2. 2(303) 801-0123
• Per the American Academy of Urgent Care Medicine:
“Urgent Care Medicine is the provision of immediate medical
service offering outpatient care for the treatment of acute and
chronic illness and injury. . . . Urgent care does not replace your
primary care physician. An urgent care center is a convenient
option when someone's regular physician is on vacation or unable
to offer a timely appointment. Or, when illness strikes outside of
regular office hours, urgent care offers an alternative to waiting
for hours in a hospital Emergency Room.”
• Per the Urgent Care Association of America, Urgent Care is
differentiated from other deliver models by providing:
• No appointment necessary / walk-in care;
• Evening and weekend operating hours;
• X-ray on site; and
• Capability to perform procedures like suturing, splinting and IV
What Is Urgent Care?
3. 3(303) 801-0123
The phenomenon of the development of urgent care
centers is due to the oversupply of physicians, some
of whom have opted to engage in a new level of
entrepreneurship by expanding the types of services
they offer including clinics treating minor medical
problems without an appointment
Quotes
4. 4(303) 801-0123
The phenomenon of the development of urgent care
centers is due to the oversupply of physicians, some
of whom have opted to engage in a new level of
entrepreneurship by expanding the types of services
they offer including clinics treating minor medical
problems without an appointment
Quotes
US New & World Report
1983
5. 5(303) 801-0123
Urgent care centers are one of the innovative
alternatives methods that will render hospital
emergency departments vulnerable to replacement
Quotes
6. 6(303) 801-0123
Urgent care centers are one of the innovative
alternatives methods that will render hospital
emergency departments vulnerable to replacement
Quotes
Harvard Business
Review 1980
7. 7(303) 801-0123
• Hospital began purchasing independent urgent care
centers
• Managed like hospitals with licensed nurses, triage
processes, and union wages
• Centers were not marketed cohesively
• People did not know what kind of care they could get at
an urgent care center
What Happened?
8. 8(303) 801-0123
• Average emergency room (ER) wait time; Nationally
takes an average of:
• 135 minutes before being sent home
• 53 minutes to receive pain medication when presenting
with a broken bone
• 96 minutes after being admitted to get to a room
• More healthcare cost is shifted to the patient
• Average ER bill is estimated between $1,250 to $2,000
• Average urgent care bill is <$500
• 1/3to ½ of all ER visits are for non urgent care and the
CDC estimates that moving these cases to urgent care
could save $18 billion in healthcare costs
What Has Happened Since?
9. 9(303) 801-0123
Locations
Concentration in suburban
locations within major
metropolitan cities
Large presence in
shopping/retail areas
Typical patient entrapment
radius
• 8-10 miles suburban
• 18-20 miles rural
Rural centers operate
closer to primary care than
true urgent care
Locations Total (%)
Urban 15%
Suburban 75%
Rural 10%
Metro Areas with Largest # of Clinics # of
Clinics
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, Calif. 164
Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, Fla. 107
Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, Ill.-Ind.-Wis. 103
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, Texas 88
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, Ga. 84
Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Ariz. 80
Detroit-Warren-Livonia, Mich. 76
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island 74
Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, Texas 68
Type of Location
Percentage of
Centers
Freestanding 32%
Within a Medical Office Building 20%
Within a Shopping Center or Strip Mall 38%
Within a Mixed-Use Building 9%Sources: UCAOA, Becker’s Hospital Review
10. 10(303) 801-0123
Average Payor Mix
Private
Insurance
55%
Medicare
17%
Out-of-Pocket
Payments
10%
Other
5%
Medicaid
5%
Worker’s
Compensation
5% Other
Government
4%
Commercial insurance is most
prominent payor
• Case rates are common
• Patient out-of-pocket higher compared to
primary care visit (i.e. 30%-50% of total
