|
On March 5, 2007, the last sale price of our class A common stock as reported by the NYSE was $25.10 and there were approximately 200 holders of record of our class A common stock, 3 holders of record of our class B common stock and 5 holders of record of our LP exchangeable units.
We refer you to our Registration Statement filed on Form S-1 under the Securities Act of 1933 with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 15, 2005 under the caption Description of Capital Stock for a further description of our capital stock.
Dividend Policy
We currently intend to retain any future earnings to support our operations and to fund the development and growth of our business. In addition, the payment of dividends by us to holders of our common stock is limited by our senior secured credit facility. See Item 7, Management Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and Item 8, Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. Our future dividend policy will depend on the requirements of financing agreements to which we may be a party. We did not pay dividends in 2006 or 2005 and do not intend to pay cash dividends on our common stock in the foreseeable future. Any future determination to pay dividends will be at the discretion of our board of directors and will depend upon, among other factors, our results of operations, financial condition, capital requirements and contractual restrictions.
Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities
Other than as disclosed in Part II, Item 2 of the Form 10-Q/A for the fiscal quarter ended June 30, 2006, the Company had no sales of unregistered securities in the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006.
Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
We did not repurchase any shares of our common stock during the year ended December 31, 2006.
Summary of Equity Compensation Plans
We adopted our equity option plan approved by security holders in 2005 in connection with the acquisition of AMR and EmCare. The compensation committee of our board of directors, or the board itself if there is no committee, administers the equity option plan.
54
The following table presents information pertaining to our equity option plan at December 31, 2006:
|
|
Number of securities |
|
Weighted average |
|
Number of |
|
|||||||
Plan Category |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity compensation plan approved by security holders |
|
|
3,357,907 |
|
|
|
$ |
6.77 |
|
|
|
702,403 |
|
|
Equity compensation plan not approved by security holders |
|
|
32,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
|
Total |
|
|
3,389,907 |
|
|
|
$ |
6.77 |
|
|
|
702,403 |
|
|
* Under the terms of the equity compensation plan not approved by security holders, each non-employee director will be entitled to receive Restricted Stock Units representing $100,000 in class A common stock subject to the conditions described under our Non-Employee Director Compensation Program. The number of shares is therefore indeterminable.
The equity option plan to purchase shares of our class A common stock and approved by security holders have the following terms:
· exercise price of $6.67 per share, except for options to purchase 37,500 shares with an exercise price of $16.00 per share,
· vesting ratably on each of the first four anniversaries of the grant date (the first eight 6-month anniversaries in the case of Mr. Sanger), provided, that the exercisability of one-half of the options granted to each employee is subject to the further condition that Onex has realized a 15% internal rate of return, as defined, or, on the fourth anniversary of the grant date, we have achieved an aggregate EBITDA, as defined, of not less than $617.4 million, subject to certain adjustments, for the four fiscal years ending December 31, 2008,
· each option expires on the tenth anniversary of the grant date unless the employees employment is terminated earlier, in which case the options will expire as follows: (i) upon the termination of employment if the termination is for cause, (ii) 30 days after the termination of employment, or such other date as determined by the compensation committee, following termination by the employee for good reason or by us without cause or due to retirement, or (iii) 90 days after termination of employment due to death or disability, and
· upon (i) a sale of the equity of Emergency Medical Services whereby any person other than existing equity holders as of the grant date acquires voting power to elect a majority of our board of directors or (ii) a sale of all or substantially all of our assets, all options granted to each employee will accelerate (although still subject to the performance target) and will terminate if not exercised in accordance with the terms of the option agreement.
All options and Emergency Medical Services equity held by our senior management are governed by agreements which:
· restrict transfer of their equity until the fifth anniversary of purchase, and
· grant piggyback registration rights.
See Description of Capital StockEquityholder Agreements and Registration Agreement in our Registration Statement under the Securities Act of 1933 filed on Form S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 15, 2005 for a description of the transfer restrictions and piggyback registration rights.
55
Management Investment and Equity Purchase Plan
In connection with our acquisition of AMR and EmCare, our named executive officers and other members of management purchased an aggregate of 915,750 shares of class A common stock. Approximately 160 employees and affiliated physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners purchased in the aggregate an additional 231,450 shares of class A common stock pursuant to our equity purchase plan. The 1,147,200 shares held by these investors, including our named executive officers, are governed by equityholders agreements. These agreements contain restrictions on transfer of the equity. See Description of Capital StockEquityholder Agreements in our Registration Statement under the Securities Act of 1933 filed on Form S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 15, 2005 for a description of the transfer restrictions and piggyback registration rights.
Non-Employee Director Compensation Program
On June 1, 2006, on the recommendation of our Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee, our board of directors adopted a non-employee director compensation program, effective as of June 1, 2006.
Under the terms of the plan, in addition to an annual cash retainer of $50,000, each non-employee director (other than Robert M. Le Blanc, our Lead Director) was awarded a grant of 8,000 restricted stock units, or RSUs, each RSU representing one share of our class A common stock. Commencing with the 2007 annual meeting, effective immediately following each annual meeting of stockholders, each continuing non-employee director will receive a grant of a number of RSUs having a fair market value of $100,000, based on the closing price of our class A common stock on the business day immediately preceding the grant date. The RSUs will vest on the date of the next following annual meeting of stockholders, immediately prior to the vote for directors, and will be paid in shares of our class A common stock (one share for each RSU). The number of RSUs granted to a non-employee director joining the board other than at an annual meeting of stockholders will be pro-rated based on the amount of time remaining until the next annual meeting of stockholders. This equity component of the non-employee director compensation program became effective as of June 1, 2006, subject to stockholder approval at the 2007 annual meeting of stockholders. If such approval is not obtained, the June 1, 2006 grants will be void and the RSUs will not vest on the meeting date.
