Zechmeister Ingrid, Oesterle August, Denk Peter, Katschnig Heinz
Department of Social Policy, Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration, Reithlegasse 16, A- 1190 Wien, Austria.
J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2002 Sep;5(3):121-9.
In Austria, financing health care -and even more so mental health care- is characterized by a mix of federal and provincial responsibilities, lack of uniformity in service provision and service providers, and diverse funding arrangements. The division between financing structures for health care and social care makes the situation even more complex. This state of affairs results in various, partly counterproductive and sometimes paradoxical financial incentives and disincentives for the providers, recipients and financiers of mental health services. In several provinces of Austria, recent reform plans in mental health care have focused strongly on establishing community-based and patient-oriented mental health care. One of the main challenges in implementing this new policy is the re-allocation of resources.
The authors hypothesize that the existing structure of mental health care financing, with its incentives and disincentives, constitutes an obstacle to patient-oriented community-based mental health care. Analyzing the characteristics of the overall mental health care financing system in one Austrian province, Lower Austria, will provide a better understanding of actor-relationships and inherent incentives and highlight implications for the process of deinstitutionalization.
The authors used an analytical framework based on the principal-agent theory, empirical evidence, and information on financial, organizational and legal structures to identify the characteristics of actor-relationships and the position of single actors within the system.
The article shows how incentives are linked to existing constellations of actors involved in mental health care financing and identifies significant power relations. As a consequence, incentives and disincentives within the financing system result in hospital- centered and supply-oriented mental health care in Lower Austria.
The current system of financing mental health care provides an obstacle to the provision of patient-oriented and community-based mental care. This is due to existing constellations and power relations among the actors where, most importantly, patients are the weakest party in the patient-payer-provider triangle. Balancing power relations will be a significant prerequisite for alternative financing systems. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICIES AND FURTHER RESEARCH: If a community and needs-based mental health care system is to be established in Austria, the financing structures have to be changed accordingly. Applying a principal-agent framework is useful for identifying key aspects in mental health care financing in relation to the provision of services. Further research is needed to help develop alternative financing mechanisms that support community-based and patient-oriented mental health care systems.
在奥地利,医疗保健(尤其是精神卫生保健)的融资具有联邦和省级责任相互交织、服务提供和服务提供者缺乏统一性以及资金安排多样的特点。医疗保健和社会护理融资结构之间的划分使情况更加复杂。这种状况给精神卫生服务的提供者、接受者和资助者带来了各种有时适得其反、甚至自相矛盾的经济激励和抑制因素。在奥地利的几个省份,近期精神卫生保健改革计划大力侧重于建立以社区为基础、以患者为导向的精神卫生保健体系。实施这项新政策的主要挑战之一是资源重新分配。
作者假设,精神卫生保健融资的现有结构及其激励和抑制因素构成了以患者为导向、以社区为基础的精神卫生保健的障碍。分析奥地利下奥地利州这一省份整体精神卫生保健融资系统的特征,将有助于更好地理解行为主体之间的关系以及内在激励因素,并突出对去机构化进程的影响。
作者使用了一个基于委托代理理论、实证证据以及关于财务、组织和法律结构信息的分析框架,以确定行为主体关系的特征以及系统内单个行为主体的地位。
本文展示了激励因素如何与精神卫生保健融资中涉及的现有行为主体组合相关联,并确定了重要的权力关系。因此,融资系统内的激励和抑制因素导致下奥地利州的精神卫生保健以医院为中心且以供应为导向。
当前的精神卫生保健融资系统为提供以患者为导向、以社区为基础的精神护理设置了障碍。这是由于行为主体之间现有的组合和权力关系所致,其中最重要的是,在患者 - 支付者 - 提供者三角关系中,患者是最弱势的一方。平衡权力关系将是替代融资系统的一个重要前提。对卫生政策和进一步研究的启示:如果要在奥地利建立一个基于社区和需求的精神卫生保健系统,就必须相应地改变融资结构。应用委托代理框架有助于确定与服务提供相关的精神卫生保健融资的关键方面。需要进一步研究以帮助开发支持以社区为基础、以患者为导向的精神卫生保健系统的替代融资机制。