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Mednax Inc (MD 4.10%)
Q2 2020 Earnings Call
Jul 30, 2020, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the MEDNAX, Inc. Second Quarter 2020 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Charles Lynch. Please go ahead.

Charles Lynch -- Vice President, Strategy And Investor Relations

Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Joining me today for our call are our Chief Executive Officer, Mark Ordan; our Chief Financial Officer, Stephen Farber; and President of Pediatrics and Obstetrics Medical Group, Dr. Mack Hinson. I'll quickly read our forward-looking statements and then turn the call over to Mark. Certain statements and information during this conference call may be deemed to be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Federal Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are based on assumptions and assessments made by MEDNAX's management in light of their experience and assessment of historical trends, current conditions, expected future developments and other factors they believe to be appropriate. Any forward-looking statements made during this call are made as of today.

And MEDNAX undertakes no duty to update or revise any such statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Important factors that could cause actual results, developments and business decisions to differ materially from forward-looking statements are described in the company's most recent annual report on Form 10-K, its quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and its current reports on Form 8-K, including the sections entitled Risk Factors. In today's remarks by management, we will be discussing non-GAAP financial metrics. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in this morning's earnings press release, our annual report on Form 10-K and in the Investors section of our website located at mednax.com. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mark.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Charlie. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining our call. I'm excited to join MEDNAX and to support this great national medical and healthcare group. Over the past several weeks, I've spent in time meeting with people across the organization, including practice groups in both pediatrics and radiology, and I've been so impressed with the dedication it clearly has to this company's decade long mission, to take great care of the patient. As you know, MEDNAX has always been physician-led at the top of the organization. That will continue, and that's why Dr. Mack Hinson is here with us today. In particular, I want to thank Roger Medel, both for his gracious introduction to the MEDNAX team and to help me get up to speed. Dr. Medel made this a physician- and patient-centric culture, and that has been key to MEDNAX' success and longevity. MEDNAX' strong mission and spirit spring from Dr. Medel's determination and care. I want to assure you that MEDNAX mission will not change.

Even as we continue to address an unprecedented pandemic across the country, the care the clinicians across our organization provide every day is as important as ever. And the focus that MEDNAX has always shown over the year to continually improve their care in clinical research, education, quality and safety will remain important as it has ever been. Today, I want to reaffirm our previously announced intent to divest MEDNAX's radiology solutions. And we are actively engaged in a comprehensive process in order to realize the value that recognizes this group's strength, resilience and growth potential. While radiology saw a steep follow-up in the spring through the COVID, it saw a very impressive bounce back in the early weeks of summer. Stephen will provide more color about this. So if this sale does happen, it's only for strategic and financial reasons. It is a very strong business that will be very additive in the right hands. This sale will help accelerate our focus on our core pediatrics and obstetrics medical group in terms of both continuing strength as well as growth. A lot of the sale and, if approved by shareholders, we will change our name to Pediatrics Medical to attest to our focused commitment going forward.

Stephen will provide details regarding our second quarter results, but I'd like to comment briefly that the strength in results during an incredibly challenging time in history demonstrates just how critical and necessary our national medical group services are to our patients. In my view, this is a hallmark of this organization, and I'm tremendously proud to begin working alongside the clinicians and the nonclinician associates to support them to help ensure that our patients have access to that care every step of the way. I'm most excited about the opportunities of MEDNAX as we look forward. Our entire Board, including me, of course, believe that a concerted focus on our core will enable us to operate very efficiently and grow very effectively. I look forward to updating you over the coming months on our progress. I'll be working closely with our Board, leadership of the company and our clinicians and operators to ensure that MEDNAX can succeed, grow and continue to invest in the foundations of great patient care. I firmly believe that collectively, these will prove to be the basis to strong value creation for all of our stakeholders.

With that, I'll turn the call over to Stephen.

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mark, and good morning. Thank you for joining our call. I'll start with some high level observations of the quarter, and then I'll go into some detail. First and foremost, we have been positively surprised by our operating results for the quarter, which demonstrate both the resiliency of underlying demand for the services our clinicians provide and our ability to mobilize an effective timing and comprehensive response against an unprecedented and highly unpredictable environment. This was obviously a tremendously challenging period for our organization as it has been for all healthcare providers. In a very short time, beginning in late March, we mobilized multiple work streams through which we identified and executed on cost mitigation efforts across our corporate and support infrastructure, additional mitigation steps with many affiliated practices, and actions to strengthen our supply chain for critical protective personal equipment, our telehealth capabilities and virtual support groups within all of our clinical specialties.

We also took steps to ensure that we maintain significant financial liquidity and meaningfully curtailed our third-party spend as part of our transformational and restructuring activity. Lastly, as we announced in early May, we divested our anesthesiology service line, which was impacted by the pandemic to a far greater degree than our ongoing business and is well served, in our view, being part of a much larger dedicated anesthesiology organization. As a result of these steps, we were able to ensure that our clinicians receive the support that they needed to fulfill all of their commitments to their patients, to our hospital and health system partners. Turning to our results for the quarter. Our consolidated revenue from continuing ops of $509 million was down $52 million or just over 9% compared to last year. This comparison includes just under $12 million in revenue that we received through stimulus programs during the quarter, which was divided about evenly between pediatrics and radiology. Our cost mitigation efforts during the quarter provided a meaningful offset to the decline in revenue, such that our adjusted EBITDA was down $29 million or only about half of our dollar decline in revenue.

