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Reimbursement and incentive contracts in health care

Reimbursement and incentive contracts in health care. By Alan Maynard. Outline. Background Incentivising hospitals Incentivising doctors What next?. Background. What’s wrong with the health care market?

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Reimbursement and incentive contracts in health care

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  1. Reimbursement and incentive contracts in health care By Alan Maynard

  2. Outline • Background • Incentivising hospitals • Incentivising doctors • What next?

  3. Background • What’s wrong with the health care market? • Variations in clinical practice : the Dartmouth Medical School (Wennberg and Fisher), Yates and Bloor-Maynard(HSJ 12/2002) • Inappropriate care (Bernstein et al IJHTA 1993) • Medical error (Too err is human IOM 1999) • Failure to measure outcomes (Nightingale: dead , relieved and unrelieved)

  4. Hospital payment systems • What are you try to achieve? • Expenditure control, or cost containment • Efficiency • Equity, in health care funding, access? and utilisation? Or health status • The policy issue of ranking and trade offs

  5. Payment options • Global budgets • Retrospective budgets • Prospective payment per case • Non financial incentives related to activity, patient access and patient outcomes (levels of patient outcome and distribution between social classes)

  6. Global budgets I • Fixed financial allocation to the hospital • How is it fixed? • last year plus x+y+z (where x=inflation, y=scandals in the press and z=influence of local politicians! • Or allocation by formula according to capitation weighted by need • how do you determine and monitor prices, quantity and quality?

  7. Global budgets II • A global budget can give expenditure control • But offers no micro regulation regulation of: • price • quantity (volume) • quality • What measure of volume? • What of quality? ‘The operation was a success but the patient died ……’ !

  8. Global budgets III • Contracts: who bears the risk? Purchaser or provider? • Block contract: fixed allocation to cover all care delivered in the year • risk with provider • Need for activity ceilings and floors • cost per case contract • risk for purchaser without a volume.activity cap?

  9. Global budgets V: summary • Macroeconomic cost containment can be achieved • Microeconomic problems continue: • prices: is provision at least cost? • quantity: is volume appropriate? • quality: is treatment provided efficiently(I.e low cost and good outcomes) with medical errors controlled at least cost?

  10. Retrospective budgets I • Fee per item of service • U.C.R. system in the USA pre-1980s UCR= “usual, customary and reasonable”) • Cross subsidisation • Still exists in some parts of the US system today

  11. Cross subsidisation in UCR system Cost Type of funder Private insurer Blue cross/blue shield Medicare/Medicaid Poor

  12. Retrospective budgets II • Perverse incentives • maximise activity regardless of appropriateness and efficiency? • No systematic management of quality • activity mix depends on relative prices • lack of cost control

  13. Retrospective budgets III: the German case • Majority (80%) paid on per diem basis • Longer lengths of stay: inefficient and costly • Too many beds and hospitals • Move towards DRGs • Retrospective budgeting is seen as inflationary and inefficient, but it does incentivise activity

  14. Prospective payment by case I • Diagnostic related groups • 470 groups • Hospital revenue/income is determined by DRG price x volume of activity • DRG systems require hospitals to manage with good information systems but these systems focus on price and volume

  15. Prospective payment by case II • Problems of exclusions: • physicians pay • outpatients • mental illness

  16. Prospective payment by case III • Further problems: • sticky prices: how are DRGs adjusted over time as technology and relative prices alter? • DRG “creep”: specialist software to maximise income/revenue • funding medical schools, usually separate • information needs (high transactions costs) • no control of volume or quality

  17. Prospective payment by case IV • Effects: • length of stay • ‘quicker-sicker’ (Rand studies in the 1980s) • cream skimming • removal of cross-subsidisation • hospital closures • access for poor (uncompensated care) • supply side moral hazard (reduce service content)

  18. Purchasing hospital care 1 • What do you want to purchase? • Global budgets give to expenditure control if the budgets are “hard” • Global budgets do not give you control over volume/access which is important to patients and to Governments concerned about waiting times • Do global budgets and DRGs enable you to achieve expenditure control and explicitness about volume?

  19. Purchasing hospital care 2 • Global budgets and DRGs do not resolve the problems of variations in medical practice activity, appropriateness and quality/outcome measurement • Policies to deal with activity variation and outcome measurement :job plans for clinicians, publishing mortality data and measuring HRQOL

  20. Purchasing hospital care 3 • Job plans :measure, manage and police practitioner activity data about 4 aspects of their work • What do they produce by case mix and outcome • How much do the produce relative to their peers? • What principles determine their adoption of new and abandonment of old technologies • Who gets what care by social class?

  21. English national tariffs • York’s reference costs are 85, so we are 15% below the national average. UCH is above the national average • Why bother with national tariffs? • Sort out accounting and clinical practice variations? • To increase activity? • No efficiency and equity effects? No outcome measures and “RAWP” trade off?

  22. Paying doctors • Doctors can be paid on the basis of • Fee for service • Capitation • Salary • “There are many mechanisms for paying physicians, some are good and some are bad. The three worst are fee for service, capitation and salary” Jamie Robinson, Milbank Quarterly 2001

  23. Type of pay Incentive effects increase activity decrease activity shift costs target the poor control cost fee-for-service yes no no maybe no salary no yes yes no yes capit-ation no yes yes no yes Doctor payment systems

  24. Paying GPs • The role of the GP :the John Wayne contract! • General practice is a data free activity! • About 40% are now on salary and the rest are self employed and paid by a mix of capitation, ffs and salary elements. Contracts are 24/7/365 cover for patients

  25. The 2004 contract • Contract is with the practice. GPs can stay salaried or on the old capitated contract • “Out of hours” opt out • Ten item “quality contract” • What will be excluded? “What is not incentivised is marginalised”

  26. GP Contract quality framework A: Clinical indicators • CHD: 121 • Stroke: 31 • Cancer: 12 • Hypothyroidism: 8 • Diabetes: 99 • Hypertension: 105 • Mental health: 41 • COPD: 45 • Epilepsy: 16 • Total: 550

  27. Overview of new contract • Uncosted e.g pharmaceutical costs • Knock on effects for secondary care: e.g referrals for diagnostics and I/p care • Administrative costs of data systems , collection and policing: the likelihood of gaming • The problem of incentivising GP practices e.g. GP fund holding (see Dusheiko,Gravelle, Jacobs and Smith, CHE technical paper 26)

  28. Annual differences between fundholder and non-fundholder admission rates

  29. Conclusion • “ The only way to pay doctors is to change the system every three years as by then they have learnt to game it!” Bob Evans

  30. Overview • Be clear about the system goals, their ranking and trade offs before you proceed • Mixed systems unavoidable: mix of both financial and non financial incentives • Gaming is inevitable and there are no quick fixes!

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