Generally, a non-employee director will forfeit his annual compensation (both the cash and the equity components) if he does not attend at least 75% of the meetings held by the board of directors and the board committees on which he serves. The board of directors may waive this requirement if it determines that extenuating circumstances precluded such attendance. There will be no compensation paid to directors for attendance at individual meetings, for service on committees of the board of directors or for serving as Chair of any such committee.
Robert Le Blanc will not receive any compensation for his service as a director of the Company. Employee directors do not receive any additional compensation for their service as directors of the Company.
Offer to Provide Form 10-K
Stockholders may request a complimentary copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K by mail addressed to our Investor Relations Department at the following address: Emergency Medical Services Corporation, 6200 South Syracuse Way, Greenwood Village, CO 80111.
56
ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
The following table sets forth our selected financial data derived from our combined or consolidated financial statements for each of the periods indicated. The selected financial data presented below should be read in conjunction with Item 7, Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and our audited financial statements and notes thereto appearing in Item 8 of this Report.
Effective as of January 31, 2005, we acquired AMR and EmCare from Laidlaw and, in connection with the acquisition, we changed our fiscal year to December 31 from August 31. For all periods prior to the acquisition, the AMR and EmCare businesses formerly owned by Laidlaw are referred to as the Predecessor.
The comparability of our selected historical financial data has been affected by a number of significant events and transactions. In 2001, AMRs and EmCares former parent, Laidlaw, and certain of its affiliates filed voluntary petitions for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Although subsidiaries of Laidlaw, neither AMR nor EmCare was included in the bankruptcy filing. Laidlaw emerged from bankruptcy protection in June 2003. Laidlaw applied fresh-start accounting as of June 1, 2003 to AMR and EmCare and pushed down to us our share of the fresh-start accounting adjustments. As a result of the fresh-start change in the basis of accounting for our underlying assets and liabilities, our results of operations and cash flows have been separated as pre-June 1, 2003 and post-May 31, 2003.
57
Financial data for the years ended August 31, 2002 (Pre Fresh-Start Predecessor), August 31, 2003 (Predecessor) and August 31, 2004 (Predecessor) and the five months ended January 31, 2005 (Predecessor) are derived from our audited combined financial statements. Financial data as of and for the eleven months ended December 31, 2005 and as of and for the year ended December 31, 2006 are derived from our audited consolidated financial statements included in Item 8 of this Report.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Predecessor |
|
Pre Fresh-Start |
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
As of and for the |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Year |
|
Eleven |
|
Five |
|
Year |
|
Three |
|
Nine |
|
Year |
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
December 31, |
|
January 31, |
|
August 31, |
|
May 31, |
|
August 31, |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
2006 |
|
2005 |
|
2005 |
|
2004 |
|
2003 |
|
2003 |
|
2002 |
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
(dollars in thousands, except per share amounts) |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Statement of Operations Data: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net revenue |
|
$ |
1,934,205 |
|
$ |
1,655,485 |
|
|
$ |
696,179 |
|
|
|
$ |
1,604,598 |
|
|
$ |
384,461 |
|
$ |
1,103,335 |
|
|
$ |
1,415,786 |
|
|
Compensation and benefits |
|
1,333,648 |
|
1,146,055 |
|
|
481,305 |
|
|
|
1,117,890 |
|
|
264,604 |
|
757,183 |
|
|
960,590 |
|
|
|||||||
Operating expenses |
|
294,806 |
|
233,087 |
|
|
94,882 |
|
|
|
218,277 |
|
|
55,212 |
|
163,447 |
|
|
219,321 |
|
|
|||||||
Insurance expenses |
|
68,271 |
|
82,800 |
|
|
39,002 |
|
|
|
80,255 |
|
|
34,671 |
|
69,576 |
|
|
66,479 |
|
|
|||||||
Selling, general and administrative expenses |
|
57,403 |
|
54,262 |
|
|
21,635 |
|
|
|
47,899 |
|
|
12,017 |
|
37,867 |
|
|
61,455 |
|
|
|||||||
Depreciation and amortization expenses |
|
66,005 |
|
54,143 |
|
|
18,808 |
|
|
|
52,739 |
|
|
12,560 |
|
32,144 |
|
|
67,183 |
|
|
|||||||
Restructuring charges |
|
6,369 |
|
1,781 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2,115 |
|
|
1,449 |
|
1,288 |
|
|
3,777 |
|
|
|||||||
Impairment losses |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
262,780 |
|
|
|||||||
Laidlaw fees and compensation charges |
|
|
|
|
|
|
19,857 |
|
|
|
15,449 |
|
|
1,350 |
|
4,050 |
|
|
5,400 |
|
|
|||||||
Laidlaw reorganization charges |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3,650 |
|
|
8,761 |
|
|
|||||||
Income (loss) from operations |
|
107,703 |
|
83,357 |
|
|
20,690 |
|
|
|
69,974 |
|
|
2,598 |
|
34,130 |
|
|
(239,960 |
) |
|
|||||||
Interest expense |
|
(45,605 |
) |
(47,813 |
) |
|
(5,644 |
) |
|
|
(9,961 |
) |
|
(908 |
) |
(4,691 |
) |
|
(6,418 |
) |
|
|||||||
Realized gain (loss) on investments |
|
(467 |
) |
(164 |
) |
|
|
|
|
|
(1,140 |
) |
|
90 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Interest and other income |