I'll also point out that the lion's share of the pandemic impact to our operating results occurred in April, and we've been very pleased with the rapid return toward normalization of patient volumes and revenue in May and June. As we noted in our press release, our overall volumes fell to roughly 75% to 80% of pre-COVID levels during April, but have recovered to roughly 90% to 95% of normalized levels by the end of the quarter. On a preliminary basis, this recovery has persisted during the month of July with some geographic variations. We believe this rapid snapback in volumes reflect the nature of services our clinicians provide, which are highly critical and acute in nature and oftentimes lifesaving and showed strong resiliency in demand as a result. We did provide additional color in our press release that covers volume trends in what we view as the three primary components of our continuing operations: Hospital-based women and children's, office-based women and children's and radiology. I won't repeat those here, but to give some color on the relative weighting of these segments. Hospital-based services, which were the least affected component of our business, representing about 60% of our revenue from continuing operations and primarily reflect neonatology services.

The impact of patient volumes in the NICU was only about 5% in the quarter, and trended up toward the end of June. Elsewhere, within hospital-based, pediatric ICU and general pediatric services were impacted more significantly, with patient volumes down roughly by half in April. But these volumes recovered to about 85% or so of pre-COVID levels over the course of June. These are also relatively small components of our overall hospital-based revenue compared to the NICU. Our office-based women and children services and radiology services, which were more significantly impacted, each make up about 20% of revenue from continuing operations. In both of these areas, we saw a strong recovery in volumes in May and June, ending the quarter in the 85% to 90% of pre-COVID range. As a couple of additional notes, our payer mix remained stable and was actually slightly positive in the second quarter, with nongovernment volumes increasing by about 65 basis points as a percentage of total volumes compared to last year. Our AR days were also very stable. In fact, we actually picked up a day, coming down by just over one day versus the end of March.

As I mentioned, we undertook meaningful expense activities in response to the revenue disruption we experienced during the quarter. These are evident in the reductions in practiced salaries and benefits as well as G&A expense in our reported results. Those reductions also reflected the clinical compensation structure within MEDNAX radiology where each of our on-the-ground practices operates under a revenue share model and vRad affiliated radiologists are compensated based on volume. These comp structures functioned very effectively, and I'll note that all but one of our individual practices, as well as vRad, had positive EBITDA for the quarter. Within our G&A expense, I'll provide three observations for those of you keeping models on the company. First, for the second quarter, our G&A was roughly 15% of revenue. I'll point out that G&A for radiology is structurally higher as a percentage of revenue than G&A or pediatrics and rate with radiology being closer to 20%. This predominantly relates to vRad, which has a fairly different P&L inflection versus our practices based on the expenses incurred of its fairly extensive operations and IT infrastructure. Second, our P&L reflects the accounting treatment for transitional services, which we have in place with NAPA following the sale of American Anesthesiology.

Within that agreement, we are providing certain ongoing services as NAPA works to integrate AA, most of which are nonlabor, but that flowed through our own G&A expense line. We are reimbursed for those expenses, and that reimbursement is recorded within investment and other income further down on our P&L. For the second quarter, these expenses and our reimbursement for them totaled $2.8 million. These items are a wash in our calculation of adjusted EBITDA so they don't impact that metric. But they will temporarily inflate our reported G&A for a time that we provide those services. Lastly, as I indicated in our update call in early June, in the weeks following the sale of American Anesthesiology, we had identified and completed roughly $10 million in annualized expense takeout. We continue to press hard to reshape our G&A infrastructure to match the size and scale of our ongoing enterprise and anticipate that those efforts will benefit our overall G&A percentage as we make further progress. As the last comment on expenses, we meaningfully reduced our third-party and other outlays related to our transformational and restructuring activity.

Total expense in the third quarter was $11.5 million, down about 40% from what we reported in the first quarter of this year. Turning to cash flow and liquidity. We are very pleased with how the quarter progressed. In total, we generated $193 million in cash flow from continuing operations, which is significantly higher than the prior year. There are a handful of moving parts in the quarter related to either the sale of American Anesthesiology, taxes or both, and there are significant additional cash inflows that we anticipate collecting. So I want to spend some time there. First, as a meaningful part of the consideration for American Anesthesiology, we retained all of the working capital from that business, which, as we disclosed in May, totaled about $110 million and consisted primarily of accounts receivable, net of current liabilities. While the retained AR is recorded as part of our continuing ops on our balance sheet, our collection of those receivables are not part of our cash flow from continuing operations, but rather are reported separately as part of disc ops.

So our continuing on cash flow for the quarter is not inflated by those collections. Second, we were not a cash taxpayer during the quarter compared to cash taxes paid in last year's second quarter of $68 million. In fact, for the first half of the year, last year, our cash taxes were $71 million. This year, in the first half, our cash taxes were $1 million. Third, we were able to defer payroll taxes during the quarter as part of the CARES Stimulus Act. This was a smaller amount in total of about $12 million during Q2 and we expect additional similar amounts over the balance of the year. Thanks to these sources of cash, we meaningfully improved our net debt profile during the quarter. We ended the quarter with cash on hand of $132 million, which is up about $40 million from what we reported for the end of May. We have no borrowings on our $1.2 billion revolver, our dollar amount debt consists solely of our senior notes, and our net debt as of June 30 was about $1.6 billion compared to about $1.8 billion at the end of March. I will tell you as well that our cash projection for July, for which we have one more day, would add another $40 million to $50 million of cash to where we ended June.

