Collaboration Structures in Integrated Healthcare Delivery Systems: An Exploratory Study of Accountable Care Organizations

Yingchao Lan, Aravind Chandrasekaran, D. Goradia, D. Walker
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Problem definition: This study explores the performance implications of collaboration structures in an integrated healthcare delivery system, namely, an accountable care organization (ACO). ACOs consist of providers from various stages of the care continuum (preacute, acute, and postacute) that voluntarily assume collective responsibility for the quality and cost of care for a defined patient population. Academic/practical relevance: ACOs’ unsatisfied outcomes are largely due to a lack of provider collaboration. There is a dearth of empirical studies on how to develop collaboration structures. Studies in the healthcare operations management primarily have focused on collaboration within a single organization, shedding little light on this problem. We address this issue by exploring two distinct dimensions of collaboration: partnership scope and scale. Partnership scope measures the presence of providers from the preacute, acute, and/or postacute care-continuum stages, whereas partnership scale measures the presence of providers within a single care-continuum stage. Methodology: We assemble a unique data set of provider types, collaboration structures, and system-level performance for 528 Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) ACOs from 2013–2016. To investigate the impact of partnership scope and scale on ACO performance, we then use econometric estimation approaches that account for endogeneity in collaboration structure decisions. ACO performance is measured by experiential quality and 30-day readmission rates. As additional tests, we also investigate our research questions by assembling data sets at both the hospital level (20,975 hospital-year panel data spanning 2009 to 2015) and patient level (859,145 Medicare patients admitted to 39 California hospitals over a four-year period from 2012 to 2015). Results: We find that synergies exist between partnership scope and scale with respect to ACO performance. Specifically, an average-sized ACO can realize 3.2% more improvement in experiential quality and a 6.6% greater reduction in 30-day readmission rates through partnership scope and scale synergies in the preacute care stage. We also show that the benefits of increasing partnership scope are consistent across providers and patient-level analysis. Further, we find that these benefits come at some cost, suggesting an initial cost-quality trade-off when developing collaboration structures. Managerial implications: Our results offer important insights into the healthcare operations management literature on designing effective healthcare delivery systems extending beyond a single organization.
整合医疗服务系统中的协作结构:负责任医疗组织的探索性研究
问题定义:本研究探讨了协作结构对综合医疗服务系统的绩效影响,即一个负责任的医疗组织(ACO)。ACOs由来自护理连续体不同阶段(急性前、急性和急性后)的提供者组成,他们自愿对特定患者群体的护理质量和费用承担集体责任。学术/实践相关性:ACOs不满意的结果主要是由于缺乏提供者合作。关于如何发展协作结构的实证研究缺乏。医疗保健运营管理方面的研究主要集中在单个组织内的协作上,对这个问题的研究很少。我们通过探索合作的两个不同维度来解决这个问题:伙伴关系的范围和规模。伙伴关系范围衡量急性前、急性期和/或急性期后护理连续阶段的提供者的存在,而伙伴关系规模衡量单一护理连续阶段内提供者的存在。方法:我们收集了2013-2016年528个医疗保险共享储蓄计划(MSSP) ACOs的提供商类型、协作结构和系统级绩效的独特数据集。为了研究合作伙伴范围和规模对蚁群管理绩效的影响,我们使用计量经济学估计方法来解释协作结构决策中的内生性。ACO性能是通过体验质量和30天再入院率来衡量的。作为附加测试,我们还通过收集医院层面(2009年至2015年期间20,975家医院年度面板数据)和患者层面(2012年至2015年期间39家加州医院住院的859,145名医疗保险患者)的数据集来调查我们的研究问题。结果:我们发现在合作伙伴范围和规模之间存在协同效应。具体而言,通过伙伴关系范围和规模协同效应,平均规模的ACO可以在急性前护理阶段实现3.2%的体验质量提高和6.6%的30天再入院率降低。我们还表明,增加合作范围的好处在提供者和患者层面的分析中是一致的。此外,我们发现这些好处是有一定代价的,这表明在开发协作结构时需要进行初始的成本-质量权衡。管理意义:我们的研究结果提供了重要的见解,为设计有效的医疗服务系统延伸到一个单一的组织的医疗运营管理文献。
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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