Barer Morris L, Evans Robert G, McGrail Kimberlyn M, Green Bo, Hertzman Clyde, Sheps Samuel B
Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, Department of Health Care and Epidemiology, University of British Columbia, 2194 Health Sciences Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada.
CMAJ. 2004 Mar 2;170(5):803-7. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.1020460.
Although expenditures on health care are continually increasing and often said to be unsustainable, few studies have examined these trends at the level of services delivered to individual patients. We analyzed trends in the various components that contributed to changes in overall expenditures for physician services in British Columbia from 1985/86 to 1996/97.
We obtained data on all fee-for-service payments to physicians in each study year using the British Columbia Linked Health Data set and analyzed these at the level of individual patients. We disaggregated overall billing levels by year into the following components: number of physicians seen by each patient, number of visits per physician, number of services rendered on each visit and average price of those services. We removed the effect of inflation on fees by adjusting to those in 1988. We used direct age-standardization to isolate and measure the effect of demographic changes. We used the Consumer Price Index to determine the effects of inflation.
Total payments to fee-for-service physicians in British Columbia rose 86.3% over the study period. The increase was entirely accounted for by the combined effects of population growth (28.9%), aging (2.1%) and general inflation (41.4%). Service use per capita rose 10.5%; this increase was offset by a decline of 9.4% in inflation-adjusted fees. The average cost of age-adjusted per-capita services rendered by general or family practitioners (GP/FPs) increased very little (3.3%) over the 11-year period, compared with a nearly one-third (31.8%) increase for medical specialists. Although there was a dramatic increase in the number of GP/FPs seen on average by each patient (32.9%), this increase was offset by the combination of decreases in the number of visits per physician (-14.9%), the number of services provided per visit (-8.0%) and the "real cost" of each service provided (-3.5%). Visits to medical specialists increased by about 20% over the study period in all age groups. However, for each person 65 years of age or over receiving any services, the average fee-adjusted expenditures increased 24.8%, almost 4 times the rate of increase for people younger than 65. The use of surgical services grew 26.5% for seniors while declining -2.0% for people under age 65.
These findings suggest a form of "homeostasis" in aggregate-level service use and cost. The supposed inflationary effects of population aging and increasing "abuse of the system" by patients were not found.
尽管医疗保健支出持续增加且常被认为不可持续,但很少有研究在为个体患者提供的服务层面考察这些趋势。我们分析了1985/86年至1996/97年期间不列颠哥伦比亚省医生服务总支出变化的各个组成部分的趋势。
我们使用不列颠哥伦比亚省关联健康数据集获取了每个研究年度向医生支付的所有按服务收费的数据,并在个体患者层面进行分析。我们将每年的总计费水平分解为以下组成部分:每位患者就诊的医生数量、每位医生的就诊次数、每次就诊提供的服务数量以及这些服务的平均价格。通过调整为1988年的费用来消除通货膨胀对费用的影响。我们使用直接年龄标准化来分离和衡量人口结构变化的影响。我们使用消费者价格指数来确定通货膨胀的影响。
在研究期间,不列颠哥伦比亚省向按服务收费医生的总支付增长了86.3%。增长完全由人口增长(28.9%)、老龄化(2.1%)和总体通货膨胀(41.4%)的综合影响所致。人均服务使用量增长了10.5%;这一增长被经通货膨胀调整后的费用下降9.4%所抵消。在11年期间,普通或家庭医生(GP/FPs)提供的经年龄调整后的人均服务平均成本增幅很小(3.3%),而医学专科医生的增幅近三分之一(31.8%)。尽管每位患者平均就诊的GP/FPs数量大幅增加(32.9%),但这一增长被每位医生就诊次数减少(-14.9%)、每次就诊提供的服务数量减少(-8.0%)以及每次提供的每项服务的“实际成本”下降(-3.5%)所抵消。在研究期间,所有年龄组就诊医学专科医生的次数增加了约20%。然而,对于每位65岁及以上接受任何服务的人,经费用调整后的平均支出增长了24.8%,几乎是65岁以下人群增长率的4倍。老年人手术服务的使用量增长了26.5%,而65岁以下人群则下降了2.0%。
这些发现表明在总体服务使用和成本方面存在一种“稳态”形式。未发现人口老龄化和患者“滥用系统”所假定的通货膨胀影响。