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Med Care Res Rev ; 57 Suppl 2: 116-35, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11105509

ABSTRACT

In the past two decades, relationships among health plans, medical groups, and providers have grown more complex and the number of clinical management strategies has increased. In this context, determining the independent effect of a particular organizational strategy on quality of care has become more difficult. The authors review some of the issues a researcher must address when studying the relationship between organizational characteristics and quality of care. They offer criteria for selecting a research question, list organizational characteristics that may influence quality, and suggest sampling and study design techniques to reduce confounding. Since this type of research often requires a health care organization as collaborator, the authors discuss strategies for developing research partnerships and collecting data from the partner organization. Finally, they offer suggestions for translating research into policy.


Subject(s)
Health Services Administration/standards , Health Services Research , Quality Indicators, Health Care/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care , Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic , Cooperative Behavior , Data Collection/methods , Health Personnel/psychology , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Research Design , Research Personnel/psychology
7.
Jt Comm J Qual Improv ; 26(3): 137-46, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10709147

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Initiatives to improve quality measurement (QM) and to create systems for financial risk adjustment (RA) have developed in response to concerns about price competition's threat to quality and stimulation of risk selection. QM is designed to help purchasers identify best plans, to aid plans in their selection of providers, to facilitate quality improvement by plans and providers, and to assist patients faced with choices among plans and providers. The goal of RA is to eliminate incentives for plans and providers to avoid sick, high-cost patients in favor of healthy, low-cost patients. CONFLICTS BETWEEN QM AND RA: For QM it is often necessary to identify all patients with a particular condition, and many quality measures involve intervening on patients early in the course of their disease. Identifying patients through utilization decisions (for example, identifying patients with depression through receipt of an antidepressant prescription) may bias QM. For RA, the focus is on the highest-cost patients, and patient capture through resource utilization is more likely to be appropriate. DISCUSSION: Achieving QM and RA depends on improving information systems and patient identification processes and developing standard definitions for important variables. QM and RA could both be improved, and the conflicts between them reduced, if they were based more on detailed clinical data, if consensus definitions of quality of care for specific diagnoses could be achieved, if the number of QM measures that target acute and chronic care (versus preventive care) were increased, and if information systems were enhanced.


Subject(s)
Managed Care Programs , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Risk Adjustment , Risk Sharing, Financial , Antidepressive Agents/economics , Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Breast Neoplasms/therapy , Costs and Cost Analysis , Cystic Fibrosis/therapy , Data Collection , Depression/drug therapy , Female , HIV Infections/therapy , Heart Failure/therapy , Humans , Male , Managed Care Programs/economics , Managed Care Programs/standards , Medical Records , Retrospective Studies , United States
10.
Inquiry ; 36(2): 200-11, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10459374

ABSTRACT

This paper shows that risk adjustment models based on demographic and employment variables are not easily transferable from one population to the next, and that administrative variables are not useful in predicting medical expenditures. We found statistically significant differences between models built on populations of employees from a single employer enrolled in two different health plans, and between models built on populations of enrollees from a single health plan employed at two different companies. Employment-based variables (e.g., length of employment) had little predictive power in any of these risk models. We conclude that policymakers should be careful in applying risk models across populations, and that future versions of risk models for use within large employers need not include employment-based variables.


Subject(s)
Health Benefit Plans, Employee/statistics & numerical data , Models, Econometric , Risk Adjustment/methods , Adult , Child , Female , Health Benefit Plans, Employee/economics , Health Expenditures , Health Maintenance Organizations , Humans , Insurance Selection Bias , Logistic Models , Male , Reimbursement Mechanisms , Reproducibility of Results , United States
13.
Future Child ; 8(2): 25-38, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9782648

ABSTRACT

This article lays the foundation for the other articles in this journal issue, which examine the effect of managed health care arrangements on a particular population: children. Although managed care has been used to finance and deliver health care services for decades, the meaning of this term often has been unclear to health care consumers and practitioners because new forms of managed care have evolved rapidly. The one consistent and unifying concept across all managed care arrangements is that enrollees obtain care from a network of participating health care providers who contract with the managed care organization and abide by the organization's rules. The uncertainty of what managed care is has made it difficult to measure the effect of these arrangements on health service delivery and health outcomes, especially in the pediatric population, where the development of outcome and quality measures lags behind that for adults. The incentives posed by managed care suggest both potential advantages and disadvantages to these arrangements for children. On the positive side, managed care enrollment may offer a "medical home" for primary care services to children who otherwise would obtain only episodic care; improve the coordination of health care services; and encourage more preventive health services. On the negative side, under capitated reimbursement, health plans have an incentive to enroll only healthy children with the lowest expected health care expenditures, and providers have an incentive to offer fewer services than may be appropriate. Managed care also may limit enrollees' choice of providers, particularly for specialty care. Despite the paucity of information about the effect of managed care on the delivery of pediatric health services and on child health outcomes, children are disproportionately being enrolled in managed care plans.


Subject(s)
Child Health Services/trends , Managed Care Programs/trends , Adult , Child , Child Health Services/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/trends , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Health Services Accessibility/trends , Humans , Managed Care Programs/economics , Primary Health Care/economics , Primary Health Care/trends , Quality Assurance, Health Care/economics , Quality Assurance, Health Care/trends , United States
15.
Annu Rev Public Health ; 19: 459-75, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9611628

ABSTRACT

Medicare offers nearly universal, but limited, coverage for the elderly. The vast majority of beneficiaries therefore obtain supplemental coverage, or they enroll in HMOs to gain extra benefits at substantially lower or zero cost. This is possible because of reduced utilization and costs, as well as favorable selection of lower-risk enrollees into HMOs. Competition from HMOs may lower local fee-for-service costs as well. Quality and satisfaction measures are quite balanced, with some results showing better HMO performance and some worse. The absence of adequate risk-adjusted payments to HMOs, however, gives them little incentive to develop high-quality programs for the sickest enrollees.


