Does a global budget superimposed on fee-for-service payments mitigate hospitals' medical claims in Taiwan?

Pi-Fem Hsu
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Taiwan's global budgeting for hospital health care, in comparison to other countries, assigns a regional budget cap for hospitals' medical benefits claimed on the basis of fee-for-service (FFS) payments. This study uses a stays-hospitals-years database comprising acute myocardial infarction inpatients to examine whether the reimbursement policy mitigates the medical benefits claimed to a third-payer party during 2000-2008. The estimated results of a nested random-effects model showed that hospitals attempted to increase their medical benefit claims under the influence of initial implementation of global budgeting. The magnitudes of hospitals' responses to global budgeting were significantly attributed to hospital ownership, accreditation status, and market competitiveness of a region. The results imply that the regional budget cap superimposed on FFS payments provides only blunt incentive to the hospitals to cooperate to contain medical resource utilization, unless a monitoring mechanism attached with the payment system.

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全球预算叠加在按服务收费的支付上,是否减轻了台湾医院的医疗索赔?
与其他国家相比,台湾的医院医疗保健全球预算为医院根据按服务收费(FFS)支付的医疗福利规定了区域预算上限。本研究使用包含急性心肌梗死住院患者的住院年数据库来检查报销政策是否减轻了2000-2008年期间向第三方付款人索赔的医疗福利。嵌套随机效应模型的估计结果表明,在最初实施全球预算编制的影响下,医院试图增加其医疗福利索赔。医院对全球预算的反应程度很大程度上归因于医院所有权、认证地位和一个地区的市场竞争力。研究结果表明,除非在支付制度中附加监测机制,否则对医院合作控制医疗资源利用的激励作用较弱。
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Does a global budget superimposed on fee-for-service payments mitigate hospitals' medical claims in Taiwan? Payment generosity and physician acceptance of Medicare and Medicaid patients. The impact of global budgeting on treatment intensity and outcomes. Health care expenditure decisions in the presence of devolution and equalisation grants. Changing healthcare capital-to-labor ratios: evidence and implications for bending the cost curve in Canada and beyond.
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