In addition, there are ongoing onetime cash benefits that we expect to realize in the back half of this year that totaled more than $100 million. First, in terms of our retained AR for the anesthesia sales. As of June, we still had $58 million remaining to collect, which we expect to receive mostly during the third quarter. Second, you'll see in our balance sheet details that we have reported $64 million in income taxes receivable. About half of this is a refund for an overpayment of 2019 estimated tax, and the remainder is the current tax benefit on our year-to-date operating loss that will be used to offset any future taxes payable for the remainder of 2020. We anticipate that these additional nonrecurring sources of cash, when combined with our ongoing cash flow from continuing ops, will enable us to further reduce our net debt perhaps by $200 million or more over the balance of the year. If you do that math, that's well over $2 per share of incremental value. I'll wrap up with just one more high-level comment on our ongoing operations. Based on a review of the impact to our business from the COVID-19 pandemic, we anticipate a full recovery of demand across our women's and children's and radiology service lines, pending the pandemic.

Put more simply, at this time, we do not believe that there has been any structural or permanent impact to that demand and I'll reiterate that we believe strongly this reflects the nature of our services of our affiliated clinicians' provide, which are highly critical and necessary in nature. As it relates to our discussion in early June regarding the outlook for the financial profile of the Pediatrics Medical Group, at this point, we are not changing that outlook. More specifically, we previously indicated that this business on a normalized basis should generate roughly $1.8 billion in annual revenue. From a margin standpoint, we view pediatrics and obstetrics as beginning with a mid-teens EBITDA margin profile, which based on a normalized annual revenue, would put EBITDA in the $270 million area. From this initial margin profile, we believe there is a highly viable path to move pediatrics margins from mid-teens to high teens, driven by continued reshaping of our support infrastructure and by operating leverage as revenue increases. This could move dollar EBITDA into the $300 million range or higher from our preliminary range, which we believe is fully achievable over the next couple of years.

With that, I will now turn the call back over to Mark.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Stephen. Before we go to questions, I want to share some observations I made a few weeks at business company. First, everyone here is tremendously proud of how the entire team responded to the pandemic. It's clear that a giant test to mobilize a nationwide organization to care for patients safely, to protect our frontline caregivers and to manage our costs. I want to recognize and thank everyone for their efforts and contributions. Second, I know from my past, it's all about people. I'm impressed by the dedication our team has to the mission to take great care of the patient. The results we reported this morning simply wouldn't be possible without that dedication, and I intend to do my job with the same commitment to this company's mission. I've already spoken with and heard from physicians and clinicians from throughout our organization. So I can speak to the spirit and determination firsthand. Third, I view this as an absolutely incredible franchise. And again, as COVID demonstrated, we are resilient even in the worst of times. We occupy a hugely important and unique space in the healthcare ecosystem.

We care from others, babies and children when they are at their most vulnerable. The trust that our patients place in their physician and the trust that our hospital partners place in us has been earned over a decade, and that makes us truly unique. And last, the position we hold in the healthcare industry gives us terrific opportunities to grow. In each of our service lines, and in any number of adjacent ones, there are exciting paths to take to build on where we are today and to make this company more and more efficient and more and more successful. I'm looking forward to working with the team to make that happen. I'm looking forward to telling you what we're doing as we go from here.

With that, operator, we are ready for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

[Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from the line of A.J. Rice with Crrdit Suisse. Please go ahead.

A.J. Rice -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hi everybody Welcome on board, Mark. I appreciate the comments there. Just a couple of questions. A lot of discussion over the last year about the transformational initiatives and today, you provide an update on what the spending level is. How much of that is still relevant, given the focus on pediatrics going forward? And what is sort of the run rate of expected spending? And what are some of the opportunities that you think you might realize from that as you move forward?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Sure. I can give you a little bit of color on that. We are continuing to work through our plans. As you may recall, a significant portion of our transformation spend was in and around the anesthesia business and now with that business... So that really has provided us with a good opportunity to reshape our investments and efforts there. The pediatrics business had a relatively modest portion of that spend. I'd say probably about 1/4 of it or so. And then we had some general infrastructure for the company as a whole with the number of projects that that were under way, and some of which are still under way. So for example, I know we've spoken before that we were migrating our DRP to Oracle in the cloud. That project is continuing. Should be largely done around the end of the year. And we have some IT infrastructure and other sorts of things that are ongoing. We're continuing to refine those plans.

We kept a little bit going for things that were more mission-critical during this period. But to some extent, it's kind of like stopping and steering an aircraft carrier. So it does take a little time. I can't give you a precise sort of anticipated spend level going forward but I can say it should be very modest relative to what spend levels have been historically and should be extremely focused on things that are either necessary critical infrastructure upgrades or things that will enhance the physician experience and the patient experience of being part of and working with this company.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

A.J., the only thing I'd add on to that is, in my past, I usually only use third-party advisors for IT and related projects. So we certainly have a strong bias going forward to operate and make decisions within our four walls with our team and with our Board.

A.J. Rice -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Okay. No, that's great. Maybe the follow-up question would be around the Cares Act funding. I think you reported about $11.7 million this quarter, if I got the number right. I know at one point, you had applied for significantly more than or thought you might be significantly more than that. What's sort of the current thinking of where you stand in Cares Act money and when you might report some of that in the back half of the year, if there is indeed incremental dollars to be had?

