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An Actuarial Cost and Revenue Model for Helicopter Emergency Medical Services: Estimating Population-Based Coverage and Sustainability Thresholds

Robert D. Lieberthal, Sabin Ahmed, David M. Hechtman, Lauren R. Indrisano, Douglas R. Amirault, Susan Haas and Varun Saraswathula
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Robert D. Lieberthal: Thomas Jefferson University
Sabin Ahmed: The MITRE Corporation
David M. Hechtman: The MITRE Corporation
Lauren R. Indrisano: Elevance Health
Douglas R. Amirault: The MITRE Corporation
Susan Haas: The MITRE Corporation
Varun Saraswathula: Congressional Research Service

Papers from arXiv.org

Abstract: Helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) provide rapid access to critical care but are costly to operate and difficult to sustain financially. A clear understanding of these costs is essential for evaluating the feasibility and design of population-based funding or policy strategies. We developed a two-part model: (1) a cost framework capturing capital and operating expenses (e.g., aircraft, equipment, labor, facilities), and (2) an actuarial revenue model using healthcare encounter data and payer reimbursement rates. The model was applied to a commercially insured Massachusetts population (3.9M lives), using provider charge data and Medicare fee schedules. We analyzed breakeven transport volumes under varying reimbursement and labor cost assumptions, including sensitivity scenarios. Under optimistic assumptions (full charge realization, minimal overhead), breakeven is reached with approximately 90 annual transports. More realistic scenarios, incorporating commercial reimbursement at 50% of charges and full 24/7 staffing, require 184 transports. If labor costs are doubled or Medicare rates are used exclusively, breakeven thresholds exceed 1,000 transports per year. A Monte Carlo simulation (10,000 iterations) confirmed the robustness of these thresholds: the median simulated breakeven was 190 transports under commercial reimbursement, closely matching the deterministic base case. The 90th percentile reached 304 (commercial) and 1,066 (Medicare) annual transports. HEMS programs are highly sensitive to labor costs and payer reimbursement levels. Sustainable operation requires more transport volume than previously estimated, especially when reimbursement is constrained or staffing costs increase. This model provides a transparent, replicable tool to inform financial planning, policy evaluation, and payer negotiations for air medical services.

Date: 2026-06, Revised 2026-06
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