Taheri P A, Butz D A, Greenfield L J
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, USA.
Ann Surg. 1999 Jun;229(6):807-11; discussion 811-4. doi: 10.1097/00000658-199906000-00007.
Tertiary medical centers continue to be under extreme pressure to deliver high-complexity care, but paradoxically there is considerable pressure within these institutions to reduce their emphasis on tertiary care and refocus their efforts to develop a more community-like practice. The genesis of this pressure is the perceived profitability of routine surgical activity when compared with more complex care. The purpose of this study is to assess how the total cost and profit (loss) margin can vary for an entire trauma service. The authors also evaluate payments for specific trauma-related diagnostic-related groups (DRGs) and analyze how hospital margins were affected based on mortality outcome.
The authors analyzed the actual cost of all trauma discharges (n = 692) at their level I trauma center for fiscal year 1997. Data were obtained from the trauma registry and the hospital cost accounting system. Total cost was defined as the sum of the variable, fixed, and indirect costs associated with each patient. Margin was defined as expected payments minus total cost. The entire population and all DRGs with 10 or more patients were stratified based on survival outcome, Injury Severity Score, insurance status, and length of stay. The mean total costs for survivors and nonsurvivors within these various categories and their margins were evaluated.
The profit margin on nonsurvivors was $5,898 greater than for survivors, even though the mean total cost for nonsurvivors was $28,821 greater. Within the fixed fee arrangement, approximately 44% of transfers had a negative margin. Both survivors and nonsurvivors become increasingly profitable out to 20 days and subsequently become unprofitable beyond 21 days, but nonsurvivors were more profitable than survivors.
There is a wide variance in both the costs and margins within trauma-related DRGs. The DRG payment system disproportionately reimburses providers for nonsurvivors, even though on average they are more costly. Because payers are likely to engage in portfolio management, patients can be transferred between hospitals based on the contractual relationship between the payer and the provider. This payment system potentially allows payers to act strategically, sending relatively low-cost patients to hospitals where they use fee-for-service reimbursement and high-cost patients to hospitals where their reimbursement is contractually capped. Although specific to the authors' trauma center and its payer mix, these data demonstrate the profitability of maintaining a level I trauma center and preserving the mission of delivering care to the severely injured.
三级医疗中心在提供高复杂性医疗服务方面持续面临巨大压力,但矛盾的是,这些机构内部也存在相当大的压力,要求减少对三级医疗的重视,并将工作重点重新调整为发展更具社区特色的医疗服务。这种压力的根源在于,与更复杂的医疗服务相比,常规外科手术活动被认为具有更高的盈利能力。本研究的目的是评估整个创伤服务的总成本和利润(亏损) margin 如何变化。作者还评估了特定创伤相关诊断相关组(DRG)的支付情况,并分析了基于死亡率结果医院 margin 是如何受到影响的。
作者分析了其一级创伤中心1997财年所有创伤出院病例(n = 692)的实际成本。数据来自创伤登记处和医院成本核算系统。总成本定义为与每位患者相关的可变成本、固定成本和间接成本之和。margin 定义为预期支付减去总成本。根据生存结果、损伤严重程度评分、保险状况和住院时间,对整个人口以及所有有10名或更多患者的DRG进行分层。评估了这些不同类别中幸存者和非幸存者的平均总成本及其 margin。
非幸存者的利润率比幸存者高5898美元,尽管非幸存者的平均总成本高出28821美元。在固定费用安排下,约44%的转诊病例 margin 为负。幸存者和非幸存者在20天内的盈利能力都越来越强,之后在21天以上则变得无利可图,但非幸存者比幸存者更有利可图。
创伤相关DRG的成本和 margin 存在很大差异。DRG支付系统对非幸存者的提供者报销过多,尽管平均而言他们的成本更高。由于支付方可能会进行组合管理,患者可以根据支付方与提供者之间的合同关系在不同医院之间转诊。这种支付系统可能使支付方能够采取策略性行动,将成本相对较低的患者送到采用按服务收费报销的医院,将成本较高的患者送到报销有合同上限的医院。尽管这些数据特定于作者的创伤中心及其支付方组合,但它们证明了维持一级创伤中心并履行救治重伤患者使命的盈利能力。