Break-Even Analysis Factors
The Practice Success Prescription: Team-Based Veterinary Healthcare Delivery by Drs. Leak. Morris Humphries
Thomas E. Catanzaro, DVM, MHA, FACHE, DACHE

The trouble with today's economy is that when a man is rich, it's all on paper. When he's broke, it's cash. - Sam Marconi

As stated in the AAHA primer text Successful Financial Management for the Veterinary Practice, there is an entire body of accounting and financial theory that deals with cost analysis and accounting of those costs. This same reference explains "Cost Behavior Patterns", "Break-Even Analysis", and "Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis" in Chapter 3, and some useful veterinary financial ratios in Chapter 5, so I will not reiterate those facts or factors. It is also assumed that the annual cash budget is being effectively planned, as discussed in Chapter 4 of the above-mentioned text. It is my belief that a practice must clearly identify fixed and variable costs before it attempts fiscal analysis of cost data by any of the above-mentioned methods.

Cost Centers and Profit Centers

Practice managers usually analyze costs on a specific element of expense, but often the expense code used does not have an equal income source identified for analysis purposes. A good chart of accounts will ensure that each of the cost centers (expense item) are calibrated to the corresponding income centers (invoice category) for effective profit analysis.

As stated previously, a healthy, mature practice can maintain expenses to about forty-five to forty-eight percent of the monthly gross, if rent, all veterinarian monies, and ROI factors are backed out of the expenses before computation. The costs in most well-run practices are usually within control in today's environment, so the real concern is to maximize income centers. This means that segregation and subsequent analysis of fixed and variable expenses should look at costs in three basic perspectives:

1.  The relationship between costs, patient volume, and net income should be more readily accessible.

2.  Fixed and variable cost analysis would help the practice manager determine which costs could be reduced and which costs could be eliminated

3.  Segregating costs is a prerequisite for using more sophisticated methods of cost analysis, such as the break-even analysis and other cost, profit, and volume analysis.

"Profit Center Management" is simply the term used to mean aligning the income sources to the associated expenses, then comparing the two sets of figures for trends, and, hopefully, net income. Some consultants advocate the computation of floor space committed to an income center, and divide the circulating spaces (hallways/offices/rest rooms) into "fair shares" for each income area. While this total allocation of costs excite accountants, it is making "sunk cost" (fixed overhead) a variable in pricing. This is not a rational approach for a progressive veterinary practice that deals in total patient wellness, which offers services needed by the patients or clients. Total cost allocation is arbitrary and confuses the use of specific diagnostic areas that support the other income areas of the practice, with a floor plan that is out-of-date or in need of system assessment for improvement.

Identifying Fixed and Variable Costs

The typical veterinary practice must be ready for virtually any animal healthcare emergency at any time. Surgery, radiology, and ancillary support functions are demands that must be ready at all times of operation. To a great extent, salaries, utilities, and other costs incurred to maintain this standby status are not directly related to the number of patients/clients seen, often called semi-variable or semi-fixed costs.

Without a direct relationship between patient volume and practice costs, fixed and variable costs cannot be readily defined. With the help of your accountant, all costs can be broken into four categories:

1.  Committed fixed costs.

2.  Discretionary fixed costs

3.  Pure variable costs.

4.  Step variable costs.

Each category will be defined and discussed, but the elements of expense must be evaluated line item by line item to see which category of cost each element should be assigned. An example of laboratory costs is provided at the bottom of the chart, but this process should be done for each area of concern.

Committed Fixed Costs

Committed fixed costs are the initial and ongoing costs that are essential to the basic practice of veterinary medicine, the costs associated with being ready to receive clients and treat patients. Committed costs include: interests on debt, depreciation of assets, management salaries, insurance, lease of plant and equipment, audit fees, taxes, rent, and other costs that do not vary with the volume, but that will be incurred, as long as the practice serves the community. These costs cannot be eliminated, but they may be minimized by thorough analysis prior to commitment.