visit reimbursement from patient)
Low government payors
• Reimbursement generally through
Medicare Part B – bill via the Physician
Fee Schedule on a fee-for-service basis
• Medicare patients do not have time
pressure
• Some clinics do not accept Medicaid
Discounts (typically 15-20%) available
for patients without insurance
11. 11(303) 801-0123
Industry Fragmentation
Source: Company Websites
Top Urgent Care Operators
Clinics as of Net Center
Growth12/31/13 12/31/14 5/1/16
1 Concentra 289 290 300 3.8%
2 US HealthWorks / Dignity 172 172 172 0.0%
3 MedExpress 126 139 150 19.0%
4 American Family Care DRX 108 143 160 48.1%
5 NextCare 96 115 135 40.6%
6 FastMed 65 86 110 69.2%
7 Patient First 49 55 63 28.6%
8 CareSpot 52 57 54 3.8%
9 Doctors Care 52 51 52 0.0%
10 City MD / Premier Care 14 38 56 300.0%
11 Urgent Care Extra 48 48 33 -31.3%
12 MedPost 20 25 53 165.0%
13 Aurora Health n/a n/a 35 0.0%
14 Physicians Urgent Care 28 32 37 32.1%
15 Intermountain Health n/a n/a 30 0.0%
16 Carolinas HealthCare n/a n/a 34 0.0%
17 Medspring 16 18 36 125.0%
18 Centra Care n/a n/a 36 0.0%
19 Zoomcare 22 25 33 50.0%
20 ExpressCare of MD 11 15 25 127.3%
TOTAL 1,168 1,309 1,604 37.3%
12. 12(303) 801-0123
Current Drivers of Urgent Care M&A
M&A activity in the Urgent Care market continues at a feverish pace.
ellS
Drivers
of Seller
Interest
•Historically high transaction multiples
•Narrow Networks
•Increased and Stronger Competition
•Increase complexities and cost
•Need to invest in growth or align with a larger operator
•Growth Capital
•Add sophistication
Drivers
of Buyer
Interest
•The Affordable Care Act/Healthcare reform
•Highly Fragmented market
•Scalability and industry growth
•Overcrowded Emergency Rooms
•Lack of Access to primary care
•Access to Patients-New Patients into system/Networks
•Consumerism
•Low cost of debt
•Competitive Landscape
• Shift in healthcare cost burden
13. 13(303) 801-0123
Urgent Care Buyer Universe
Hospital Health Systems Pure Play Consolidators
Private Equity Commercial Insurance Payors
15. 15(303) 801-0123
New Center Growth
$10.14 $10.63 $11.29
$12.31 $13.19
$14.17
$15.77
$16.73
$17.82
$19.01
$20.08
$21.43
$22.58
8,000 8,100
8,700 8,800
9,300 9,428
9,899
10,434
11,350
11,350 12,099
12,299
12,845
-
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
16,000
18,000
$-
$5
$10
$15
$20
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
# of Centers
Amount in Billions
Industry Revenue
Number of Urgent Care Centers & Industry Revenue
2008-2015E
CAGR # of Centers: 4.4%
2015P-2020P
CAGR # of Centers: 4.2%
Sources: IBIS World, HarrisWilliams&Co., McguireWoods
~ 9,500 urgent care centers | $16 billion industry
16. 16(303) 801-0123
• Private Equity investment in UC has remained strong
• Higher than average number of PE-backed start ups and growth
equity
More than 15 Private Equity investments in Urgent Care since 2007
and more wanting in
• Demand for bolt on deals have skyrocketed over the last few years
and will continue for the longterm
The 1-3 center ownership comprises about 65% of the market and
represents the greatest opportunity
• Hospital lead health systems are now leading the charge
• Since 2014 hospitals have been aggressively pursuing urgent care
• Managed Care is making their move
• Historically payors have made minority investments but that has
changed
Urgent Care M&A Trends Driving Growth
17. 17(303) 801-0123
• Select Medical Holdings and Welsh Care team up to buy Concentra from
Humana
• United Healthcare/Optum purchases MedExpress
• ABRY Partners purchase FastMed (PE TO PE)
• Crestline Investors invest in Urgent Team
• HCA purchases Urgent Care Extra’s Nevada operations and 14 centers
• FastMed acquires Texans Urgent Care 14 locations
• USPI Purchases Carespot and 35 centers from Welsh Carson which is also in a JV
with Tenet in USPI
• HCA purchased 18 of CareSpot Express locations in Nashville and Kansas City
Noteworthy Transactions
18. 18(303) 801-0123
Valuation Multiples and Observations
0.00 x
5.00 x
10.00 x
15.00 x
20.00 x
Small Size Company Medium Size Company Large Size Company
TIC/EBITDA Multiple Ranges
Multiples
Record high multiples of trailing earnings for platform acquisition
Buyers are typically paying for earnings rather than revenue
Types of Buyers
