Purchasing Primary Care Services for Quality Chronic Care: Capitation With Performance Payments in Four Countries.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Sarah L Barber, Inke Mathauer, Megumi Rosenberg, Nicolas Larrain, Yunguo Liu, Qian Long, Anja Smith, Stevie Ardianto Nappoe, Luca Lorenzoni
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Abstract

Improving quality of care for chronic conditions is central to addressing the large burden of premature mortality from non-communicable diseases. This paper presents the main results from case studies of health care purchasing arrangements in Chile, China, Indonesia and South Africa, which involved paying providers of primary care services using capitation with performance pay to improve service quality and health outcomes for chronic conditions. In all four settings, changes to payment methods were accompanied by other enabling interventions to provide incentives to deliver health services in a better way, such as training and non-financial incentives. However, the incentives in these programs were insufficient to drive significant changes in provider behaviour needed to improve quality. Design and implementation challenges included voluntary enrolment, quality metrics, performance targets, risk adjustment, payment certainty and levels, and withholding payments. The design and implementation challenges contributed to low patient volume or provider programme uptake resulting in lower-than-expected effects. The findings from this analysis underscore the importance of adjusting quality measures for patient health risk and complexity to avoid penalising health care providers for accepting patients with higher health risks. Relative or progressive quality targets may be more appropriate where wide diversity in providers' capacities exist, particularly in national programs, and may be used to encourage gradual quality improvements over time. Uncertainty about timing and levels of payment may have also undermined impact. Withholding performance payments as a penalty may reduce resources for quality improvements in these settings.

购买初级保健服务以获得优质慢性护理:四个国家的绩效支付。
提高慢性病护理质量对于解决非传染性疾病造成的过早死亡这一巨大负担至关重要。本文介绍了智利、中国、印度尼西亚和南非的医疗保健采购安排案例研究的主要结果,这些案例涉及使用绩效薪酬向初级保健服务提供者支付薪酬,以改善慢性病的服务质量和健康结果。在所有四种情况下,付款方式的改变都伴随着其他扶持性干预措施,如培训和非财政激励措施,为更好地提供保健服务提供激励。然而,这些计划中的激励措施不足以推动提供者行为发生重大变化,从而提高质量。设计和实施方面的挑战包括自愿登记、质量指标、绩效目标、风险调整、付款确定性和水平以及预提付款。设计和实施方面的挑战导致患者数量或提供者方案的接受程度较低,导致效果低于预期。该分析的结果强调了调整患者健康风险和复杂性的质量措施的重要性,以避免因接受健康风险较高的患者而惩罚卫生保健提供者。相对的或渐进式的质量目标可能在提供者能力差异很大的情况下更为合适,特别是在国家规划中,并可用于鼓励随着时间的推移逐步提高质量。时间和支付水平的不确定性可能也削弱了影响。扣留绩效报酬作为惩罚可能会减少这些环境中用于质量改进的资源。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
3.70%
发文量
197
期刊介绍: Policy making and implementation, planning and management are widely recognized as central to effective health systems and services and to better health. Globalization, and the economic circumstances facing groups of countries worldwide, meanwhile present a great challenge for health planning and management. The aim of this quarterly journal is to offer a forum for publications which direct attention to major issues in health policy, planning and management. The intention is to maintain a balance between theory and practice, from a variety of disciplines, fields and perspectives. The Journal is explicitly international and multidisciplinary in scope and appeal: articles about policy, planning and management in countries at various stages of political, social, cultural and economic development are welcomed, as are those directed at the different levels (national, regional, local) of the health sector. Manuscripts are invited from a spectrum of different disciplines e.g., (the social sciences, management and medicine) as long as they advance our knowledge and understanding of the health sector. The Journal is therefore global, and eclectic.
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