Table 11: Fixed and Variable Costs

 

Fixed Costs

Variable Costs

Element of Expense

Committed

Discretionary

Pure

Step

Management salaries

$XX

   

$XX

Other salaries

       

Rent

$XX

     

Medical supplies

   

$XX

 

Non-medical supplies

   

$XX

 

Office supplies

 

 

 

$XX

Minor equipment

 

 

 

$XX

Telephone

$XX +

$XX

 

 

Outside services

 

 

$XX

 

Equipment repair

 

 

 

$XX

Lease expense

$XX

 

 

 

Maintenance contract

 

 

 

$XX

CE expenses

 

$XX

 

 

Taxes

$XX

 

 

 

Total lab expense

$XX +

$XX +

$XX +

$XX

Discretionary Fixed Costs

Discretionary fixed costs are incurred because management decides that certain programs are needed or desirable. These are generally seen as non-patient care programs. Discretionary costs include: community and public relation programs, management development programs, travel budgets, charity services to patients, employee picnics, consultant fees, internal auditing, and other costs that are generally incurred on an annual basis. During the budgeting process, discretionary costs can often be severely cut without affecting the care of patients.

Pure Variable Costs

Pure variable costs vary proportionately to some unit of output. These would include such items as medical supplies, drugs, and food used for treatment of patients (direct materials); non-medical supplies such as laundry expenses, data processing costs, admission and billing forms, which vary directly with changes in the inpatient numbers (indirect supplies); and certain purchased services. Labor costs cannot be included, since they do not vary proportionately to the changes in case load. Since most of the pure variable costs are materials, inventory control procedures become important tools to control these costs. A system must be in place to insure that every client is charged for all materials that are used in the treatment of the patient.

Step Variable Costs

The greatest portion of practice variable costs are step variable costs. These costs increase or decrease only because of larger changes in patient/client numbers. These costs include: direct and indirect labor costs, employee fringe benefits, utilities, office and housekeeping supplies, and purchased services, such as maintenance contracts. These costs can be adjusted more readily than fixed costs, but are often not done for loyalty to staff reasons. Some techniques that may be used to control step variable costs include:

 Schedule vacations during those slow months so that full staff is available in the busy months.

 Look to temporary or part-time hires to extend the labor pool available to the practice as the season dictates.

 Cross-train various individuals to perform several duties, such as technicians backing up receptionists at the end-of-day rush at the front desk, and using high school kids at minimum wage to do the clean up the technicians have been tasked to perform in the back at the close of business daily.

 Insure that the veterinarians do only professional duties and that lower-paid staff are used for clerical, maintenance, and other nonprofessional duties.

 Establish a part-time, "on call", pool of trained support staff, such as extra client relations specialists, who will extend the staff at key times, without causing great increases in payroll and benefit packages.

Other Uses of Fixed and Variable Cost Data

The cash budget process briefly discussed and illustrated in Chapter 4 of the AAHA text Successful Financial Management presumes many things, such as an adequate practice accounting system. After visiting over eight hundred veterinary facilities in the last five years, I can tell you that most practices do not have good income center accounting, and try to be successful by managing expenses. Some of this approach lies with the MBA or CPA mentality advising the practice. Tracking expenses is far "safer" for an adviser than assessing income sources. With an inflation rate like we have, controlling expenses is not the road to success. Expenses are only the road signs for the income-producing services that a practice offers to the clients and for the patients.

These break-even analysis and fiscal management suggestions are the initial steps to good cost control, using fixed and variable costs. Once the practice's elements of expense have been classified by management, they can be addressed in daily operational decisions. The scope of evaluation can be expanded as the data becomes more valid, such as:

 Looking at profitability of specific services and functions, which means subtracting total expense from total income and looking at the difference.

 Assessing outpatient services to the cash budget inpatient rates needed for backroom productivity.

 Establishing rates and fees based on historical expenses and income analysis for the specific service rendered, with a reasonable factor added for known overhead.

 Determining the value of certain employees who have been hired for specific areas of expertise. OR

 Conducting the cost-volume-profit analysis, or break-even analysis, on new programs being established, or traditional programs that have lost their usefulness.

If this sounds like too much trouble, welcome to the business of veterinary medicine. Every small business must look at its services and programs in this light. If you need help, or suspect that your CPA or MBA advisor has been less than helpful, call the Small Business Administration (SBA) Answer Desk, 1-800-368-5855, and ask for the nearest SCORE Chapter (Service Corp of Retired Executives). These are retired experts who volunteer their time to the SBA to help people just like you, for free! You may find the SCORE relationship one of the most valuable encounters you have ever attempted. You can't beat the price, so try it today!

Speaker Information
(click the speaker's name to view other papers and abstracts submitted by this speaker)

Thomas E. Catanzaro, DVM, MHA, FACHE, DACHE
Diplomate, American College of Healthcare Executives


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