扭曲的支付系统破坏了医疗质量和效率提高的商业案例。

Paul B Ginsburg, Hoangmai H Pham, Kelly McKenzie, Arnold Milstein
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引用次数: 0

摘要

根据卫生系统变革研究中心(HSC)的一项新研究,如果医生和医院在成功实现这些目标时遭受巨大的经济损失,那么提高卫生保健效率和质量的努力就不太可能成功。目前,大多数提高特定医疗条件效率的努力通常会减少每个患者可以计费的服务数量,这对提供者构成了财务挑战。目前的按服务收费的支付结构往往放大了这些挑战,其中一些服务利润丰厚,而另一些则无利可图,进一步削弱了重新设计医疗服务以提高质量和效率的理由。这些动态在弗吉尼亚梅森医疗中心(VMMC)和西雅图安泰保险公司(Aetna)为改善四种常见疾病的护理而开展的合作中得到了体现。尽管Aetna和参与的自保雇主已经同意,如果实现减少使用有利可图的服务,则为某些无利可图的服务支付更高的费率,但VMMC仍然面临着向其他保险公司承保的患者应用更有效的护理实践的财务挑战。
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Distorted payment system undermines business case for health quality and efficiency gains.

Efforts to improve the efficiency and quality of health care are unlikely to be successful if physicians and hospitals incur steep financial losses from success in accomplishing these goals, according to a new study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Currently, most efforts to improve efficiency for a specific medical condition usually reduce the number of services per patient that can be billed, posing financial challenges for providers. These challenges are often magnified by the current fee-for-service payment structure, where some services are highly profitable and others are unprofitable, further undermining the case for redesigning care delivery to improve quality and efficiency. These dynamics are seen in the collaboration between Virginia Mason Medical Center (VMMC) and Aetna in Seattle to improve care for four common conditions. Although Aetna and participating self-insured employers have agreed to pay higher rates for certain unprofitable services if reductions in use of profitable services are achieved, VMMC still faces a financial challenge from applying more efficient care practices to patients covered by other insurers.

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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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