Magnussen J, Solstad K
Department of Economics, University of Trondheim, Norway.
Health Policy. 1994 Mar;28(1):23-36. doi: 10.1016/0168-8510(94)90018-3.
Several European countries are experimenting with new ways of organising and financing the hospital sector. This paper discusses the present Norwegian reform, where a system of fixed grants is replaced by a combination of payment per case and fixed grants. Initially implemented in four hospitals only, the decision to move to a full-scale reform will be based on the evaluation of this pilot project. The paper presents two alternative hypotheses on how a system with case-based financing will influence the performance of hospitals. Given that hospitals adjust passively to the constraints imposed by the financing system, increased efficiency is to be expected. If hospitals and hospital owners (i.e. the counties) interact in a game dominated by the hospital, however, the efficiency of the hospital will not be influenced by the financing system. We argue that the design of the pilot project limits the possibility of discriminating between these two hypotheses. Nevertheless, a comparison of key variables in the pilot hospitals with a set of reference hospitals indicates that the change of financing system has not had any substantial effect on hospital efficiency. Thus we are inclined to believe that hospitals in fact are able to set the level of efficiency independent of whether they are financed by fixed grants or a payment per case.
几个欧洲国家正在试验组织医院部门和为其融资的新方法。本文讨论了挪威目前的改革,即固定拨款制度被按病例付费和固定拨款相结合的方式所取代。最初仅在四家医院实施,全面改革的决定将基于对该试点项目的评估。本文就基于病例的融资系统将如何影响医院绩效提出了两种替代性假设。鉴于医院被动地适应融资系统施加的限制,预计效率会提高。然而,如果医院及其所有者(即各县)在以医院为主导的博弈中相互作用,那么医院的效率将不会受到融资系统的影响。我们认为,试点项目的设计限制了区分这两种假设的可能性。尽管如此,将试点医院的关键变量与一组参照医院进行比较表明,融资系统的变化对医院效率没有产生任何实质性影响。因此,我们倾向于认为,医院实际上能够设定效率水平,而不管它们是由固定拨款还是按病例付费来融资。