小儿 Moyamoya 病转诊血管重建术:支持私人保险公司批准网络外医疗的财务和质量数据

Shivani D. Rangwala, Nikita Singh, J. Judge, Christopher Isibor, Craig D. McClain, Laura L. Lehman, A. P. See, D. Orbach, Edward R. Smith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Moyamoya 是一种影响颅内循环的罕见动脉病变,在儿童人群中有中风风险。与低容量中心相比,高容量中心的手术血管重建效果更好。然而,私人保险公司往往不愿意批准网络外医疗。我们的假设是,可以通过单次手术治疗的罕见疾病(如治疗 moyamoya 的血管再通手术),如果获准在高流量的卓越中心接受治疗,就能改善临床疗效,并为保险公司节省大量成本。 2018年1月至2020年12月期间接受moyamoya血管重建手术的儿科患者的纵向去身份化数据(N = 125)由独立的第三方分析核心从全国性商业保险公司获得。根据国际疾病分类第十版(ICD-10)的诊断和手术代码选择患者。在为期 9 个月的病程中,对各中心的临床和成本结果指标进行了比较,并将最高诊疗量中心的患者指定为主要队列。 主要队列中的患者手术时平均年龄较轻,合并症较多,但术后并发症较少,非计划再入院次数也较少。与在其他单一机构医疗系统接受治疗的患者相比,主治队列的总费用降低了 42%(89 000 美元对 153 000 美元)。在实施合作护理模式后,主要队列将网络外费用降到了最低,68%的病例利用当地资源进行术前检查,而在一个高流量中心,只有8%的病例利用当地资源进行术前检查。 合作模式的实施利用了高容量中心的手术资源优势,同时最大限度地利用当地资源进行术前和术后护理。转诊到高流量中心进行儿科莫亚莫亚血管再通手术既能改善患者的治疗效果,又能为保险公司节省大量费用。这些数据表明,针对需要神经外科治疗的特定病症,发展大容量卓越中心可为患者和保险公司带来益处,即使是在网络外治疗的情况下也是如此。
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Referral of Pediatric Moyamoya for Revascularization: Financial and Quality Data Supporting Private Insurer Approval for Out‐of‐Network Care
Moyamoya is a rare arteriopathy affecting the intracranial circulation with a risk of stroke in the pediatric population. High‐volume centers provide improved outcomes after surgical revascularization compared with low‐volume centers. However, private insurers are often reluctant to approve care out‐of‐network. We hypothesized that rare diseases that can be treated in a single procedure, such as revascularization for moyamoya, can yield improved clinical outcomes with substantial cost savings to insurance companies when approved for care at high‐volume centers of excellence. Longitudinal deidentified data of pediatric patients undergoing surgical revascularization for moyamoya from January 2018 to December 2020 (N = 125) were obtained from national commercial insurers by an independent third‐party analytics core. Patients were selected according to International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision ( ICD‐10 ) diagnosis and procedure codes. For a 9‐month episode, clinical and cost outcome metrics were compared across centers, with patients from the highest volume center designated as the primary cohort. Patients in the primary cohort were on average younger at time of surgery, with greater medical comorbidities, yet exhibited decreased postoperative complications and fewer unplanned readmissions. The primary cohort had an overall 42% lower expense compared with patients treated at other single institution health systems ($89 000 versus $153 000). The primary cohort minimized out‐of‐network costs with implementation of a partnership care model, using local resources for preoperative workup in 68% of episodes, compared with only 8% of episodes at a comparator high‐volume center. Implementation of a partnership model takes advantages of the surgical resources of a high‐volume center while maximizing local resource use for preoperative and postoperative care. Referral to high‐volume centers for pediatric moyamoya revascularization provides both improved outcomes for the patients and substantial cost savings for the insurers. These data suggest the development of high‐volume centers of excellence for select conditions requiring neurosurgical treatment confer benefit to both patients and insurers, even in cases of out‐of‐network care.
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