Shen Joannie, Andersen Ronald, Brook Robert, Kominski Gerald, Albert Paul S, Wenger Neil
Laboratory of Clinical Studies, National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20814-1610, USA.
Med Care. 2004 Mar;42(3):297-302. doi: 10.1097/01.mlr.0000114918.50088.1c.
The influence of payment mechanisms on physician decisions is not well understood.
The objective of this study was to test 2 null hypotheses: 1) physicians' clinical decisions would not be influenced by payment incentives; and 2) physicians would have equal concern about medical decisions made under capitation or fee-for-service (FFS) arrangements.
We conducted a physician survey in which patient insurance status (capitated or FFS) was randomly incorporated into 4 clinical scenarios using a Latin square design.
We used a nationally representative random sample of family physicians in direct patient care.
We used treatment decisions and physician "bother" scores (a measure of discomfort about decisions) in response to the clinical scenarios and adjusted for physician gender, age, board certification, income, practice location, practice mix, practice setting, geographic region, local area managed care penetration, and capitation or risk pool contracts in practice.
Seventy-two percent of sampled physicians responded. Comparing decisions made under capitation to FFS, physicians were less likely to indicate they would perform discretionary care (relative risks [RR] range, .64-.82; P<0.001), but payment had no effect on selection of life-saving care (RR, 1.02, not significant). Physicians felt significantly more "bothered" when they made clinical decisions under capitated payment (P<0.001 in all scenarios), regardless of whether a treatment was discretionary or life-saving, and whether the decision was made for or against the treatment (P<0.001).
Payment mechanism has significant effects on clinical decision-making. Reduction of resources spent for discretionary care might be achieved under capitated arrangements; however, physicians respond with greater levels of discomfort under capitation than FFS.
支付机制对医生决策的影响尚未得到充分理解。
本研究的目的是检验两个零假设:1)医生的临床决策不会受到支付激励的影响;2)医生对按人头付费或按服务收费(FFS)安排下做出的医疗决策会给予同等关注。
我们进行了一项医生调查,使用拉丁方设计将患者保险状态(按人头付费或FFS)随机纳入4个临床场景中。
我们使用了全国具有代表性的直接为患者提供护理的家庭医生随机样本。
我们使用针对临床场景的治疗决策和医生“困扰”评分(一种对决策不适感的衡量),并对医生的性别、年龄、委员会认证、收入、执业地点、执业组合、执业环境、地理区域、当地管理式医疗渗透率以及实践中的按人头付费或风险池合同进行了调整。
72%的抽样医生做出了回应。将按人头付费与FFS下做出的决策进行比较,医生表示进行 discretionary care 的可能性较小(相对风险[RR]范围为0.64 - 0.82;P<0.001),但支付对挽救生命护理的选择没有影响(RR为1.02,无统计学意义)。无论治疗是 discretionary 还是挽救生命的,以及决策是支持还是反对治疗,当医生在按人头付费下做出临床决策时,他们感到的“困扰”明显更多(在所有场景中P<0.001)。
支付机制对临床决策有显著影响。在按人头付费安排下,可能会减少用于 discretionary care 的资源;然而,与FFS相比,医生在按人头付费下的不适感更强。