|
2,346 |
|
1,040 |
|
|
714 |
|
|
|
240 |
|
|
22 |
|
304 |
|
|
369 |
|
|
|||||||
Loss on early debt extinguishment |
|
(377 |
) |
(2,040 |
) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Fresh-start accounting adjustments(1) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
46,416 |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Income (loss) before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle |
|
63,600 |
|
34,380 |
|
|
15,760 |
|
|
|
59,113 |
|
|
1,802 |
|
76,159 |
|
|
(246,009 |
) |
|
|||||||
Income tax expense |
|
(24,961 |
) |
(14,372 |
) |
|
(6,278 |
) |
|
|
(21,764 |
) |
|
(8,633 |
) |
(829 |
) |
|
(1,374 |
) |
|
|||||||
Income (loss) before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle |
|
38,639 |
|
20,008 |
|
|
9,482 |
|
|
|
37,349 |
|
|
(6,831 |
) |
75,330 |
|
|
(247,383 |
) |
|
|||||||
Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle(2) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(223,721 |
) |
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated subsidiary |
|
432 |
|
59 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Net income (loss) |
|
$ |
39,071 |
|
$ |
20,067 |
|
|
$ |
9,482 |
|
|
|
$ |
37,349 |
|
|
$ |
(6,831 |
) |
$ |
(148,391 |
) |
|
$ |
(247,383 |
) |
|
Net income per share: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Basic |
|
$ |
0.94 |
|
$ |
0.56 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
Diluted |
|
$ |
0.92 |
|
$ |
0.55 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Basic |
|
41,502,632 |
|
33,621,542 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Diluted |
|
42,528,885 |
|
34,282,176 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Other Financial Data: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Cash flows provided by (used in): |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Operating activities |
|
$ |
165,742 |
|
$ |
109,963 |
|
|
$ |
15,966 |
|
|
|
$ |
127,679 |
|
|
$ |
30,009 |
|
$ |
58,769 |
|
|
$ |
156,544 |
|
|
Investing activities |
|
(113,127 |
) |
(909,629 |
) |
|
(21,667 |
) |
|
|
(81,516 |
) |
|
(15,136 |
) |
(98,835 |
) |
|
(57,347 |
) |
|
|||||||
Financing activities |
|
(31,327 |
) |
803,083 |
|
|
10,856 |
|
|
|
(47,328 |
) |
|
(47,222 |
) |
(8,060 |
) |
|
(36,066 |
) |
|
|||||||
Cash and cash equivalents |
|
39,336 |
|
18,048 |
|
|
14,631 |
|
|
|
9,476 |
|
|
10,641 |
|
42,990 |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Total assets |
|
1,318,217 |
|
1,267,028 |
|
|
983,510 |
|
|
|
949,599 |
|
|
914,746 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Long-term debt and capital lease obligations, including current maturities |
|
479,775 |
|
502,184 |
|
|
11,497 |
|
|
|
15,480 |
|
|
24,057 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
Shareholders or Combined Equity |
|
386,040 |
|
344,984 |
|
|
598,277 |
|
|
|
573,840 |
|
|
560,539 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) Reflects the impact of push-down accounting adjustments on the combined companies of Laidlaws emergence from bankruptcy.
(2) Reflects an impairment of goodwill recorded in connection with the adoption of SFAS No. 142.
58
Quarterly Results
The following table summarizes our unaudited results for each quarter in the year ended December 31, 2006 and the eleven month period ended December 31, 2005 (in thousands, except per share amounts).
|
|
2006 |
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
For the three months ended |
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
March 31, |
|
June 30, |
|
September 30, |
|
December 31, |
|
||||||||
Net revenue |
|
$ |
469,124 |
|
$ |
478,451 |
|
|
$ |
485,697 |
|
|
|
$ |
500,933 |
|
|
Income from operations |
|
23,033 |
|
28,668 |
|
|
27,899 |
|
|
|
28,103 |
|
|
||||
Net income |
|
7,261 |
|
10,718 |
|
|
10,284 |
|
|
|
10,808 |
|
|
||||
Basic net income per common share |
|
0.17 |
|
0.26 |
|
|
0.25 |
|
|
|
0.26 |
|
|
||||
Diluted net income per common share |
|
0.17 |
|
0.25 |
|
|
0.24 |
|
|
|
0.25 |
|
|
||||
|
|
2005 |
|
||||||||||||||||
|
|
For the two |
|
For the three months ended |
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
March 31, |
|
June 30, |
|
September 30, |
|
December 31, |
|
||||||||||
Net revenue |
|
|
$ |
286,389 |
|
|
$ |
445,019 |
|
|
$ |
456,245 |
|
|
|
$ |
467,832 |
|
|
Income from operations |
|
|
17,047 |
|
|
22,618 |
|
|
19,252 |
|
|
|
24,440 |
|
|
||||
Net income |
|
|
4,535 |
|
|
6,461 |
|
|
3,006 |
|
|
|
6,065 |
|
|
||||
Basic net income per common share |
|
|
0.14 |
|
|
0.14 |
|
|
0.11 |
|
|
|
0.17 |
|
|
||||
Diluted net income per common share |
|
|
0.14 |
|
|
0.14 |
|
|
0.11 |
|
|
|
0.17 |
|
|
||||
ITEM 7. MANAGEMENTS DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The following discussion of our financial condition and results of operations should be read in conjunction with the audited financial statements and the notes to the audited financial statements included in Item 8 of this Report and the Selected Financial Data included in Item 6 of this Report. The following discussion includes periods before the acquisition of AMR and EmCare. Accordingly, the discussion and analysis of historical periods do not fully reflect the impact the acquisition of AMR and EmCare have had on us. In addition, this discussion contains forward-looking statements and involves numerous risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, those described in the Risk Factors section in Item 1A of this Report. Our results may differ materially from those anticipated in any forward-looking statements.
