Leutz Walter, Nonnenkamp Lucy, Dickinson Lynn, Brody Kathleen
Schneider Institute for Health Policy, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, USA.
Int J Integr Care. 2005;5:e25. doi: 10.5334/ijic.143.
Our objective was to describe the utilization and costs of services from 1985 to 2002 of a Social Health Maintenance Organization (SHMO) demonstration project providing a benefit for home-based and community-based as well as short-term institutional (HCB) care at Kaiser Permanente Northwest (KPNW), serving the Portland, Oregon area. The HCB care benefit was offered by KPNW as a supplement to Medicare's acute care medical benefits, which KPNW provides in an HMO model. KPNW receives a monthly per capita payment from Medicare to provide medical benefits, and Medicare beneficiaries who choose to join pay a supplemental premium that covers prescription drugs, HCB care benefits, and other services. A HCB care benefit of up to 12,000 dollars per year in services was available to SHMO members meeting requirement for nursing home certification (NHC).
We used aggregate data to track temporal changes in the period 1985 to 2002 on member eligibility, enrollment in HCB care plans, age, service utilization and co-payments. Trends in the overall costs and financing of the HCB care benefit were extracted from quarterly reports, management data, and finance data.
During the time period, 14,815 members enrolled in the SHMO and membership averaged 4,531. The proportion of SHMO members aged 85 or older grew from 12 to 25%; proportion meeting requirements for NHC rose from 4 to 27%; and proportion with HCB care plans rose from 4 to 18%. Costs for the HCB care benefit rose from 21 dollars per SHMO member per month in 1985 to 95 dollars in 2002. The HCB care costs were equivalent to 12% to 16% of Medicare reimbursement. The HCB program costs were covered by member premiums (which rose from 49 dollars to 180 dollars) and co-payments from members with care plans. Over the 18-year period, spending shifted from nursing homes to a range of community services, e.g. personal care, homemaking, member reimbursement, lifeline, equipment, transportation, shift care, home nursing, adult day care, respite care, and dentures. Rising costs per month per SHMO member reflected increasing HCB eligibility rather than costs per member with HCB care, which actually fell from 6,164 dollars in 1989 to 4,328 dollars in 2002. Care management accounted for about one-quarter of community care costs since 1992.
The Kaiser Permanente Northwest SHMO served an increasingly aged and disabled membership by reducing costs per HCB member care plan and shifting utilization to a broad range of community care services. Supported by a disability-based Medicare payment formula and by SHMO beneficiaries willing to pay increasing premiums, KPNW has been able to offer comprehensive community care. The model could be replicated by other HMOs with the support of favorable federal policies.
我们的目标是描述1985年至2002年期间,凯撒永久医疗集团西北分部(KPNW)的一个社会健康维护组织(SHMO)示范项目的服务利用情况和成本。该项目为俄勒冈州波特兰地区提供居家和社区护理以及短期机构护理(HCB)福利。KPNW提供HCB护理福利作为医疗保险急性护理医疗福利的补充,KPNW以健康维护组织模式提供医疗保险急性护理医疗福利。KPNW每月从医疗保险获得人均支付以提供医疗福利,选择加入的医疗保险受益人需支付补充保费,该保费涵盖处方药、HCB护理福利及其他服务。符合疗养院认证(NHC)要求的SHMO成员每年可获得高达12,000美元的HCB护理福利服务。
我们使用汇总数据追踪1985年至2002年期间会员资格、HCB护理计划注册情况、年龄、服务利用和自付费用的时间变化。HCB护理福利的总体成本和融资趋势从季度报告、管理数据和财务数据中提取。
在此期间,14,815名成员加入了SHMO,平均会员人数为4,531人。85岁及以上的SHMO成员比例从12%增长到25%;符合NHC要求的比例从4%上升到27%;参加HCB护理计划的比例从4%升至18%。HCB护理福利成本从1985年每位SHMO成员每月21美元升至2002年的95美元。HCB护理成本相当于医疗保险报销额的12%至16%。HCB项目成本由会员保费(从49美元升至180美元)和参加护理计划成员的自付费用覆盖。在这18年期间,支出从疗养院转向一系列社区服务,如个人护理、家务服务、会员报销、生命线服务、设备、交通、轮班护理、家庭护理、成人日托、喘息护理和假牙。每位SHMO成员每月成本的上升反映了HCB资格的增加,而非每位接受HCB护理成员的成本,实际上该成本从1989年的6,164美元降至2002年的4,328美元。自1992年以来,护理管理约占社区护理成本的四分之一。
凯撒永久医疗集团西北分部的SHMO通过降低每位HCB成员护理计划的成本并将利用转向广泛的社区护理服务,为日益老龄化和残疾的会员提供服务。在基于残疾的医疗保险支付公式以及愿意支付不断增加保费的SHMO受益人的支持下,KPNW能够提供全面的社区护理。在有利的联邦政策支持下,其他健康维护组织可以复制该模式。