Managed behavioral health care and supply-side economics. 1998 Carl Taube Lecture

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Richard M. Scheffler
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

Background

Within the past decade, the mental health care system in the United States has undergone a significant transformation in terms of delivery, financing and work force configuration. Contracting between managed care organizations (MCOs) and providers has become increasingly prevalent, paralleling the trend in health care in general. These managed care carve-outs in behavioral health depend on networks of providers who agree to capitated rates or discounted fees for service for those patients covered by the carve-out contracts. Moreover, the carve-outs use a broader array of mental health providers than is typically found in traditional indemnity plans, encourage time-limited versus long-term treatments and favor providers who are engaged in outpatient care.

This phenomenal growth in managed behavioral health care over the past decade includes the rapid growth and quick consolidation of mental health MCOs. The period 1992–1998 shows steady and substantial annual increases in the number of enrollees in mental health MCOs, the figure more than doubling from 78.1 million people in 1992 to a projected 156.6 million in 1998, or 70% of insured lives. Moreover, these vast numbers of enrollees are becoming increasingly consolidated into a smaller number of firms. In 1997, 12 companies controlled nearly 85% of the managed behavioral health care market, with 60% of the market held by the three largest firms.

Study Aims

This article reviews empirical data and draws policy implications from the literature on managed behavioral health care in the United States. Starting with spending and spending trend estimates that show the average annual growth rate of mental health expenditures to be lower than that of health care expenditures in general over the past decade, the author examines utilization and price factors that may account for managed-care-induced cost reductions in behavioral health care, with special attention to hospital use patterns, fee discounting and the supply and earnings patterns of various types of mental health provider. In addition, data on staffing ratios and provider mixes of health maintenance organizations and mental health MCOs are reviewed as they reveal at least part of the dynamics of reconfiguration of the mental health work force in this era of managed care.

Conclusions

As measured by changes in utilization and price, widespread application of ‘classic’ managed care techniques such as preadmission review (gatekeeping), concurrent review, case management, standardized clinical guidelines and protocols, volume purchase of services and fee discounting appears to have led to significant cost reductions for providers of both impatient and outpatient mental health services. However, amidst a complex flux of market variables such as risk shifting, changing financial incentives and intensity of competition, not all of the reduction or slowdown in spending can be clearly and purely attributed to managed care. The data on the ongoing reconfiguration of the mental health work force are clearer in their implications: with an oversupply of all types of mental health providers, managed care has significant potential to increase the incidence of provider substitutions and spur the growth of integrated group practices.

Implications for Further Research

The current body of empirical and policy literature in mental health economics suggests several salient areas of follow-up. Is the proportionately greater impact of managed care on the annual growth rate of mental health care spending a temporary phenomenon or does it signal an enduring difference in the rates of increase between behavioral health care and health care in general? Beyond industry downsizing, what are the substitutions among mental health providers that are going on, and will go on, to produce cost-effective practices? What are the new financial or risk-sharing arrangements between providers and MCOs that will produce appropriate and high-quality mental health services? Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

管理行为医疗保健和供应方经济。1998年Carl Taube讲座
背景在过去的十年里,美国的精神卫生保健系统在提供、融资和劳动力配置方面发生了重大转变。管理护理组织(MCO)和提供者之间的合同越来越普遍,与医疗保健的总体趋势相平行。行为健康领域的这些管理式护理分拆取决于提供者网络,这些提供者同意为分拆合同所涵盖的患者提供按人头计算的服务费或折扣费。此外,与传统的赔偿计划相比,这些例外使用了更广泛的心理健康提供者,鼓励有时间限制的治疗与长期治疗,并有利于从事门诊护理的提供者。在过去十年中,有管理的行为健康护理的显著增长包括心理健康MCO的快速增长和快速巩固。1992年至1998年期间,心理健康MCO的注册人数每年都在稳步大幅增长,从1992年的7810万人增加到1998年的预计1.566亿人,即70%的投保人,这一数字翻了一番多。此外,这些庞大的注册者正越来越多地合并为数量较少的公司。1997年,12家公司控制了近85%的管理行为医疗市场,其中60%的市场由三大公司持有。研究目的本文回顾了美国管理行为医疗的实证数据,并从文献中得出了政策启示。从支出和支出趋势估计开始,该估计显示在过去十年中,心理健康支出的年均增长率低于医疗保健支出的平均年增长率,费用折扣以及各种类型的心理健康提供者的供应和收入模式。此外,还对健康维护组织和心理健康MCO的人员配置比率和提供者组合的数据进行了审查,因为它们至少揭示了在这个有管理的护理时代,心理健康工作队伍重组的部分动态。结论通过利用率和价格的变化来衡量,“经典”管理护理技术的广泛应用,如任务前审查(把关)、并发审查、病例管理、标准化临床指南和方案,大量购买服务和费用折扣似乎大大降低了不耐烦和门诊心理健康服务提供者的成本。然而,在风险转移、不断变化的财务激励和竞争强度等复杂的市场变量中,并不是所有支出的减少或放缓都可以清楚而纯粹地归因于有管理的护理。关于正在进行的心理健康工作队伍重组的数据的含义更为明确:由于所有类型的心理健康提供者供过于求,管理式护理有很大的潜力增加提供者替代的发生率,并刺激综合团体实践的发展。对进一步研究的启示心理健康经济学的现有实证和政策文献提出了几个值得关注的领域。管理护理对心理健康护理支出年增长率的影响是暂时的,还是表明行为健康护理和一般健康护理之间的增长率存在持久差异?除了行业规模缩小之外,心理健康提供者中正在进行和将要进行的替代品是什么,以产生具有成本效益的做法?提供者和MCO之间有哪些新的财务或风险分担安排,可以提供适当和高质量的心理健康服务?版权所有©1999 John Wiley&;有限公司。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics publishes high quality empirical, analytical and methodologic papers focusing on the application of health and economic research and policy analysis in mental health. It offers an international forum to enable the different participants in mental health policy and economics - psychiatrists involved in research and care and other mental health workers, health services researchers, health economists, policy makers, public and private health providers, advocacy groups, and the pharmaceutical industry - to share common information in a common language.
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