Charles Lynch -- Vice President, Strategy And Investor Relations

A.J., its Charlie. Yes. When we made that comment in early May, as Steve would recall, it was reflective of all the services we had, including anesthesia. So a meaningful amount of the monies were related to anesthesiology and not relevant to our continuing ops. So the just under $12 million we received during the month during the quarter relates to pediatrics and radiology. We do have some additional amounts that we would anticipate in the third quarter. They're not meaningful, probably somewhere in the single-digit millions. So that's still pending. But the amount that you see for the quarter is specific to our ongoing operations.

A.J. Rice -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Okay, all right, thanks a lot. Thanks.

Operator

And our next question comes from Ralph Giacobbe with Citi. Please go ahead.

Ralph Giacobbe -- Citi -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning. Hoping you could talk a little bit more about the NICU trends and the declines there. I guess, a little bit surprising given the specialty, and I think the commentary last quarter that you had a more stable results. But obviously, we've seen lower birth rate in the past, to some degree. But the commentary, I think, in your release, talked about lower admission rate. Can you just delve into that a bit and help us understand sort of the level of acuity and sensitivity to that trend kind of going forward?

Roger M. Hinson, M.D. -- President, Pediatrix And Obstetrix Medical Groups

Sure. Rob, this is Mack Hinson. There's a little bit of decrease as we reported in terms of numbers. I think, firstly, related to COVID. I think it's difficult to clearly relate any of this to COVID, whether it's cyclical or not. We've seen some consolidation of NICUs. We've seen some diversion of NICU beds to allow for COVID patients, but that's really been a minority. Very, very sporadic and not, I think, contributing significantly to the numbers. Clearly, I think everybody has seen over time and even recently, concerned about birth rates. I think I would remind everybody that the markets we're in tend to have relatively less effect than the overarching national market. And so the year-over-year decrease that we've seen is well within simplicity that we've seen over time. So we're hearing anecdotal reports that some of our NICUs are busier over the last month in some of our major markets. So I would be very hard-pressed to say that this is a downward trend that's something that we're going to see as persistent and I think we'll wait and see how this plays out. But certainly, we have some indication in the markets that we are busier than we see in the first part of the year.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

I would also add Ralph I would just add one quick comment on top of that. When we actually look sort of month-on-month and week-by-week because we have obviously internal indicators that we look at, we did see a trend that was pretty similar to the other businesses and to others out there that we know a lot of the hospital systems have reported, where essentially, April was a lot softer, and then it came back somewhat in May, and it came back even more in June and then trended pretty strong week-to-week throughout June, which indicates along with what Mack just said. It really does indicate that this was almost more of an exogenous type item over the quarter as opposed to something that we expect to be persistent.

Roger M. Hinson, M.D. -- President, Pediatrix And Obstetrix Medical Groups

I'd just add one other comment. We have looked at the mix of the type of patients that we are seeing in the NICU. And there have been a report too about their less premature babies, for example. We're not seeing any mix of the type of degree of prematurity or the acuity of the babies that we're admitting. So across our system, we're certainly not seeing any evidence today of that happening.

Ralph Giacobbe -- Citi -- Analyst

Okay. All right. That's helpful. The follow-up I had, just on payer mix, it improved in the quarter, certainly encouraging and somewhat confusing, I guess, given the backdrop. Any thought on why that was the case? Or more importantly, sort of how you see mix playing out into the back half of 2020 or into the back half of 2020 and into 2021?

And then is it your expectation that the pandemic, including economic consequences is going to impact birth rates one way or the other going forward? Or how do you think about those considerations looking ahead?

Charles Lynch -- Vice President, Strategy And Investor Relations

Ralph, its Charlie. On your second question, I think we don't have any specific answer to that. I mean, that's just purely an unknown related to any kind of, as you would expect, I mean, behavioral response to what the country has been going through. So that's going to be something that we'll just watch as everything unfolds. Related to the payer mix, what I would say is our payer mix dynamics today, when you don't have the anesthesiology organization in the mix, are predominantly focused around pediatrics and obstetrics. And just to remind you, which I think you know, Ralph, it's kind of a binary payer mix between nongovernment and Medicaid. So what we've generally seen over the past number of years is a fairly good degree of stability in that mix with modest variations quarter-to-quarter, like we saw this quarter. So when we see a quarter with pediatrics mix going up or down 50 bps or something like that, we haven't seen that reflected in any trends. We'll obviously keep an eye on it because that's going to be something that needs to be closely watched as we go forward. But that said, our observation for the quarter was that, that mix was relatively stable and didn't reflect anything outside of the trend lines we've seen the last few years.

Ralph Giacobbe -- Citi -- Analyst

Okay, thank you.

Operator

And our next question comes from Kevin Fischbeck with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Kevin Fischbeck -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Great, thanks. Just Maybe I want to build on that last question. You guys have outlined a kind of an accelerating top line growth profile over the next couple of years with improving margins. I mean, what is your assumption about birth rates and payer mix in that, I guess, there are a lot of forecasting that the birth rates may be down and obviously, unemployment implies payer mix will be down. Are these targets that you can get to in that kind of scenario? Or are you assuming a more steady state when you think about that earnings power in the next few years?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

It's Stephen. We've thought about all those factors, and we've gained it out a bit. As Mack was just saying, and Charlie, we haven't really seen it yet, right? I mean, our payer mix improved a little bit during the quarter. We really didn't see anything dramatically different in terms of birth rates. And in fact, in some of our practices over the past several weeks that, take care of pregnant women, they're actually busier than normal. So I don't think anyone can really call it yet, but I do think there are folks out there who are writing articles that are extrapolating off of really small sample sets where I'm not sure we're comfortable that there is any statistical validity to it, and it's really more of anecdotal. In terms of our modeling, look, I think that the two main drivers of our thoughts about the prospective future performance for pediatrics and obstetrics are reshaping our cost structure, which is near, if not completely within our control. It doesn't rely on any exogenous factors and we see significant opportunities to continue to reshape our cost structure and change the fundamental margin of the business.

