Landon B E, Reschovsky J, Reed M, Blumenthal D
Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Med Care. 2001 Aug;39(8):889-905. doi: 10.1097/00005650-200108000-00014.
One of the principal tenets of managed care is that physicians' clinical decisions can be influenced both to improve the quality and consistency of care and to decrease health care expenditures. Medical decision making, however, remains a complex phenomenon and the most important determinants of physicians' approaches to clinical decision making remain poorly understood.
To determine how clinical decisions are associated with individual characteristics, practice setting and organizational characteristics, attributes of the patient population under care, and the market environment.
Cross-sectional, nationally representative survey of patient-care physicians.
Primary care physicians who provide direct patient care at least 20 hours per week.
Proportion of physicians who would order a referral, diagnostic test, or treatment for 5 clinical scenarios thought to be representative of discretionary medical decisions.
Responses were received from 4,825 primary care physicians who cared for adult patients (Response Rate 65%). The distribution of results for each of the five clinical scenarios demonstrates significant variability both within and between physicians. No evidence was seen of a consistent practice style across the vignettes (eg, "aggressive" or "conservative"). The organizational setting of practice was the most consistent predictor of behavior across all the clinical scenarios, with the exception of back pain, which was minimally related to any of the environmental factors. When compared to physicians in solo practice, physicians in all other practice settings were less likely to order a test or referral or pursue treatment. Practice involvement with managed care and measures of financial influences and administrative strategies associated with managed care were minimally and inconsistently associated with reported physician behaviors.
The ability of managed care to improve the quality and consistency of care while also controlling the costs of care depends on its ability to influence medical decisions. Our findings generally demonstrate that managed care has a weak influence on discretionary medical decisions and that the influence of managed care pales in comparison to personal and practice setting influences.
管理式医疗的主要原则之一是,医生的临床决策能够受到影响,从而提高医疗质量和一致性,并降低医疗保健支出。然而,医疗决策仍然是一个复杂的现象,对于医生临床决策方法的最重要决定因素,人们仍然知之甚少。
确定临床决策如何与个体特征、执业环境和组织特征、所护理患者群体的属性以及市场环境相关联。
对提供患者护理的医生进行具有全国代表性的横断面调查。
每周至少提供20小时直接患者护理的初级保健医生。
针对被认为代表可自由决定的医疗决策的5种临床情景,会开出转诊、诊断检查或治疗医嘱的医生比例。
收到了4825名照顾成年患者的初级保健医生的回复(回复率65%)。五种临床情景中每种情景的结果分布在医生内部和医生之间都显示出显著差异。没有证据表明在各个案例中存在一致的执业风格(例如,“积极”或“保守”)。执业的组织环境是所有临床情景中行为最一致的预测因素,但背痛除外,背痛与任何环境因素的相关性最小。与独立执业的医生相比,所有其他执业环境中的医生开出检查或转诊医嘱或进行治疗的可能性较小。与管理式医疗的执业参与度以及与管理式医疗相关的财务影响和行政策略的指标与报告的医生行为的关联最小且不一致。
管理式医疗在提高医疗质量和一致性同时控制医疗成本的能力取决于其影响医疗决策的能力。我们的研究结果总体表明,管理式医疗对可自由决定的医疗决策影响较弱,与个人和执业环境的影响相比,管理式医疗的影响微不足道。