Our financial statements referred to in this Item 7 are included in Item 8 of this Annual Report, except for the unaudited eleven months ended December 31, 2004.
Effective as of January 31, 2005, we acquired EmCare and AMR from Laidlaw and in connection with the acquisition we changed our fiscal year to December 31 from August 31. For all periods prior to the acquisition, the AMR and EmCare businesses formerly owned by Laidlaw are referred to as the Predecessor.
The financial information referred to in this discussion includes our consolidated results of operations subsequent to the acquisition of AMR and EmCare and our combined results of operations prior to the acquisition of AMR and EmCare. This information has been derived from: (1) our audited consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2006, (2) the combination of our audited consolidated statement of operations for the eleven months ended December 31, 2005 and the unaudited combined statement of operations of the Predecessor for the one month ended January 31, 2005, (3) our audited consolidated statement of operations for the eleven months ended December 31, 2005, and (4) the
59
unaudited combined statements of operations of the Predecessor for the eleven months ended December 31, 2004.
Company Overview
We are a leading provider of emergency medical services in the United States. We operate our business and market our services under the AMR and EmCare brands. AMR is the leading provider of medical transport services in the United States. EmCare is the leading provider of outsourced emergency department staffing and management services in the United States. Approximately 87% of our net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2006 was generated under exclusive contracts. During 2006, we provided emergency medical, ambulance and other transport services to approximately 10.0 million patients in more than 2,000 communities nationwide. For the year ended December 31, 2006, we generated net revenue of $1.934 billion, of which AMR and EmCare represented approximately 61% and 39%, respectively.
Over its more than 50 years of operating history, AMR has developed the largest network of ambulance transport services in the United States based on net revenue and number of transports. AMR has an 8% share of the total ambulance services market and a 21% share of the private provider ambulance market. During the year ended December 31, 2006, AMR treated and transported approximately 3.5 million patients in 36 states. As of December 31, 2006, AMR had approximately 3,100 contracts with communities, government agencies, healthcare providers and insurers to provide ambulance services. For the year ended December 31, 2006, approximately 58% of AMRs net revenue was generated from emergency 911 ambulance transport services. Non-emergency ambulance transport services, including critical care transfer, wheelchair transports and other interfacility transports, or IFTs, accounted for 31% of AMRs net revenue for the same period. The balance of net revenue for 2006 was generated from the provision of training, dispatch centers and other services to communities and public safety agencies and from revenue associated with the recent acquisition of Air Ambulance Specialists, Inc., or AASI, which operates in the fixed-wing medical transportation services business. For the year ended December 31, 2006, AMR generated net revenue of $1.19 billion.
Over its more than 30 years of operating history, EmCare has become the largest provider of outsourced emergency department staffing and related management services to healthcare facilities based on number of contracts with hospitals and affiliated physician groups. EmCare has a 7% share of the total emergency department services market and a 10% share of the outsourced emergency department services market. In addition, EmCare has become one of the leading providers of hospitalist services, with hospitalist related net revenue increasing from $7.2 million in fiscal 2001 to $41.0 million in the year ended December 31, 2006. A hospitalist is a physician who specializes in the care of acutely ill patients in an in-patient setting. In the fourth quarter of 2006, EmCare acquired Clinical Staffing Solutions, or CSS, to expand our hospitalist and in-patient business. During the year ended December 31, 2006, EmCare had approximately 6.5 million patient visits in 39 states.
EmCare primarily provides emergency department staffing and related management services to healthcare facilities. EmCare recruits and hires or subcontracts with physicians and other healthcare professionals, who then provide professional services within the healthcare facilities with which we contract. We also provide billing and collection, risk management and other administrative services to our healthcare professionals and to independent physicians. EmCare has 378 contracts with hospitals and independent physician groups to provide emergency department, hospitalist and radiology staffing, and related management and other administrative services. For the year ended December 31, 2006, EmCare generated net revenue of $744.8 million.
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Key Factors and Measures We Use to Evaluate Our Business
The key factors and measures we use to evaluate our business focus on the number of patients we treat and transport and the costs we incur to provide the necessary care and transportation for each of our patients.
We evaluate our revenue net of provisions for contractual payor discounts and provisions for uncompensated care. Medicaid, Medicare and certain other payors receive discounts from our standard charges, which we refer to as contractual discounts. In addition, individuals we treat and transport may be personally responsible for a deductible or co-pay under their third party payor coverage, and most of our contracts require us to treat and transport patients who have no insurance or other third party payor coverage. Due to the uncertainty regarding collectibility of charges associated with services we provide to these patients, which we refer to as uncompensated care, our net revenue recognition is based on expected cash collections. Our net revenue is gross billings after provisions for contractual discounts and estimated uncompensated care. Provisions for contractual discounts and uncompensated care have increased historically primarily as a result of increases in gross billing rates. The table below summarizes our approximate payor mix as a percentage of both net revenue and total transports and patient visits for the year ended December 31, 2006 and for the eleven months ended December 31, 2005.