And the second one and the second most important factor is the ability to drive growth, whether it's organic growth through landing new contracts or providing adjacent services to across to the hospital beds that we serve or through some M&A-related some nonheroic assumptions for M&A opportunities really across the whole national platform. We do expect some level of birth rate volatility but we think, at best, it will be on some sort of a regional basis. And we think that there are some places that could be busier as well as some place that could be slower. So it's probably too early to to make a hard call precisely what that's going to look like, but it's not keeping us up at night. So I'm not sure, do you guys have anything incremental to add? No?

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

As the new guy, the only thing I'd add is this organization obviously went through a lot over the last several quarters, and has transformed itself into a very different kind of company than it was. And I think that with that focus that Stephen was talking about just now, it's a very different apple. So while we don't assume either a decline or an increase in birth rate as part of our modeling, we assume that things will be fairly steady. We do think that this is going to be a dramatically more focused and streamlined company than it has been in the past.

And we do believe that, that will really bear fruit, that that's going to attract many more practices to adjacent services to want to be part of our organization. We're going to redouble our efforts to reach out to the organization to provide the kind of support that they need. We will increase our improve our relationships and really work on our relationships with our payers so that we're working hand-in-hand with them. So I think a lot of this is a little bit hard to quantify, but I think surely, an organization that has a very strong resilient core business, the focus is 24/7 on just that, tends to outperform.

Kevin Fischbeck -- Bank of America -- Analyst

All right. And then, Mark, maybe just to follow-up on that point because, I guess, oftentimes you see a new CEO come in, and then there's kind of a new strategic review of the business. And I guess, the fact that you're kind of reiterating all of these dynamics mean that you've done that work and come to the same conclusions as the prior management team. So just to a, make sure I have that correct, but then b, would just love to hear your perspective to someone who's coming in with fresh eyes and being able to kind of look under the hood a little bit more than we get from the outside. Just what gives you the confidence in that growth opportunity and the cost cutting?

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, in no particular order, I would say that, first, the Board, I think, was very careful before in dealing with the issues that it had to navigate around. We then added a group of new Board members, where you can see are highly qualified and really a terrific group. So in total, we have a group of 10 people, plus me, and I think we're very attracted to continuing to move this company forward because they see the incredibly strong position we have in its viral niche in medical services. And I think we were all attracted to the fact that the company was already moving in a direction to focus on its core operations. And again, I'll remind you that the radiology practice here is very strong and as Stephen detailed, bounced back incredibly for the depth of COVID. So it's really a core and strategic initiative to say it could be better off in other hands, and we could use that money to enhance our core business. But it's certainly not selling from a position of weakness.

So when I go back to the core business and say, yes, I think everybody is determined to go in that direction. We, as the Board, are obviously new any changes that we make won't be because it may be because of me working with my Board and our senior management team and we'll but I would anticipate anything different than will be described in this call and what Dr. Medel and everybody had intended moving forward. Compared to things I've done in the past, I would say that the dedication level to succeeding in this core business here is higher than I could have imagined. The spirit in the organization is greater. I think people have gone through a turbulent time and are so eager to put that turbulence behind and to move and to really focus. I've spent a lot of time with Roger and understanding the importance of the support that we do and can provide, the importance of research and other intangibles to really making sure that we're doing what we say we're going to do, then we're always a leader, we're always out in front.

So I've seen organizations before that kind of lack a central purpose and the central drive, and that's not the case here. So it gives me a great deal of confidence. And I know from the people who were on the Board before and the people who have joined the Board, they have that enthusiasm, that this is a great opportunity to follow-on a lot of hard work that the team did before I arrived.

Kevin Fischbeck -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Okay. And then maybe to speak to that more, last one in. I guess the volume numbers, I understand that worse in April and better as you exited the month to the quarter, but it is still a little bit strange because we think about NICU volumes being driven nine months, I guess, six or seven months before the patient actually comes in. So it doesn't seem like the demand side of it would have been impacted by COVID and you so it sounds like you're saying you think it's just normal fluctuation. I don't know if there's anything else, like are there more home bursts? Are there anything else that might somehow explain why maybe the birth rate was lower as far as what you saw when, again, all equal, you would think that demand would have been although it was much more resilient to other subsectors, almost not impacted yet, it seems to have been impacted to some degree?

