Schneider Eric C, Zaslavsky Alan M, Epstein Arnold M
Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health, USA.
Am J Med. 2005 Dec;118(12):1392-400. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2005.05.032.
For-profit health plans now enroll the majority of Medicare beneficiaries who select managed care. Prior research has produced conflicting results about whether for-profit health plans provide lower quality of care.
The objective was to compare the quality of care delivered by for-profit and not-for-profit health plans using Medicare Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS) clinical measures.
This was an observational study comparing HEDIS scores in for-profit and not-for-profit health plans that enrolled Medicare beneficiaries in the United States during 1997.
Outcome measures included health plan quality scores on each of 4 clinical services assessed by HEDIS: breast cancer screening, diabetic eye examination, beta-blocker medication after myocardial infarction, and follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness.
The quality of care was lower in for-profit health plans than not-for-profit health plans on all 4 of the HEDIS measures we studied (67.5% vs 74.8% for breast cancer screening, 43.7% vs 57.7% for diabetic eye examination, 63.1% vs 75.2% for beta-blocker medication after myocardial infarction, and 42.1% vs 60.4% for follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness). Adjustment for sociodemographic case-mix and health plan characteristics reduced but did not eliminate the differences, which remained statistically significant for 3 of the 4 measures (not beta-blocker medication after myocardial infarction). Different geographic locations of for-profit and not-for-profit health plans did not explain these differences.
By using standardized performance measures applied in a mandatory measurement program, we found that for-profit health plans provide lower quality of care than not-for-profit health plans. Special efforts to monitor and improve the quality of for-profit health plans may be warranted.
营利性健康保险计划目前覆盖了大多数选择管理式医疗的医疗保险受益人。先前的研究对于营利性健康保险计划是否提供较低质量的医疗服务产生了相互矛盾的结果。
使用医疗保险健康计划雇主数据与信息集(HEDIS)临床指标,比较营利性和非营利性健康保险计划所提供的医疗服务质量。
这是一项观察性研究,比较了1997年在美国参保医疗保险受益人的营利性和非营利性健康保险计划的HEDIS评分。
结局指标包括HEDIS评估的4项临床服务中每项服务的健康保险计划质量评分:乳腺癌筛查、糖尿病眼部检查、心肌梗死后β受体阻滞剂用药以及精神疾病住院后的随访。
在我们研究的所有4项HEDIS指标上,营利性健康保险计划的医疗服务质量均低于非营利性健康保险计划(乳腺癌筛查:67.5%对74.8%;糖尿病眼部检查:43.7%对57.7%;心肌梗死后β受体阻滞剂用药:63.1%对75.2%;精神疾病住院后随访:42.1%对60.4%)。对社会人口学病例组合和健康保险计划特征进行调整后,差异有所减小但并未消除,在4项指标中的3项(心肌梗死后β受体阻滞剂用药除外)上仍具有统计学意义。营利性和非营利性健康保险计划的不同地理位置并不能解释这些差异。
通过使用强制性测量计划中应用的标准化绩效指标,我们发现营利性健康保险计划提供的医疗服务质量低于非营利性健康保险计划。可能有必要做出特别努力来监测和改善营利性健康保险计划的质量。