Medicare Accountable Care Organizations Reduce Spending on Surgery.

American journal of accountable care Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Epub Date: 2020-09-15
Parth K Modi, Nicholas Moloci, Lindsey A Herrel, Brent K Hollenbeck, John M Hollingsworth
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Abstract

Background: Surgical care among older adults is costly. While Medicare accountable care organizations (ACOs) are designed around primary care, there are reasons to believe that participation may also affect spending on surgery. This study examines the impact that Medicare ACO alignment has on spending for inpatient and outpatient surgical care.

Study design: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using national Medicare claims (2008 through 2015). Among a 20% random sample of beneficiaries, we identified adults 65 years of age and older enrolled in fee-for-service Medicare, distinguishing between those aligned and unaligned with a Medicare ACO. We then measured payments for surgical services made on their behalf. Finally, we fit multivariable regression models to evaluate the association between ACO alignment and spending for inpatient and outpatient surgical care.

Results: We identified 37,249,845 beneficiary-year observations, of which 2,950,188 (7.9%) were aligned with a Medicare ACO. After adjustment for patient factors, ACO alignment was associated with $181 [95% confidence interval (CI), -$243 to -$118; P <0.001] lower spending per beneficiary-year. ACO alignment was associated with 2.9% fewer inpatient surgical episodes per year [incidence rate ratio (IRR), 0.97; 95% CI, 0.96 to 0.98; P <0.001] but 2.3% more outpatient episodes per year (IRR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.03; P <0.001). Among inpatient surgical episodes, average payments were $956 lower for ACO aligned beneficiaries (95%CI -$1218 to -$694, P <0.001).

Conclusions and relevance: ACO alignment was associated with savings on surgical care. These savings resulted from increased outpatient surgery and reduced use of inpatient surgery as well as reduced spending per inpatient surgical episode. Greater focus on surgical care may improve the ability of ACOs to control healthcare spending.

医疗保险责任医疗机构减少手术支出。
背景:老年人的外科护理费用很高。虽然医疗保险责任保健组织(ACOs)是围绕初级保健设计的,但有理由相信,参与也可能影响手术支出。本研究考察了医疗保险ACO对齐对住院和门诊手术护理支出的影响。研究设计:我们进行了一项回顾性队列研究,使用国家医疗保险索赔(2008年至2015年)。在20%的随机受益人样本中,我们确定了65岁及以上的成年人参加了按服务收费的医疗保险,区分了与医疗保险ACO一致和未一致的人。然后,我们衡量了为他们支付的手术服务费用。最后,我们拟合多变量回归模型来评估门诊和住院外科护理费用与ACO一致性之间的关系。结果:我们确定了37,249,845个受益人年观察,其中2,950,188个(7.9%)与Medicare ACO一致。在调整患者因素后,ACO对齐与181美元相关[95%置信区间(CI), - 243美元至- 118美元;结论和相关性:ACO对齐与节省手术护理费用相关。这些节省来自门诊手术的增加和住院手术的减少,以及住院手术的每次花费的减少。对外科护理的更多关注可能提高ACOs控制医疗保健支出的能力。
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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