Roger M. Hinson, M.D. -- President, Pediatrix And Obstetrix Medical Groups

Yes. This is Mack, again. I think based on the evidence we have to date, but you're absolutely right about the time line, babies who were born in April, May and June, obviously, were conceived earlier. So what we're seeing is not a direct result of COVID. I think we tend, over the years, to see some cycling of admissions. Generally, our busier time of the year tends to be July through the rest of the year. Certainly, our anecdotal evidence from some of our bigger units are that they are busier over the last four weeks or so. In one of our major markets, one of the main will be very large OB groups had related to us they've had a record number of pregnancy intakes new pregnancy intakes in the last month. So I think the jury is out over what this looks like in terms of a long-term trend. Right now, I think the evidence is just cyclical and I don't think we should make anything more of it at this point.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

The only other thing I'd say, which is important, none of us here wish for a downturn in the birth rate. But if there is, in any business that is focused and is positioned to grow and during weak times, it's an opportunity. It's an M&A opportunity. It's usually a better time to be acquiring and enlarging when when there's some temporary or cyclical weakness. So if, in fact, we start to see trends that we don't see as Dr. Hinson just said, we'll take advantage of. That's unless you think there's a permanent change, which we have no reason to believe, we will be strong. And as Stephen outlined our financial position, which is an improving financial position, which is a strong financial position, with the sale of radiology will be an even stronger financial position, we'll take care of it. The weakness, we'll that will be an opportunity.

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Kevin, I'm just going to add. I just got one last comment, not to pile on as everyone around the table is providing part of the response. But the just to build on what Mark was just saying, we end up getting a significant amount of essentially development pipeline referrals through our existing physicians and clinicians. They have someone they work with. They have someone at the hospital, someone else is at the hospital, the hospital down the street who has had a hard time. There are a lot of physicians and clinicians in small groups who have had a really hard time financially during this COVID period.

A number of them were sort of taken to the range of viability, and we have received a very significant amount of reverse inquiry and direct referral from these folks who are more interested now than they have ever been in being part of a financially strong national medical group. So I think the ultimate proof will be borne out over time, but we are really pleased with what we're seeing and believe that we're going to, over the next several quarters, achieve some momentum with exactly what Mark was just talking about.

Kevin Fischbeck -- Bank of America -- Analyst

All right, great. Thank you.

Operator

And our next question comes from Ryan Daniels with William Blair. Please go ahead.

Nick Spiekhou -- William Blair -- Analyst

Hey guys, It's Nick Spiekhout in for Ryan. Welcome, Mark. This one's kind of for you. I guess, so it seems like you're kind of continuing on toward the strategy that was basically in place before you came on. I guess, I was just wondering how you are going to define or how you define your responsibilities going forward? And I guess, what would be success on your end?

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, my responsibility, I know I'm the CEO, so I think a bunch of stuff I'm responsible for. Foremost, all kidding aside, is working with the team, knowing who's around me and how we're going to mark it all together ether to achieve great results. And as to what those great results look like, I would say that, number one, we have to be the absolute best in care. Our core strength cannot be diluted one bit. So all the referred to this before, but all the little intangibles that make up a great company are what is going to be what I think about all the time. Then, we're going to make sure that we're always strong financially, so we can take advantage of opportunities. We can invest where it it make sense, we can make changes where we need to make changes, and we can grow very responsibly and carefully. And then there's a scorecard out there, which is our share price, which I think, over time, will go up meaningfully, if we do the things that we described with the care that we will employ.

But I would simply say, make me sound old, but I have done this several times, and I have always done it the same way, you take something that's complicated, you make it template, you have everybody focused. You make sure that you are doing the best job you can at your core. You're very transparent with everybody, all stakeholders. You deal with problems the second they come up, which, again, a simpler organization is far easier to do than a more complicated organization, and that's what gives me confidence. That's what gave me the confidence to want to do this. I'm sure that's what gave our fellow Board members the confidence that they like to be part of this. And I think it's only been a few weeks, but I think the team has a collective confidence level that this is the right direction, and they're excited to be part.

Nick Spiekhou -- William Blair -- Analyst

Great. That's good to hear. And then, I guess this ones for Stephen. I see that salary and benefits expenses kind of like ticked down as a percentage of revenue this quarter, assuming kind of going on your cost reduction benefit. Just wondering how variable that is going to be to improvements kind of a normalization in volume. Should we expect that could tick up a bit as volumes kind of continue to normalize going forward?

Charles Lynch -- Vice President, Strategy And Investor Relations

Nick, this is Charlie. Yes, I think we referenced both in the release, and as David mentioned before, one of the components of cost response to the revenue impact we saw in the quarter was built within a number of our different practice structures. So for example, if you have a radiology group whose physicians are compensated based on the revenue of the practice, there's going to be a mechanical adjustments to the clinical compensation within that practice as revenues go down, and there would be an adjustment. Conversely, as revenues improve and grow. So I wouldn't call that a lock step, but that was a very useful mechanism as we went through the trough of demand earlier this quarter, and we see some normalization in practice level compensation, should we see a continued recovery in volumes and revenue.

So I would not call that variable and under our control, but it certainly flex accordingly as we saw the impact we saw during this quarter. More things that are under our control or some of the other operating and support structure within the medical group and more importantly, within our G&A, which is obviously more of a business expense and something above over which we have greater control. And on top of that, we are in the midst of reshaping that G&A infrastructure following the divestiture to American Anesthesiology. And that, I think, will give us additional capabilities to flex our G&A as we go forward.

Nick Spiekhou -- William Blair -- Analyst

Got it. Think the telco. I appreciate taking the questions here.