Strategic buyers are more common today than in previous years
M&A has historically been dominated by private equity firms
Hospitals and health systems are exhibiting growing of interest and
presence in the space
Drivers of Value
Growth opportunities and factors affecting demand
Competitive environment and regional density
Stage in business cycle and profitability
Infrastructure and support (platform vs. stand-alone)
Reimbursement and payor mix
19. 19(303) 801-0123
• 2007 MedExpress was acquired by Excellere Partners, a private
equity group
• 2010 Excellere sells MedExpress to General Atlantic and Sequoia
Capital after only 3 years into their investment
• 50 Locations
• $110M 2010 Rev
• EV $450M
• 4.1X EV/R
• ~ 20X TTM EBITDA
• 2015 Optium, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group acquires
MedExpress
• 134 Locations
• $279M 2014 Rev
• EV $1.5B
• 5.4X EV/R
• $11.2M Price Per Center
• Assuming a 20% to 25% EBIDTA margin, +/- 25X TTM EBITDA
MedExpress Case Study
Source: PrivCO and Ambulatory Alliances, LLC
20. 20(303) 801-0123
Overview
• Structuring with an Eye Towards an Exit
• Getting Your House in Order
• Before You Share: The DO’s and DON’T’s of Sharing
Confidential Information
• Generally
• Privileged Materials
• HIPAA and PHI
• Competitively sensitive information
• Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues
• Corporate Structure and Corporate Practice of Medicine
Issues
• Misclassification
• Stark Law Compliance
• Coding Compliance
• Others
21. 21(303) 801-0123
Structuring with an Eye Towards an Exit
“Beginning with the end in mind”
• Choice of Entity
• Corporate form – often limited by corporate practice of
medicine prohibition
• Be careful not to self-limit (e.g., DE professional corporation)
• Tax election (for corporations and LLCs)
• To MSO or Not to MSO
22. 22(303) 801-0123
To MSO…
Fair Market Value
Management Fee3
Long-Term Management
Services Agreement (MSA)
Management
Services
Organization (MSO)
100% ownership 100% ownership
Friendly
Physician1
Urgent Care
Clinics Operator
(Practice)3
Owners1
Owners1
Management Services2
1 There may be mirror ownership of the MSO and the Practice, or, depending on various factors, including whether any owners are
non-physicians in a state with a corporate practice of medicine prohibition and whether all economics flow through the MSA, there
may be different individuals that comprise the Owners of the MSO versus the Owners of the Practice or they may own each entity in
different proportions.
2 MSO will typically provide non-clinical assets, non-clinical personnel, equipment and management services under the MSA; while
the Practice will have Practice have the provider number(s), payor contracts, contracts with physicians and other licensed providers,
including, in many cases, the Owners.
3 Assuming economics flow primarily or wholly to the MSO (or can be adjusted to easily permit the same), this structure is ready
made for a non-physician investor to step in through an equity purchase in the MSO. The Owners of the Practice would typically be
replaced by an investor nominated “friendly” physician or one or more Owners may be left in to serve in that role in corporate
practice of medicine states.
23. 23(303) 801-0123
…Not to MSO
100% ownership2
Friendly
Physician1
Urgent Care
Clinics Operator
(Practice)3
Owners1
In most states, a financial sponsor cannot own an interest under this structure and it will need to be converted to an MSO
model.
1 The Owners will typically all be licensed physicians unless the clinics are operated in a state without a corporate practice of
medicine prohibition
2 The Owners receive profits through distributions or dividends
3 The Practice has all of the clinical and non-clinical assets required for its operation (either through direct ownership or leasehold
interest)
24. 24(303) 801-0123
Structuring with an Eye Towards an Exit (cont.)
• Capitalization
• Compensation structure
• Thankfully, Most Structures Can Be Fixed
• Avoid Critical Errors
“If you don’t have time to do it right, when are you going to have
time to do it over” – John Wooden
25. 25(303) 801-0123
Fast Forward To….SUCCESS
You did a great job building your business….but are you ready for an exit?
