The impact of global budgeting on treatment intensity and outcomes.

Kamhon Kan, Shu-Fen Li, Wei-Der Tsai
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

This paper investigates the effects of global budgets on the amount of resources devoted to cardio-cerebrovascular disease patients by hospitals of different ownership types and these patients' outcomes. Theoretical models predict that hospitals have financial incentives to increase the quantity of treatments applied to patients. This is especially true for for-profit hospitals. If that's the case, it is important to examine whether the increase in treatment quantity is translated into better treatment outcomes. Our analyses take advantage of the National Health Insurance of Taiwan's implementation of global budgets for hospitals in 2002. Our data come from the National Health Insurance's claim records, covering the universe of hospitalized patients suffering acute myocardial infarction, ischemic heart disease, hemorrhagic stroke, and ischemic stroke. Regression analyses are carried out separately for government, private not-for-profit and for-profit hospitals. We find that for-profit hospitals and private not-for-profit hospitals did increase their treatment intensity for cardio-cerebrovascular disease patients after the 2002 implementation of global budgets. However, this was not accompanied by an improvement in these patients' mortality rates. This reveals a waste of medical resources and implies that aggregate expenditure caps should be supplemented by other designs to prevent resources misallocation.

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全球预算编制对治疗强度和结果的影响。
本文研究了全球预算对不同所有制医院用于心脑血管疾病患者的资源量和患者预后的影响。理论模型预测,医院有财政激励来增加对病人的治疗数量。盈利性医院尤其如此。如果是这样的话,重要的是要检查治疗数量的增加是否转化为更好的治疗结果。我们的分析利用了2002年台湾全民健康保险实施全球医院预算的优势。我们的数据来自国民健康保险的索赔记录,涵盖了急性心肌梗死、缺血性心脏病、出血性中风和缺血性中风的住院患者。分别对政府医院、私营非营利医院和营利性医院进行回归分析。我们发现,在2002年实施全球预算后,营利性医院和私立非营利医院确实增加了对心脑血管疾病患者的治疗强度。然而,这并没有伴随着这些患者死亡率的改善。这揭示了医疗资源的浪费,并意味着总支出上限应辅以其他设计,以防止资源错配。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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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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