|
|
Percentage of |
|
Percentage of Total |
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Year |
|
Eleven months |
|
Year |
|
Eleven months |
|
||||||||
Medicare |
|
|
25.6 |
% |
|
|
26.3 |
% |
|
|
26.5 |
% |
|
|
25.7 |
% |
|
Medicaid |
|
|
4.8 |
|
|
|
5.0 |
|
|
|
10.8 |
|
|
|
12.5 |
|
|
Commercial insurance and managed care |
|
|
49.4 |
|
|
|
49.8 |
|
|
|
41.0 |
|
|
|
41.1 |
|
|
Self-pay |
|
|
4.8 |
|
|
|
4.4 |
|
|
|
21.7 |
|
|
|
20.7 |
|
|
Subsidies and fees |
|
|
15.4 |
|
|
|
14.5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
|
|
100.0 |
% |
|
|
100.0 |
% |
|
|
100.0 |
% |
|
|
100.0 |
% |
|
In addition to continually monitoring our payor mix, we also analyze the following measures in each of our business segments:
Approximately 89% of AMRs net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2006 was transport revenue derived from the treatment and transportation of patients based on billings to third party payors, healthcare facilities and patients. The balance of AMRs net revenue is derived from direct billings to communities and government agencies for the provision of training, dispatch center and other services. AMRs measures for transport net revenue include:
· Transports. We utilize transport data, including the number and types of transports, to evaluate net revenue and as the basis by which we measure certain costs of the business. We segregate transports into two main categoriesambulance transports (including emergency, as well as non-emergency critical care and other interfacility transports) and wheelchair transportsdue to the significant differences in reimbursement and the associated costs of providing ambulance and wheelchair transports. As a result of these differences, in certain analyses we weight our transport numbers according to category in an effort to better measure net revenue and costs.
· Net revenue per transport. Net revenue per transport reflects the expected net revenue for each transport based on gross billings less all estimated provisions for contractual discounts and
61
uncompensated care. In order to better understand the trends across business segments and in our transport rates, we analyze our net revenue per transport based on weighted transports to reflect the differences in our transportation mix.
The change from period to period in the number of transports is influenced by increases in transports in existing markets from both new and existing facilities we serve for non-emergency transports, and the effects of general community conditions for emergency transports. The general community conditions may include (1) the timing, location and severity of influenza, allergens and other annually recurring viruses, (2) severe weather that affects a regions health status and/or infrastructure and (3) community-specific demographic changes.
The costs we incur in our AMR business segment consist primarily of compensation and benefits for ambulance crews and support personnel, direct and indirect operating costs to provide transportation services, and costs related to accident and insurance claims. AMRs key cost measures include:
· Unit hours and cost per unit hour. Our measurement of a unit hour is based on a fully staffed ambulance or wheelchair van for one operating hour. We use unit hours and cost per unit hour to measure compensation-related costs and the efficiency of our deployed resources. We monitor unit hours and cost per unit hour on a combined basis, as well as on a segregated basis between ambulance and wheelchair transports.
· Operating costs per transport. Operating costs per transport is comprised of certain direct operating costs, including vehicle operating costs, medical supplies and other transport-related costs, but excluding compensation-related costs. Monitoring operating costs per transport allows us to better evaluate cost trends and operating practices of our regional and local management teams.
· Accident and insurance claims. We monitor the number and magnitude of all accident and insurance claims in order to measure the effectiveness of our risk management programs. Depending on the type of claim (workers compensation, auto, general or professional liability), we monitor our performance by utilizing various bases of measurement, such as net revenue, miles driven, number of vehicles operated, compensation dollars, and number of transports.
We have focused our risk mitigation efforts on employee training for proper patient handling techniques, development of clinical and medical equipment protocols, driving safety, implementation of technology to reduce auto incidents and other risk mitigation processes which we believe has resulted in a reduction in the frequency, severity and development of claims.
Depreciation expense relates primarily to charges for usage of vehicles, computer hardware and software, equipment and other technologies. Amortization expense relates primarily to intangibles recorded for customer relationships.
Of EmCares net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2006, approximately 99% was derived from our hospital contracts for emergency department staffing, hospitalist and radiology services and other management services. Of this revenue, approximately 75% was generated from billings to third party payors and patients for patient visits and approximately 25% was generated from billings to hospitals and affiliated physician groups for professional services. EmCares key net revenue measures are:
· Number of contracts. This reflects the number of contractual relationships we have for outsourced emergency department staffing and related management services, hospitalist services and other management services. We analyze the change in our number of contracts from period to period based on net new contracts, which is the difference between total new contracts and contracts that have terminated.
62
· Revenue per patient visit. This reflects the expected net revenue for each patient visit based on gross billings less all estimated provisions for contractual discounts and uncompensated care. Net revenue per patient visit also includes net revenue from billings to third party payors and hospitals.
The change from period to period in the number of patient visits under our same store contracts is influenced by general community conditions as well as hospital-specific elements, many of which are beyond our direct control. The general community conditions include (1) the timing, location and severity of influenza, allergens and other annually recurring viruses and (2) severe weather that affects a regions health status and/or infrastructure. Hospital-specific elements include the timing and extent of facility renovations, hospital staffing issues and regulations that affect patient flow through the hospital.
The costs incurred in our EmCare business segment consist primarily of compensation and benefits for physicians and other professional providers, professional liability costs, and contract and other support costs. EmCares key cost measures include:
· Provider compensation per patient visit. Provider compensation per patient visit includes all compensation and benefit costs for all professional providers, including physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners, during each patient visit. Providers include all full-time, part-time and independently contracted providers. Analyzing provider compensation per patient visit enables us to monitor our most significant cost in performing under our contracts.
· Professional liability costs. These costs include provisions for estimated losses for actual claims, and claims likely to be incurred in the period, within our self-insurance limits based on our past loss experience, as well as actual direct costs, including investigation and defense costs, claims payments, reinsurance costs and other costs related to provider professional liability.
Depreciation expense relates primarily to charges for usage of medical equipment, computer hardware and software, and other technologies. Amortization expense relates primarily to intangibles recorded for customer relationships.
Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA)
EBITDA is defined as operating income plus depreciation and amortization expense. EBITDA is commonly used by management and investors as a measure of leverage capacity, debt service ability and liquidity. EBITDA is not considered a measure of financial performance under U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), and the items excluded from EBITDA are significant components in understanding and assessing our financial performance. EBITDA should not be considered in isolation or as an alternative to such GAAP measures as net income, cash flows provided by or used in operating, investing or financing activities or other financial statement data presented in our financial statements as an indicator of financial performance or liquidity. Since EBITDA is not a measure determined in accordance with GAAP and is susceptible to varying calculations, EBITDA, as presented, may not be comparable to other similarly titled measures of other companies.
63
The following table sets forth a reconciliation of EBITDA to income from operations and to net income for our company, and reconciliations of EBITDA to income from operations for our two operating segments, using data derived from our financial statements for the periods indicated (amounts in thousands):
|
|
Year ended |
|
Eleven months |
|
||||||||||||
|
|
2006 |
|
2005 |
|
2005 |
|
2004 |
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
(unaudited) |
|
|
|
(unaudited) |
|
||||||||
Consolidated/Combined |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||
EBITDA |
|
$ |
173,708 |
|
|
$ |
132,418 |
|
|
$ |
137,500 |
|
|
$ |
118,168 |
|
|
Less: Depreciation and amortization expense |
|
66,005 |
|
|
58,037 |
|
|
54,143 |
|
|
45,593 |
|
|
||||
Income from operations |
|
107,703 |
|
|
74,381 |
|
|
83,357 |
|
|
72,575 |
|
|
||||
Less: Interest expense |
|
45,605 |
|
|
48,982 |
|
|
47,813 |
|
|
11,963 |
|
|
||||
Realized loss on investments |
|
467 |
|
|
151 |
|
|
164 |
|
|
955 |
|
|
||||
Interest and other income |
|
(2,346 |
) |
|
(1,036 |
) |
|
(1,040 |
) |
|
(728 |
) |
|
||||
Loss on debt extinguishment |
|
377 |
|
|
2,040 |
|
|
2,040 |
|
|
|
|
|
||||
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated subsidiary |
|
(432 |
) |
|
(59 |
) |
|
(59 |
) |
|
|
|
|
||||
Income tax expense |
|
24,961 |
|
|
10,312 |
|
|
14,372 |
|
|
23,550 |
|
|
||||
Net income |
|
$ |
39,071 |
|
|
$ |
13,991 |
|
|
$ |
20,067 |
|
|
$ |
36,835 |
|
|
AMR |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||
EBITDA |
|
$ |
90,671 |
|
|
$ |
94,478 |
|
|
$ |
93,404 |
|
|
$ |
84,851 |
|
|
Less: Depreciation and amortization expense |
|
53,024 |
|
|
47,508 |
|
|
44,090 |
|
|
38,348 |
|
|
||||
Income from operations |
|
$ |
37,647 |
|
|
$ |
46,970 |
|
|
$ |
49,314 |
|
|
$ |
46,503 |
|
|
EmCare |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||
EBITDA |
|
$ |
83,037 |
|
|
$ |
37,940 |
|
|
$ |
44,096 |
|
|
$ |
33,317 |
|
|
Less: Depreciation and amortization expense |
|
12,981 |
|
|
10,507 |
|
|
10,031 |
|
|
7,245 |
|
|
||||
Income from operations |
|
$ |
70,056 |
|
|
$ |
27,433 |
|
|
$ |
34,065 |
|
|
$ |
26,072 |
|
|
Factors Affecting Operating Results
On February 10, 2005, an investor group led by Onex Partners LP and Onex Corporation, and including members of our management, purchased our operating subsidiaries, AMR and EmCare, from Laidlaw International, Inc. To fund the $828.8 million purchase price of these acquisitions, we received equity contributions of $219.2 million, issued and sold $250.0 million principal amount of senior subordinated notes, and entered into a $450.0 million senior secured credit agreement comprised of a $100.0 million revolving credit facility and a $350.0 million term loan. We borrowed the full amount of the term loan and $20.2 million under the revolving credit facility to fund our acquisition of AMR and EmCare, including the payment of related fees and expenses, and we have used balances outstanding from time to time under the revolving credit facility for working capital purposes. The increase in the outstanding balance of long-term debt in February 2005 resulted in a corresponding increase in interest expense.
On December 21, 2005, Emergency Medical Services Corporation completed its initial public offering of 8,100,000 shares of class A common stock; trading of those shares commenced on the New York Stock Exchange on December 16, 2005. We used a significant portion of the net proceeds of $101.9 million from this initial public offering to repay $99.1 million of debt outstanding under our senior secured credit facility and we used the balance for working capital, capital expenditures and other general corporate purposes.
64
This reduction to the outstanding balance of long-term debt in December 2005, and additional debt repayments made in 2006 of $19.4 million, will result in a corresponding decrease in our future interest costs.
Rate Changes by Government Sponsored Programs
In February 2002, the Health Care Financing Administration, now renamed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, issued the Medicare Ambulance Fee Schedule Final Rule, or Final Rule, that revised Medicare policy on the coverage of ambulance transport services, effective April 1, 2002. The Final Rule was the result of a mandate under the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, or BBA, to establish a national fee schedule for payment of ambulance transport services that would control increases in expenditures under Part B of the Medicare program, establish definitions for ambulance transport services that link payments to the type of services furnished, consider appropriate regional and operational differences and consider adjustments to account for inflation, among other provisions. The Final Rule provided for a five-year phase-in of a national fee schedule, beginning April 1, 2002. We estimate that the impact of the ambulance service rate decreases under the national fee schedule mandated under the BBA, as modified by the phase-in provisions of the Medicare Modernization Act, resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2004 of approximately $11 million, resulted in an increase in AMRs net revenue of approximately $16 million during calendar year 2005, and resulted in a decrease in AMRs net revenue of approximately $17 million in 2006. Based upon the current Medicare transport mix, we expect a further decrease in our net revenue totaling approximately $2 million for the period 2007 through 2010. Although we have been able to substantially mitigate the phased-in reductions of the BBA through additional fee and subsidy increases, we may not be able to continue to do so.
