Fleetcroft Robert, Cookson Richard
School of Medicine, Health Policy and Practice, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK.
J Health Serv Res Policy. 2006 Jan;11(1):27-31. doi: 10.1258/135581906775094316.
The new contract for primary care in the UK offers fee-for-service (FFS) payments for a wide range of activities in a quality outcomes framework (QOF), with payments designed to reflect likely workload. This study aims to explore the link between these financial incentives and the likely population health gains.
The study examines a subset of eight preventive interventions covering 38 of the 81 clinical indicators in the quality framework. The maximum payment for each service was calculated and compared with the likely population health gain in terms of lives saved per 100,000 population based on evidence from McColl et al. (1998).
Maximum payments for the eight interventions examined make up 57% of the total maximum payment for all clinical interventions in the (QOF). There appears to be no relationship between pay and health gain across these eight interventions. Two of the eight interventions (warfarin in atrial fibrillation and statins in primary prevention) receive no incentive.
Payments in the new contract do not reflect likely population health gain. There is a danger that clinical activity may be skewed towards high-workload activities that are only marginally effective, to the detriment of more cost-effective activities. If improving population health is the primary goal of the NHS, then FFS incentives should be designed to reflect likely health gain rather than likely workload.
英国新的初级医疗保健合同在质量结果框架(QOF)下为一系列广泛活动提供按服务收费(FFS)支付,支付旨在反映可能的工作量。本研究旨在探讨这些经济激励措施与可能的人群健康收益之间的联系。
该研究考察了质量框架中81项临床指标里38项的8种预防性干预措施的子集。根据麦科尔等人(1998年)的证据,计算了每项服务的最高支付额,并将其与每10万人口中可能挽救的生命数所代表的人群健康收益进行了比较。
所考察的8种干预措施的最高支付额占质量结果框架(QOF)中所有临床干预措施总最高支付额的57%。在这8种干预措施中,支付与健康收益之间似乎没有关系。8种干预措施中有两种(房颤患者使用华法林和一级预防中使用他汀类药物)没有激励措施。
新合同中的支付并未反映可能的人群健康收益。存在这样一种风险,即临床活动可能会偏向于仅具有边际效果的高工作量活动,从而损害更具成本效益的活动。如果改善人群健康是英国国民医疗服务体系(NHS)的首要目标,那么按服务收费的激励措施应设计为反映可能的健康收益而非可能的工作量。