Krankenhausreform in Deutschland: Populationsbezogenenes Berechnungs- und Simulationsmodell zur Planung und Folgenabschätzung

Jochen Schmitt, Leonie Sundmacher, B. Augurzky, Reinhard Busse, C. Karagiannidis, F. Krause, R. Schwarz, J. Wolff, T. Bschor
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Abstract

Background: Due to the increasing shortage of specialists, disproportionately rising costs and inadequate quality of care, Germany is planning a fundamental hospital reform. The government commission has developed the central principles for this reform. The aim is to achieve a centralization of hospital services in oversupplied metropolitan areas by planning according to groups of services based on defined requirements for structural quality. The economic pressure to increase the number of cases shall be reduced through the introduction of a reserve payment and by dividing hospitals into levels - at least by transparent information for the general public. So far, however, there has been no generic model to determine the significance of specific care providers considering population needs (reachability), capacity of a hospital location, and the number and severity of treated patients. Methods: We developed a generic model to determine the significance of hospital location-related care and the need for the various groups of services. The model may also be used to assess reserve financing. For the model, the groups of services were divided into four categories according to degree of specialization and urgency with limits of reachability of 30, 45, 90 and 180 minutes. Gravity models were used to simulate the population-based significance of care providers for each group of services. In the basic model, the allocation of the significance was based exclusively on the reachability for the population living within the respective reachability corridor. In extended models, the historical number of cases and their case severity were also taken into account in order to account for current care capacities and existing choices of the population regarding, among other things, the quality of care. The model was implemented on the basis of nationwide data provided in accordance with § 21 data (of the German law for hospital remuneration). We then determined the effects of weighting the three influencing variables (i) population, (ii) number of cases and (iii) case severity on the significance of the hospital sites. Using the example of "endoprosthetics of the knee" (service group 14.2 in North Rhine-Westphalia) in the federal state of Saxony, the effect of concentration on the distribution of the reserve budgets and on the accessibility of the population was illustrated. The importance of care determined in this way is contrasted with a key value that reflects the need for hospitals in terms of securing care in rural areas. Results: From the approximately 16.5 million somatic treatment cases in 2021, 98.5% could be assigned to one of the 60 somatic groups of services according to North Rhine-Westphalia model. The simulation models show a differentiated picture for the various service groups. For the majority of service groups, a moderate concentration of services does not lead to relevant restrictions in terms of reachability. Exclusively considering the population to be cared for (basic model) would lead to significant shifts in the financing of running costs, which are, however, very well mitigated by considering the historic number and severity of cases (extended models). As an example, we show the effects for the service group "endoprosthetics of the knee" in the federal state of Saxony compared to the extrapolation at location level. Discussion: The empirically based simulation model proposed here takes into account reachability, patient preference and hospital capacity and offers a scientific way of comparing the regional significance of care providers as well as the necessity of hospital locations for each service group against the background of the state's obligation to provide care and to make economical use of resources. The simulation model is meant to support hospital planning (here: the allocation of groups of services) in the federal states and to guide rational planning. It is also suitable for the management of financial resources in the context of hospital reform. It also enables an impact analysis. The model is not intended to automate planning or otherwise make rigid specifications. The calculations should be regarded as exemplary. The weights of all parameters can be varied. However, the reachability thresholds and the parameterization of the simulation model should be defined jointly by federal and state governments in terms of a common set of objectives.
德国医院改革:用于规划和影响评估的人口计算和模拟模型
背景:由于专科医生日益短缺、医疗费用不成比例地上涨以及医疗质量不高,德国正计划对医院进行根本性改革。政府委员会已经制定了这项改革的核心原则。改革的目的是,根据对结构质量的明确要求,按照服务类别进行规划,从而在供过于求的大都市地区实现医院服务的集中化。应通过引入储备金和将医院划分为不同等级来减少增加病例数量的经济压力--至少应向公众提供透明的信息。然而,到目前为止,还没有一个通用模式来确定特定医疗服务提供者在考虑人口需求(可到达性)、医院地点的能力以及治疗病人的数量和严重程度后的重要性。方法:我们开发了一个通用模型,用于确定医院位置相关护理的重要性以及对各类服务的需求。该模型还可用于评估储备资金。在该模型中,各组服务根据专业化程度和紧急程度分为四类,到达时间限制分别为 30、45、90 和 180 分钟。重力模型用于模拟每组服务中基于人口的医疗服务提供者的重要性。在基本模型中,重要性的分配完全基于居住在相应可达性走廊内的人口的可达性。在扩展模型中,历史病例数和病例严重程度也被考虑在内,以便考虑当前的护理能力和人口对护理质量等方面的现有选择。该模型是在根据(德国医院薪酬法)第 21 条数据提供的全国数据基础上实施的。然后,我们确定了三个影响变量(i)人口、(ii)病例数量和(iii)病例严重程度的权重对医院地点重要性的影响。以联邦萨克森州的 "膝关节内翻修术"(北莱茵-威斯特法伦州 14.2 服务组)为例,说明了集中对储备预算分配和人口可及性的影响。以这种方式确定的医疗服务的重要性与反映医院在确保农村地区医疗服务方面的需求的关键值进行了对比。结果:根据北莱茵-威斯特法伦州模式,在 2021 年的约 1650 万例躯体治疗病例中,98.5% 可分配到 60 个躯体服务组中的一个。模拟模型显示了不同服务组的不同情况。对于大多数服务群体而言,服务的适度集中并不会在可达性方面造成相关限制。如果只考虑需要护理的人口数量(基本模型),则会导致运行成本的显著变化,但如果考虑历史病例的数量和严重程度(扩展模型),则会很好地缓解这种变化。例如,我们将萨克森州的 "膝关节内翻修 "服务组的效果与各地的外推效果进行了比较。讨论:在此提出的基于经验的模拟模型考虑了可达性、患者偏好和医院能力,并提供了一种科学的方法,在国家有义务提供医疗服务和经济地利用资源的背景下,比较医疗服务提供者的区域重要性以及每个服务组的医院地点的必要性。该模拟模型旨在为联邦各州的医院规划(此处指服务组的分配)提供支持,并为合理规划提供指导。它也适用于医院改革背景下的财政资源管理。它还可以进行影响分析。该模型并非旨在实现规划自动化或做出硬性规定。计算结果应视为范例。所有参数的权重都可以改变。然而,可达到的临界值和模拟模型的参数化应由联邦政府和州政府根据一套共同的目标共同确定。
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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