Medicare pays for all EmCare physicians services based upon a national fee schedule. The rate formula may result in significant yearly fluctuations which may be unrelated to changes in the actual cost of providing physician services.
Our operating results are affected directly by the number of net new contracts we have in a period, reflecting the effects of both new contracts and contract expirations. We regularly bid for new contracts, frequently in a formal competitive bidding process that often requires written responses to a Request for Proposal, or RFP, and, in any fiscal period, certain of our contracts will expire. We may elect not to seek extension or renewal of a contract if we determine that we cannot do so on favorable terms. With respect to expiring contracts we would like to renew, we may be required to seek renewal through an RFP, and we may not be successful in retaining any such contracts, or retaining them on terms that are as favorable as present terms.
Hurricane Katrina and our Gulf Coast Operations
AMR provides ambulance services in Gulfport and Biloxi, Mississippi and several other Gulf Coast communities. Although our dispatch center was damaged by hurricane Katrina and we had damage to a small number of vehicles, we were able to maintain communications through our use of back-up generators and other emergency supplies. We worked closely with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, and other federal, state and local agencies and deployed additional ambulance transportation resources where they were most needed, particularly in the coastal areas of Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama. For the eleven months ended December 31, 2005, revenue derived from additional hurricane-related services was 0.9% of net revenue and related expenses were 0.9% of total expenses included in income from operations. During 2006, we recorded approximately $2.2 million in additional revenue from hurricane-related deployment in 2005.
65
EmCare operations generally were unaffected by Katrina, with only one facility in the affected area. EmCare deployed additional resources to assist at that facility, and we experienced a volume increase in certain facilities in adjacent states where evacuees were relocated.
Certain of our expenses, such as wages and benefits, insurance, fuel and equipment repair and maintenance costs, are subject to normal inflationary pressures. Although we have generally been able to offset inflationary cost increases through increased operating efficiencies and successful negotiation of fees and subsidies, we can provide no assurance that we will be able to offset any future inflationary cost increases through similar efficiencies and fee changes.
AMRs recent operating expenses have been adversely affected by increased fuel costs. Fuel costs represented approximately 12.2% of AMRs operating expenses in the year ended December 31, 2006, and 12.5% for the same period in 2005. Increases in fuel costs, without mitigation through fee and subsidy increases, would continue to adversely affect AMRs operating results.
Critical Accounting Policies
The preparation of financial statements requires management to make estimates and assumptions relating to the reporting of results of operations, financial condition and related disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements. Actual results may differ from those estimates under different assumptions or conditions. The following are our most critical accounting policies, which are those that require managements most difficult, subjective and complex judgments, requiring the need to make estimates about the effect of matters that are inherently uncertain and may change in subsequent periods.
The following discussion is not intended to represent a comprehensive list of our accounting policies. For a detailed discussion of the application of these and other accounting policies, see note 2 to our audited financial statements included in Item 8 of this Report.
Claims Liability and Professional Liability Reserves
We are self-insured up to certain limits for costs associated with workers compensation claims, automobile, professional liability claims and general business liabilities. Reserves are established for estimates of the loss that we will ultimately incur on claims that have been reported but not paid and claims that have been incurred but not reported. These reserves are based upon independent actuarial valuations, which are updated quarterly. Reserves other than general liability reserves are discounted at a rate commensurate with the interest rate on monetary assets that essentially are risk free and have a maturity comparable to the underlying liabilities. The actuarial valuations consider a number of factors, including historical claim payment patterns and changes in case reserves, the assumed rate of increase in healthcare costs and property damage repairs. Historical experience and recent trends in the historical experience are the most significant factors in the determination of these reserves. We believe the use of actuarial methods to account for these reserves provides a consistent and effective way to measure these subjective accruals. However, given the magnitude of the claims involved and the length of time until the ultimate cost is known, the use of any estimation technique in this area is inherently sensitive. Accordingly, our recorded reserves could differ from our ultimate costs related to these claims due to changes in our accident reporting, claims payment and settlement practices or claims reserve practices, as well as differences between assumed and future cost increases. Accrued unpaid claims and expenses that are expected to be paid within the next twelve months are classified as current liabilities. All other accrued unpaid claims and expenses are classified as non-current liabilities.
66
Trade and Other Accounts Receivable
Our internal billing operations have primary responsibility for billing and collecting our accounts receivable. We utilize various processes and procedures in our collection efforts depending on the payor classification; these efforts include monthly statements, written collection notices and telephonic follow-up procedures for certain accounts. AMR writes off amounts not collected through our internal collection efforts to our uncompensated care allowance, and sends these receivables to third party collection agencies for further follow-up collection efforts. To simplify the recording of any third party collection agency recoveries, EmCare classifies accounts sent to third party collection agencies as delinquent within the billing system and they are written off. Accordingly, we record any subsequent collections through third party collection efforts as a recovery, in the case of AMR, and record it against our delinquent status account, in the case of EmCare.
As we discuss further in our Revenue Recognition policy below, we determine our allowances for contractual discounts and uncompensated care based on sophisticated information systems and financial models, including payor reimbursement schedules, historical write-off experience and other economic data. We record our patient-related accounts receivable net of estimated allowances for contractual discounts and uncompensated care in the period in which we perform services. We record gross fee-for-service revenue and related receivables based upon established fee schedule prices. We reduce our recorded revenue and receivables for estimated discounts to patients covered by contractual insurance arrangements, and reduce these further by our estimate of uncollectible accounts.