Subject(s)
Health Care Reform , Managed Care Programs , Medicare/organization & administration , Humans , Risk Assessment , United States
16.
Med Care ; 36(3): 271-80, 1998 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9520953

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The authors examined the costs and outcomes resulting from a natural experiment during which direct public access to poison control centers was restricted and then restored. METHODS: Both societal and health care purchaser perspectives were used. Probability data were obtained from a natural experiment during which public callers from a large county in California were electronically blocked from directly accessing the poison control center. Callers were referred to 911, which had direct access to the poison control center, if they thought they had a poisoning emergency. We conducted telephone interviews of: (a) persons who attempted to call the poison control center for a child's poisoning exposure but who did not have direct access (n = 270) and (b) persons who called the poison control center after direct access was restored (n = 279). Cost data were obtained from primary data collection and from other sources. The outcome measure was the appropriateness of the treatment location (at home or at a health care facility). Caller-reported outcomes were also examined. RESULTS: The average additional cost per blocked call was $10.89 from a societal perspective, or $33.14 from a health care purchaser perspective. Fourteen percent of callers with restricted access were treated at an inappropriate location, compared with only 2% of callers with direct poison control center access. Also, 14% did not obtain any professional advice after they attempted to call the poison control center, although 66% of these cases involved potentially toxic substances. Results were robust across a range of sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSION: Restricting direct public access to poison control centers created additional costs to society, the health care sector, and callers.


Subject(s)
Health Services Accessibility/trends , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Poison Control Centers/statistics & numerical data , California , Decision Support Techniques , Decision Trees , Health Care Costs , Health Care Sector , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/economics , Poison Control Centers/economics , Probability , Sensitivity and Specificity , United States
18.
Milbank Q ; 76(4): 649-86, 511, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9879306

ABSTRACT

Purchasers of health care could offer financial incentives to plans or providers in order to increase quality. Unfortunately, the current health care market, in which quality is rarely measured and there is no risk adjustment, actively discourages both plans and providers from maximizing quality, resulting in a poor overall level of quality, both in fee-for-service arrangements and health maintenance organizations. Health plans and providers will not focus on quality until mechanisms to correct for risk differences among enrollees can be developed. Although such risk adjustment will be the most important stimulus for quality, it should also be linked to improvements in information systems and agreement on a minimum benefits package, quality reporting standards, and financial solvency requirements.


Subject(s)
Fee-for-Service Plans/economics , Fee-for-Service Plans/standards , Health Maintenance Organizations/economics , Health Maintenance Organizations/standards , Quality of Health Care/economics , Reimbursement, Incentive , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Fee-for-Service Plans/statistics & numerical data , Health Maintenance Organizations/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Research , Humans , Morbidity , Patient Satisfaction , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Quality of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Risk Adjustment , Treatment Outcome , United States
19.
Int J Qual Health Care ; 9(5): 341-8, 1997 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9394202

ABSTRACT

There is growing interest in the quality of health care and in using quality measures to direct patients to hospitals and providers offering high quality, low cost health care. The dilemma is that, while there is an increasing need for quality indicators as a result of a changing health care environment, this changing environment has important implications for the use of some of these measures. Since the 1970s, a growing body of research in the U.S. has addressed the empirical relationship between the number of patients with a specific diagnosis of surgical procedure and their outcomes after treatment in a particular hospital or by a particular physician ("volume-outcome" studies). In this paper, we examine the policy implications of using hospital and physician volume information as an "indicator" of quality in a rapidly changing health care environment with new players and new incentives. We begin by describing the evolution of the use of volumes within both regulatory and market-oriented contexts in the U.S. We then discuss policy considerations and cautions in using volumes, along with suggestions for future research. Our purpose is to point out potential problems and clarify confusions about the use of volumes, so that policymakers and practitioners can be sensitive to the potential minefields they are traversing.


Subject(s)
Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals/standards , Physicians/standards , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Decision Making, Organizational , Health Services/standards , Health Services Needs and Demand/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Research , Hospitals/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Information Services , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/methods , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Physicians/statistics & numerical data , Policy Making , Surgical Procedures, Operative/standards , Surgical Procedures, Operative/statistics & numerical data , United States
20.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 16(5): 7-25, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9314673

ABSTRACT

We analyzed evidence on managed care plan (mostly health maintenance organization, or HMO) performance from thirty-seven recently published peer-reviewed studies. Quality-of-care evidence from fifteen studies showed an equal number of significantly better and worse HMO results, compared with non-HMO plans. However, in several instances, Medicare HMO enrollees with chronic conditions showed worse quality of care. Evidence comparing hospital and physician resource use showed no clear pattern, whereas evidence on enrollee satisfaction varied by measure and enrollee type. Although recent research provides useful findings, interpreting and generalizing from these relatively few studies is difficult. Fears that HMOs uniformly lead to worse quality of care are not supported by the evidence, although all quality data were collected prior to the recent round of cost cutting that started in 1992. Hopes that HMOs would improve overall quality also are not supported, in part because of slow clinical practice change, lack of risk-adjusted capitation rates, and inadequate quality measurement and reporting.


Subject(s)
Health Maintenance Organizations/standards , Quality of Health Care , Fee-for-Service Plans/economics , Fee-for-Service Plans/standards , Health Care Costs , Health Maintenance Organizations/economics , Health Services Research , Humans , Patient Satisfaction , United States
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