27. 27(303) 801-0123
Getting your House in Order
Talk to Your Team
What has been keeping them up at night?
Remember all those things you left on the back burner…
Consider “Sell-Side” Due Diligence
Can be comprehensive or high-level
Can be formally led by outside counsel or an informal process in
consultation with counsel
Give the “Explanation Before the Accusation”
In a process, it is better to know which bidders may be scared off by an
issue early on, then to lose the winning bidder after everyone else is
gone
28. 28(303) 801-0123
Before You Share: The DO’s & DON’T’s of Sharing Confidential Information
• What Can I Share Without a Confidentiality
Agreement?
• Confidentiality or Non-Disclosure Agreement
• Needs to be signed
• Scope and carve-outs
• Non-solicit?
• Can I Share Privileged Materials?
• If so, when?
• Common Interest Privilege
29. 29(303) 801-0123
Before You Share: The DO’s & DON’T’s of Sharing Confidential Information (cont.)
• HIPAA and Other Privacy Laws
• Surprisingly overlooked in many instances
• Try to avoid PHI disclosure whenever possible, and always
adhere to “minimum necessary” standard
• Disclosure of PHI permitted for due diligence under HIPAA
• 45 CFR § 164.501 defines “health care operations” to include “the
sale, transfer, merger, or consolidation of all or part of the covered
entity with another covered entity, or an entity that following such
activity will become a covered entity and due diligence related to
such activity”
• What if the buyer is not a covered entity and will not become one?
• Disclosure to third party advisors?
• What happens if there is a breach?
30. 30(303) 801-0123
Before You Share: The DO’s & DON’T’s of Sharing Confidential Information (cont.)
• Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
• The sharing of competitively sensitive pricing information
among competitors can be a violation of Antitrust laws
• In the urgent care context, the concern will typically center
around payor contracts
• Where a potential buyer is a competitor in the relevant
market that needs to understand parameters of the
target’s reimbursement, a “black box” analysis is needed
• This is surprisingly overlooked, particularly in smaller
transactions
• Be careful to avoid “gun jumping”
31. 31(303) 801-0123
Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues
• Corporate Structure and Corporate Practice of Medicine
Issues
• Understanding the corporate structure and ownership is
fundamental
• Some form of corporate practice of medicine prohibition
in most jurisdictions
• Pitfalls of the “Friendly Physician”/“Captive Practice”/
“MSO Model”
• Overreaching into clinical decisions or otherwise with respect
to control can invalidate arrangement
• Payors suits
• “Friendly” physician risk
• Fee-splitting
• Management fees must be fair market value for commercially
reasonable services being performed
• Valuation and fee adjustments
32. 32(303) 801-0123
Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues (Cont.)
• Misclassification of Personnel
• Employees versus Independent Contractors
• The form of agreement does not control
• Many urgent care operators contract with personnel as
independent contractors despite treating them like
employees under IRS guidance*:
• Behavioral: Does the company control or have the right to control
what the worker does and how the worker does his or her job?
• Financial: Are the business aspects of the worker’s job controlled
by the payer? (these include things like how worker is paid,
whether expenses are reimbursed, who provides tools/supplies,
etc.)
• Type of Relationship: Are there written contracts or employee
type benefits (i.e. pension plan, insurance, vacation pay, etc.)? Will
the relationship continue and is the work performed a key aspect
of the business?
• No one factor is determinative and must examine each case
33. 33(303) 801-0123
Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues (Cont.)
• Misclassification of Personnel (cont.)
• Tax liability for employer withholdings and penalties
• Potential liability for overtime (if personnel at issue are not
exempt)
• Independent Contractors may not want to transition to
employment
• Can create a Stark Law issue…
• Stark Law Compliance
• DHS (typically X-ray and lab in urgent care space, occasionally
may be others)
• If DHS referring physicians own the urgent care provider, then
need to meet “in-office ancillary services” exception
• This will often require that the entity meet the group practice
definition under Stark
• Group practice definition has a number of requirements, including
that Independent Contractor physicians cannot provide 25% or more
of total patient encounters.
34. 34(303) 801-0123
Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues (Cont.)
• Stark Law Compliance (cont.)