Our provision and allowance for uncompensated care is based primarily on the historical collection and write-off activity of our approximately 10.0 million annual patient encounters. We extract this data from our billing systems regularly and use it to compare our accounts receivable balances to estimated ultimate collections. Our allowance for uncompensated care is related principally to receivables we record for self-pay patients and is not recorded on specific accounts due to the volume of individual patient receivables and the thousands of commercial and managed care contracts.
We also have other receivables related to facility and community subsidies and contractual receivables for providing staffing to communities for special events. We review these other receivables periodically to determine our expected collections and whether any allowances may be necessary. We write the balance off after we have exhausted all collection efforts.
A significant portion of our revenue is derived from Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance payors that receive discounts from our standard charges, which are referred to as contractual provisions. Additionally, we are also subject to collection risk for services provided to uninsured patients or for the deductible or co-pay portion of services for insured patients, which are referred to as uncompensated care. We record our healthcare services revenue net of estimated provisions for contractual allowances and uncompensated care.
Healthcare reimbursement is complex and may involve lengthy delays. Third party payors are continuing their efforts to control expenditures for healthcare and may disallow, in whole or in part, claims for reimbursement based on determinations that certain amounts are not reimbursable under plan coverage, were for services provided that were not determined medically necessary, or insufficient supporting information was provided. In addition, multiple payors with different requirements can be involved with each claim.
Management utilizes sophisticated information systems and financial models to estimate the provisions for contractual allowances and uncompensated care. The estimate for contractual allowances is determined on a payor-specific basis and is predominantly based on prior collection experience, adjusted as needed for known changes in reimbursement rates and recent changes in payor mix and patient acuity
67
factors. The estimate for uncompensated care is based principally on historical collection rates, write-off percentages and accounts receivable agings. These estimates are analyzed continually and updated by management by monitoring reimbursement rate trends from governmental and private insurance payors, recent trends in collections from self-pay patients, the ultimate cash collection patterns from all payors, accounts receivable aging trends, operating statistics and ratios, and the overall trends in accounts receivable write-offs.
Management also regularly analyzes the ultimate collectibility of accounts receivable after certain stages of the collection cycle using a look-back analysis to determine the amount of receivables subsequently collected. The retroactive adjustments, which increased revenue recorded in 2006, was 1.3% of consolidated net revenue compared to increased revenue adjustments of 0.6% for the eleven months ended December 31, 2005.
The evaluation of these factors, as well as the interpretation of governmental regulations and private insurance contract provisions, involves complex, subjective judgments. As a result of the inherent complexity of these calculations, our actual revenues and net income, and our accounts receivable, could vary from the amounts reported.
We have significant net deferred tax assets resulting from net operating losses, or NOLs, and interest deduction carryforwards and other deductible temporary differences that will reduce taxable income in future periods. Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 109 Accounting for Income Taxes requires that a valuation allowance be established when it is more likely than not that all or a portion of net deferred tax assets will not be realized. A review of all available positive and negative evidence needs to be considered, including expected reversals of significant deductible temporary differences, a companys recent financial performance, the market environment in which a company operates, tax planning strategies and the length of the NOL and interest deduction carryforward periods. Furthermore, the weight given to the potential effect of negative and positive evidence should be commensurate with the extent to which it can be objectively verified. We routinely monitor the recoverability of our deferred tax assets. Changes in managements assessment of recoverability could result in additions to the valuation allowance, and such additions could result in significant charges to our earnings in the future.
In connection with our acquisition of AMR and EmCare, we made an Internal Revenue Code section 338(h)(10) election for EmCare, which eliminated $67 million of deferred tax assets and permitted us to step-up the tax basis of EmCares assets to fair value. Differences between book and tax depreciation and amortization for these assets will create future deferred tax assets.
Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets
Goodwill is not amortized and is required to be tested annually for impairment, or more frequently if changes in circumstances, such as an adverse change to our business environment, cause us to believe that goodwill may be impaired. Goodwill is allocated at the reporting unit level. If the fair value of the reporting unit falls below the book value of the reporting unit at an impairment assessment date, an impairment charge would be recorded.
Should our business environment or other factors change, our goodwill may become impaired and may result in material charges to our income statement.
Definite life intangible assets are subject to impairment reviews when evidence or triggering events suggest that an impairment may have occurred. Should such triggering events occur that cause us to review our definite life intangibles and the fair value of our definite life intangible asset proves to be less than our unamortized carrying amount, we would take a charge to earnings for the decline. Should factors affecting the value of our definite life intangibles change significantly, such as declining contract retention rates or reduced contractual cash flows, we may need to record an impairment charge in amounts that are significant to our financial statements.
68
Results of Operations
Effective as of January 31, 2005, we acquired EmCare and AMR from Laidlaw and in connection with the acquisition we changed our fiscal year to December 31 from August 31. For all periods prior to the acquisition, the AMR and EmCare businesses formerly owned by Laidlaw are referred to as the Predecessor.
The following tables present, for the periods indicated, consolidated or combined results of operations and amounts expressed as a percentage of net revenue. This information has been derived from: (1) our audited statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2006, (2) the combination of our statement of operations for the audited eleven months ended December 31, 2005 and the unaudited combined statement of operations of the Predecessor for the one month ended January 31, 2005, (3) our audited statement of operations for the eleven months ended December 31, 2005, and (4) the unaudited combined statements of operations of the Predecessor, which include both our AMR and EmCare business segments, for the eleven months ended December 31, 2004.
Consolidated
and Combined (Predecessor) Results of Operations and as a Percentage of Net
Revenue
(dollars in thousands)
|
|
|
|
Predecessor/ |
|
|
|
Predecessor |
|