Rising hospital employment of physicians: better quality, higher costs?

Ann S O'Malley, Amelia M Bond, Robert A Berenson
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Abstract

In a quest to gain market share, hospital employment of physicians has accelerated in recent years to shore up referral bases and capture admissions, according to the Center for Studying Health System Change's (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative metropolitan communities. Stagnant reimbursement rates, coupled with the rising costs of private practice, and a desire for a better work-life balance have contributed to physician interest in hospital employment. While greater physician alignment with hospitals may improve quality through better clinical integration and care coordination, hospital employment of physicians does not guarantee clinical integration. The trend of hospital-employed physicians also may increase costs through higher hospital and physician commercial insurance payment rates and hospital pressure on employed physicians to order more expensive care. To date, hospitals' primary motivation for employing physicians has been to gain market share, typically through lucrative service-line strategies encouraged by a fee-for-service payment system that rewards volume. More recently, hospitals view physician employment as a way to prepare for payment reforms that shift from fee for service to methods that make providers more accountable for the cost and quality of patient care.

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医院聘用越来越多的医生:质量更好,成本更高?
根据研究卫生系统变化中心(HSC) 2010年对12个具有全国代表性的大都市社区的实地考察,为了获得市场份额,近年来医院对医生的雇用加速了,以支持转诊基础和获取入院人数。停滞不前的报销率,加上私人执业成本的上升,以及对更好的工作与生活平衡的渴望,促使医生对医院的工作感兴趣。虽然医生与医院的更大结盟可能通过更好的临床整合和护理协调来提高质量,但医院雇用医生并不能保证临床整合。医院聘用医生的趋势也可能增加成本,因为医院和医生的商业保险支付率更高,医院对聘用医生施加压力,要求他们提供更昂贵的医疗服务。迄今为止,医院聘用医生的主要动机一直是为了获得市场份额,通常是通过利润丰厚的服务线战略,这种战略是由按服务付费的奖励数量的支付系统所鼓励的。最近,医院将聘用医生视为为支付改革做准备的一种方式,这种改革将从按服务收费转变为使提供者对病人护理的成本和质量更负责任的方法。
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Small employers and self-insured health benefits: too small to succeed? Employer-sponsored health insurance: down but not out. Rising hospital employment of physicians: better quality, higher costs? Key findings from HSC's 2010 site visits: health care markets weather economic downturn, brace for health reform. Physicians slow to e-mail routinely with patients.
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