卫生保健服务系统的新组织。

The Baxter health policy review Pub Date : 1996-01-01
S M Shortell, K E Hull
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国医疗保健系统正在以令人眼花缭乱的速度进行重组。在美国的许多地区,管理式医疗已经进入第三代模式,强调为登记的生命付费,在这个过程中,大多数提供者和机构变成了被管理的成本中心,而不是收入的创造者。虽然新的管理式医疗模式的全面影响仍有待观察,但迄今为止的大多数证据表明,它倾向于减少住院病人的使用,可能与更多地使用医生服务和预防性护理有关,并且与服务收费计划相比,在护理质量或结果方面似乎没有产生积极或消极的净差异。然而,一些患者往往对预约安排和花在医生身上的时间不太满意。没有令人信服的证据表明,在给定的市场中,管理式医疗保健降低了总体医疗保健成本的增长率。此外,全国各地的管理医疗绩效差异很大,影响管理医疗绩效的因素尚未得到很好的理解。有组织的交付系统是最近出现的一种现象,代表了医院、医生和保险公司之间各种形式的所有权和战略联盟,旨在通过实现所需的功能、医生系统和临床整合水平,为特定人群提供更具成本效益的医疗服务。早期证据表明,整合程度更高的有组织的交付系统有可能在整个连续体中提供更容易获得的协调护理,并且与整合程度较低的交付形式相比,似乎具有更高水平的住院生产率、更高的系统总收入、更高的系统总现金流和更高的系统总营业利润率。已经确定了开发有组织的交付系统的一些关键成功因素。组织文化、信息系统、内部激励、全面质量管理、医生领导和团体实践的增长发挥了重要作用。本章描述了管理式医疗和有组织的提供系统的成长和演变,关于管理式医疗和有组织的提供系统的研究证据,以及根据最近的趋势和证据,卫生系统可能的未来组织。它还强调了新的卫生保健基础设施的一些更重要的公共政策影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The new organization of the health care delivery system.

The U.S. health care system is restructuring at a dizzying pace. In many parts of the country, managed care has moved into third-generation models emphasizing capitated payment for enrolled lives and, in the process, turning most providers and institutions into cost centers to be managed rather than generators of revenue. While the full impact of the new managed care models remains to be seen, most evidence to date suggests that it tends to reduce inpatient use, may be associated with greater use of physician services and preventive care, and appears to result in no net differences either positive or negative with regard to quality or outcomes of care in comparison with fee-for-service plans. Some patients, however, tend to be somewhat less satisfied with scheduling of appointments and the amount of time spent with providers. There is no persuasive evidence that managed care lowers the rate of growth in overall health care costs within a given market. Further, managed care performance varies considerably across the country, and the factors influencing managed care performance are not well understood. Organized delivery systems are a somewhat more recent phenomenon representing various forms of ownership and strategic alliances among hospitals, physicians, and insurers designed to provide more cost-effective care to defined populations by achieving desired levels of functional, physician-system, and clinical integration. Early evidence suggests that organized delivery systems that are more integrated have the potential to provide more accessible coordinated care across the continuum, and appear to be associated with higher levels of inpatient productivity, greater total system revenue, greater total system cash flow, and greater total system operating margin than less integrated delivery forms. Some key success factors for developing organized delivery systems have been identified. Important roles are played by organizational culture, information systems, internal incentives, total quality management, physician leadership, and the growth of group practices. This chapter describes the growth and evolution of managed care and organized delivery systems, the research evidence regarding managed care and organized delivery systems, and the likely future organization of the health system in light of recent trends and evidence. It also highlights some of the more important public policy implications of the new health care infrastructure.

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