Operator

And our next question comes from Pito Chickering with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Pito Chickering -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Good morning, guys, thanks for taking my questions. And welcome to the team, Mark. Going back to the targeted margin improvement for pediatrics, as move to the mid-teens into the high teens, how much of that margin comes from operating leverage from revenues versus cost cutting measures? And on the cost cutting, can you walk us through the lowest hanging fruit? And how fast do you think that can occur?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Pito, it's Stephen. I mean, the answer I can give you an answer that's directional. We are, as we've spoken about now for a couple of months, we are making a lot of progress with reshaping our G&A. We had that call in the first week of June, where we indicated in a couple of weeks preceding that, we had completed a $10 million takeout. We have other reshaping meaningful additional reshaping that is ongoing, but a lot of it requires a couple of quarters, whatever, to get in place because its technology-enabled, variabilization of cost, that will bring both efficiencies and lower overall tonnage of expense. So the G&A piece is a big piece but the operating leverage is also a big piece from scale. And as we've talked about, we haven't really quantified, but we think we'll be able to drive a bunch of top line from particularly, from adding practices and not just M&A-driven, that we think there is a very decent amount of opportunity of simply just picking off new contracts. And there's not that much cost involved in in tilting up new agreements.

I mean, you have a little bit of at the higher roll ahead so you've got some start-up costs, but it's clearly substantially less than paying multiple for somebody's existing business. I do think, and we do think that the whole COVID experience for the general healthcare ecosystem and for hospitals is going to really bring more business our way, in terms of what we do is generally super highly specialized, and we do it in more locations than anybody by a massive, long shot and so we've been playing to our strengths really will give us a number of opportunities to grow. And with the amount of focus we're going to place on it, way more than I think we've generated in the last few years in our core business. So it's hard for me to break down specifically for you what percentage of each is going to drive us from mid-teens to high teens but however, we pencil it out, we got have multiple ways to get there. And that's really where my focus is. I mean, we have multiple ways to get there and that gives us comfort. Well, no one we don't have a ouija board that's going to tell us exactly what path all the elements are going to take, but we do have a high degree of confidence that it's got get us what we're trying to do.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

The only thing I'd add to that, Philip, just real quickly is when we talk about the growth opportunities and talk about what we want to do, this is not all prospective. We have a lot of activity that's in play. We lay out a lot of details. i June, when we had a broader discussion of Pediatrics Medical group and the growth activities that we've been investing in and undertaking. So there is a pretty meaningful amount of new development activity that is in-flight today and gives us a fair degree of confidence in the position that we've got. So I just wanted to be clear on that.

Pito Chickering -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Okay. So can I privy down on a 50-50? Is that is a ballpark? And then a follow-up question on accounts receivable, it sounds like you had some collections since the quarter. Obviously, there's issues with NAPA. But can you just confirm that you aren't having any issues in collections with commercial payers on your core business?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Yes, sure. Look, on your 50-50 comment, I'm going to stand by the comments that I just made, Pito. There is no one on this call who would like more to be able to give you a precision answer but I think one is just not possible, but we're comfortable because we've got a lot of ways to get there. It's going clearly going to be able to do both those elements.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

By the way, I'll add, as the new guy. I'll use the new guy excuse on a limited basis. So I'll use it now. Since other Board members, the Board was reconstituted and I arrived three weeks ago, I think that's something that we're going to we'll get back to you on. We're learning and rather than through our precise number, you hear our determination, you get our confidence. A lot of things that are under way, but I don't think we're prepared to answer that now, but we'll be fully transparent when we can.

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mark. On your AR comment or on your AR question, Pito, it's actually been kind of nice to see over the past few months that, in some cases, we've had collection acceleration as opposed to delay, and we really have not seen much of anything in terms of categories that are causing concern. We've had some minor, minor negatives in certain areas, certain geographies by certain payers, but we've also had meaningful positives from others, and they've all kind of watched out. And we surprisingly pulled the day out of DSOs over the course of this quarter, which you if you asked me that question in April, I would have said, yes, well, nervous about that we're likely to see some pressure. In fact, it's gone the other way.

Pito Chickering -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Great, thanks so much guys.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And our next question comes from the line of Brian Tanquilut with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Brian Tanquilut -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Good morning, Mark, welcome to the company. So I've seen what you've done with other companies over the last few years. So coming in, and like you said earlier, you're not really want to use a lot of external consultants and whatnot. So is there more are there more concrete things that you can identify other than obviously divesting of radiology the radiology practice, more concrete stuff on colonel hanging. I know we talked a lot about of things today. But do we need to focus on like physician contract and then maybe like shoring of business development and things like that as a way to get to the goals on growth that you've laid out?

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

I won't comment further. I hope you'll understand that there are myriad of things in the organization that we're looking at. And a lot of this, for me to give an intelligent answer to you and to myself and to our Board, required to be really knowing the people in the organization better than I did. That has been my priority, and that's what I've been working hard on. So before I can talk about specifics, I want to learn more and also get together with my Board. So I apologize, had I come a few weeks earlier, then I can give you a better answer. But I think I'm getting my arms around all the facets of our operations and I'd rather not comment further until...

Brian Tanquilut -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Yes. Understandable. I guess my follow-up to that. So given what you just said, and also the comments from Mack earlier about how there's probably cyclicality in NICU or birth trends and as we look at NICU trends for you guys over the last few quarters, I mean, we haven't really hit that 3% goal for same-store that you reiterated today embedded in the guidance. So what's the mindset? You're coming in with a clean slate. So why not take the guidance out and revisit or reanalyze before coming out today and maintaining that long-term guidance range that a lot of people are questioning anyway?

