Kjerstad Egil
Institute for Research in Economics and Business Administration (SNF), Program for Health Economics, Beregen (HEB), Breiviksv. 40, N-5045 Bergen, Norway.
Int J Health Care Finance Econ. 2003 Dec;3(4):231-51. doi: 10.1023/a:1026084304382.
In Norway, a new system of Activity Based Financing (ABF) for general hospitals was introduced on a comprehensive basis in July 1997. The main purpose of the reform was to increase activity so that more patients could receive treatment more quickly without reducing the quality of care. In this paper we analyse whether the reform has had any significant effect using two different performance indicators: number of patients treated and production of DRG points (Diagnosis Related Group). We divide the hospitals into two groups: hospitals owned by counties that have adopted the ABF system, and hospitals owned by counties using other funding systems. The first group then becomes the experiment group, while the second serves as a comparison group. It is argued that fixed-effect models are suitable specifications for this evaluation study, handling selection bias and the influence of unobservable explanatory variables in a consistent manner. We find that the reform has had a significant effect on the number of patients treated and DRG points produced. The results are sensitive as to how the experiment and the comparison group are determined.
1997年7月,挪威全面推行了一种针对综合医院的基于活动的融资(ABF)新体系。此次改革的主要目的是增加医疗活动量,以便让更多患者能够更快地接受治疗,同时又不降低医疗质量。在本文中,我们使用两个不同的绩效指标来分析这项改革是否产生了显著效果:接受治疗的患者数量和诊断相关组(DRG)点数的产出。我们将医院分为两组:采用ABF体系的郡属医院,以及使用其他资金体系的郡属医院。第一组成为实验组,而第二组作为对照组。有人认为固定效应模型适用于这项评估研究,能够以一致的方式处理选择偏差和不可观测解释变量的影响。我们发现,这项改革对接受治疗的患者数量和DRG点数的产出产生了显著影响。结果对于实验组和对照组的确定方式很敏感。