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1.
Am J Manag Care ; 27(4): 137-139, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1194878

ABSTRACT

Low-value services are a major problem in the US health care system. We believe that the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic's unprecedented impact on the health system, and society writ large, offers an opportunity to reshape the conversation and incentives around low-value services. This article explores current barriers to and opportunities for accelerating progress toward high-value care delivery. We examine how financial and nonfinancial incentives, uncertainty in clinical decision-making, and insufficient partnering with patients and families contribute to the delivery of low-value care. We then explore potential solutions, including making it easier for clinicians to forgo low-value services and providing them with actionable information to make those decisions, expanding payer efforts to develop "value report cards," developing measures that map the adverse health and economic effects of low-value services, and training clinicians and health care leaders to engage in conversations with patients about the personal medical, financial, and psychological harms of low-value services.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/economics , Health Services Misuse/prevention & control , Quality of Health Care/economics , Humans
2.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 39(8): 1302-1311, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-825014

ABSTRACT

Health systems continue to grow in size. Financial integration-the ownership of hospitals or physician practices-often has anticompetitive effects that contribute to the higher prices for health care seen in the US. To determine whether the potential harms of financial integration are counterbalanced by improvements in quality, we surveyed nationally representative samples of hospitals (n = 739) and physician practices (n = 2,189), stratified according to whether they were independent or were owned by complex systems, simple systems, or medical groups. The surveys included nine scales measuring the level of adoption of diverse, quality-focused care delivery and payment reforms. Scores varied widely across hospitals and practices, but little of this variation was explained by ownership status. Quality scores favored financially integrated systems for four of nine hospital measures and one of nine practice measures, but in no case favored complex systems. Greater financial integration was generally not associated with better quality.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Hospitals , Physicians , Humans , Ownership , Quality of Health Care , United States
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