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, we have no reason I think we have no reason to there's nothing it's no evidence that would suggest that we should change what we've done. That doesn't stop us shortly from being a different comment. But given the activities that the path that the company has been on, this is not a start-up. Given the past that the company has been on, there's no evidence that is to suggest changing that number. So I think it made sense to maintain it. As we move forward, and we reshape the organization, we think about where the best M&A and add-on opportunities are, I think that's going to give us a more important number. And if it changes, we'll update it. I think we also didn't want to make it seem like, if we all sudden pull back the number that there was a reason behind it. We didn't want to send an unintended signal when there's no single to send.

Brian Tanquilut -- Jefferies -- Analyst

I appreciate it. Thank you and good luck.

Operator

And our next question comes from Rishi Parekh with Barclays. Please go ahead.

Rishi Parekh -- Barclays -- Analyst

They do, and thanks for taking my questions. First, I apologize if you already mentioned this, but I was hoping that you could just provide me your radiology volumes in Q2? And also, since you provided your NICU volumes for July, what your radiology volumes were in July? And can you update us on your negotiations with UNH? And I have a follow-up after that.

Charles Lynch -- Vice President, Strategy And Investor Relations

Yes, Rishi, it's Charlie. I think you're asking just about the RAD volumes for the quarter and coming out, it's on the release. They were heavily impacted in April, down by about half. Recovered fairly strongly through May and June, getting much closer to normalized pre-COVID volumes, 85%, 95% 85% to 90% by the end of the month and have persisted in that range, at least on a preliminary basis as we've come through July. Related to United, as we mentioned a couple of months ago, we were very pleased with how constructive the conversations had been going, such that we had extended any effective termination dates. We have more time to talk. As we stand today, we've progressed further with United. And related to the practices question within Pediatrics Medical Group, we have agreed to extend those contracts well into 2021 with no change to terms. So we're very pleased with that. It gives us plenty of time to work really constructively with United, and it's something that we're kind of happy, the way things have progressed.

Rishi Parekh -- Barclays -- Analyst

And then as a follow-up, I know you started the radiology sales process pre-COVID. But since you officially announced it in June, has there been any significant momentum in the process? Or is this on hold due to the current environment?

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

It's Mark. I think it's not on hold. It's an ongoing process. I think it will be I think, given the strength of the business, I think there'll be a lot of people interested in it, and we'll report back to you as we move forward, but we don't have any additional reports to make today.

Rishi Parekh -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

And our next question comes from Whit Mayo with UBS. Please go ahead.

Whit Mayo -- UBS -- Analyst

Thanks, Stephen, the $10 million of take-out expenses, I think, as you referred to it a couple of times, is that an annualized number, and that's on top of the G&A savings and the prior year restructuring and cost saving programs? Is this something that's new and incremental? And I guess, I'm just trying to understand a little bit better where those costs really came from?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Yes, sure. That was all incremental with basically, we exited anesthesia, and over the few weeks that followed the exit of anesthesia, we figured out and executed on an additional $10 million of takeout, and it was primarily FTE. I think it was almost completely FTE-related from the G&A side of the house. And I believe we indicated at that time that we had visibility on a significant amount of incremental similar sort of work, and that's what we and that's the context of our comments today that we're continuing to drive toward that. We feel very good about the ability to reshape our cost structure for the go-forward business.

Whit Mayo -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay. So just to be clear, that wasn't like eliminating stranded costs associated with the sale of anesthesia that was actually working down the Remainco cost. Is that fair?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Actually not. I mean, I think I mean, look, I guess we did get definitional here. But the reality is we had some costs that were not necessarily going that were there historically, but they were not necessary going forward once we exited anesthesiology. So I think it's probably it's a little hard to kind of tease out how many dollars were stranded versus some other category, but it's they're probably more it is simply the simply cost that we didn't need going forward following that exit.

Whit Mayo -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay. So a portion of that was clearly eliminating some stranded costs and some might be tied to the core business, just hard to tease that out. Okay. That's helpful. And my follow-up, I just want to make sure that I get this number right. The revenue in the quarter from American Anesthesia, I'm not sure if you have that. And if I take the restated prior year revenue and back that out from what you reported, it looks like last year, anesthesia had about $307 million of revenue. I just want to confirm that's the right number and that nothing else is influencing that?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

There shouldn't be anything else influencing that. In our reported results today, and we did restate last year, you can see a full apples-to-apples without any influence from anesthesiology, which is all in disc ops, if that helps.

Whit Mayo -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay. So there isn't any I thought that there would be revenue at least from maybe April and part of May from American?

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

No, that was entirely stripped out and moved down to disc ops. So there is 0 contribution from anesthesiology in our reported results.

Whit Mayo -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay then. And that's helpful, thanks. Sure.

Operator

And there are no further questions on the phone line at this time.

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thank you all. Have a great day. We look forward to speaking again.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 65 minutes

Call participants:

Charles Lynch -- Vice President, Strategy And Investor Relations

Mark S. Ordan -- Chief Executive Officer

Stephen D. Farber -- Executive Vice President And Chief Financial Officer

Roger M. Hinson, M.D. -- President, Pediatrix And Obstetrix Medical Groups

A.J. Rice -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Ralph Giacobbe -- Citi -- Analyst

Kevin Fischbeck -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Nick Spiekhou -- William Blair -- Analyst

Pito Chickering -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Brian Tanquilut -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Rishi Parekh -- Barclays -- Analyst

Whit Mayo -- UBS -- Analyst

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