• Where physicians are not owners, can rely on employment or
personal services arrangements exception
• However, ownership of MSO can trigger Stark as well, particularly
if not relying on the in-office ancillary services exception (and
arguably, even then)
• Good news for urgent care: DHS revenue is often a small
component of overall revenue
• Bad news:
• It is not uncommon for Stark issues to be found in urgent care
providers
• To avoid what are often technical errors from becoming false
claims, must complete a timely investigation and voluntary
repayment
• In certain circumstances, a formal self-disclosure under the CMS
SRDP may be needed
35. 35(303) 801-0123
Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues (Cont.)
• Coding Compliance
• Any historic third party audits (e.g., CMS, RAC, commercial
payors)?
• Internal auditing procedures?
• How often, who does them, what is the scope?
• Buyer auditing of target
• Consultant or in-house team?
• Common Issues
• Poor documentation
• Is the process “overly automated”
36. 36(303) 801-0123
Certain Key Substantive Due Diligence Issues (Cont.)
• Other Key Issues
• Compensation Arrangements
• FMV and Bonuses
• HIPAA
• Supervision Arrangements and Documentation
• Medical Malpractice
• Etc.
37. 37(303) 801-0123
• Healthcare is evolving from fee-for-service medicine toward value-based
reimbursement — and toward population health management.
• Hospitals are financially incentivized to reduce admissions
• Payors are looking for providers that can provide high-quality, cost-effective care
• Payors are demanding lower-cost settings of care
• Providers and Payors are becoming more involved in patient management and
care delivery
• Increased collaboration between and among providers
• Patients are seeking more convenient access to healthcare services
• Access, cost and convenience is overriding the once-sacred patient-physician
relationship
The Future of Urgent Care
38. 38(303) 801-0123
• Full Price Transparency- flat straightforward pricing for medical services
• On-Demand injury, illness and well care. Rx on-site 365 days a year
• On-Demand worldwide video visits for minor injury and illness
• Convenient labs On-Demand
• Primary, Chronic and Episodic care at one location
• On-Demand access to specialist such as orthopedics and cardiologist
• On-Demand Surgery you schedule on your phone
• ER doctors On-Demand with Onsite X-Ray/CT/Ultrasound for $299
• Prescriptions filled at the clinic
Redefining Urgent Care
39. 39(303) 801-0123
Zoomcare
• Urgent Care
Illness/Injury
Emergencies
Video Visits
• Advanced
Cardiology
GYN
ENT
Poditry
• Primary Care
Performance
Prime
Kids
Chronic Care
Mental Health
Physical Therapy
Dental
Wellness Exams
Ortho
GI
General
Surgery
41. 41(303) 801-0123
Aftercare – Care Coordination Solution
`
`
Patients
CareCheck® Coordination
Team
Complete team located in LI, New York:
dedicated team of 100+ MDs, PAs, &
scribes
Clinical follow-up powerhouse: AfterCare
makes 2.2 clinical calls per visit, to make
visits more valuable
A system of tools and QA: closing episodic
care loop, ensuring compliance with
directives, and coaching patients
AVERT® ER Diversion
A Real-Time ER Diversion Platform that:
Collects patient data
Calculates patient risk scores
Alerts CityMD doctors and AfterCare teams
Triggers automatic response and focus
Navigate® Patient
Referral System
Collects key information: doctor type,
location, insurance, power score
Proactively notifies: partner health
systems, physicians, and plans receive
notifications of patient visits
Discovers invisible patients: offers new
PCP relationships to unattached patients
HEAL® Population Health
Incubator
Studies population health: dedicated in-
house team led by Chief Medical Officer
Forms collaborative partnerships: inside
CityMD and with outside organizations
Invests in the future of care: forms
initiatives designed to treat the
undiagnosed, newly diagnosed, and “not-
yet-sick” populations
AFTERCARE - CARE COORDINATION SOLUTION
Four Proprietary Tools To Coordinate Health Systems and Groups
42. 42(303) 801-0123
THE CARE COORDINATION SOLUTION II: NAVIGATE
The End Goal Of Channeling Patients to The Right Providers
PCP 1
PCP 2
Specialist 2
Specialist 3
Specialist 4
Specialist 1
Hospital 1
Urgent Care
Hospital 2
Hospital 3