Scott Anthony, Sivey Peter, Ait Ouakrim Driss, Willenberg Lisa, Naccarella Lucio, Furler John, Young Doris
Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, The University of Melbourne, Level 7, Alan Gilbert Building, Barry Street, Carlton, Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 3053.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Sep 7(9):CD008451. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008451.pub2.
The use of blended payment schemes in primary care, including the use of financial incentives to directly reward 'performance' and 'quality' is increasing in a number of countries. There are many examples in the US, and the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QoF) for general practitioners (GPs) in the UK is an example of a major system-wide reform. Despite the popularity of these schemes, there is currently little rigorous evidence of their success in improving the quality of primary health care, or of whether such an approach is cost-effective relative to other ways to improve the quality of care.
The aim of this review is to examine the effect of changes in the method and level of payment on the quality of care provided by primary care physicians (PCPs) and to identify:i) the different types of financial incentives that have improved quality;ii) the characteristics of patient populations for whom quality of care has been improved by financial incentives; andiii) the characteristics of PCPs who have responded to financial incentives.
We searched the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care (EPOC) Trials Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) (The Cochrane Library), MEDLINE, HealthSTAR, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsychLIT, and ECONLIT. Searches of Internet-based economics and health economics working paper collections were also conducted. Finally, studies were identified through the reference lists of retrieved articles, websites of key organisations, and from direct contact with key authors in the field. Articles were included if they were published from 2000 to August 2009.
Randomised controlled trials (RCT), controlled before and after studies (CBA), and interrupted time series analyses (ITS) evaluating the impact of different financial interventions on the quality of care delivered by primary healthcare physicians (PCPs). Quality of care was defined as patient reported outcome measures, clinical behaviours, and intermediate clinical and physiological measures.
Two review authors independently extracted data and assessed study quality, in consultation with two other review authors where there was disagreement. For each included study, we reported the estimated effect sizes and confidence intervals.
Seven studies were included in this review. Three of the studies evaluated single-threshold target payments, one examined a fixed fee per patient achieving a specified outcome, one study evaluated payments based on the relative ranking of medical groups' performance (tournament-based pay), one study examined a mix of tournament-based pay and threshold payments, and one study evaluated changing from a blended payments scheme to salaried payment. Three cluster RCTs examined smoking cessation; one CBA examined patients' assessment of the quality of care; one CBA examined cervical screening, mammography screening, and HbA1c; one ITS focused on four outcomes in diabetes; and one controlled ITS (a difference-in-difference design) examined cervical screening, mammography screening, HbA1c, childhood immunisation, chlamydia screening, and appropriate asthma medication. Six of the seven studies showed positive but modest effects on quality of care for some primary outcome measures, but not all. One study found no effect on quality of care. Poor study design led to substantial risk of bias in most studies. In particular, none of the studies addressed issues of selection bias as a result of the ability of primary care physicians to select into or out of the incentive scheme or health plan.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The use of financial incentives to reward PCPs for improving the quality of primary healthcare services is growing. However, there is insufficient evidence to support or not support the use of financial incentives to improve the quality of primary health care. Implementation should proceed with caution and incentive schemes should be more carefully designed before implementation. In addition to basing incentive design more on theory, there is a large literature discussing experiences with these schemes that can be used to draw out a number of lessons that can be learned and that could be used to influence or modify the design of incentive schemes. More rigorous study designs need to be used to account for the selection of physicians into incentive schemes. The use of instrumental variable techniques should be considered to assist with the identification of treatment effects in the presence of selection bias and other sources of unobserved heterogeneity. In randomised trials, care must be taken in using the correct unit of analysis and more attention should be paid to blinding. Studies should also examine the potential unintended consequences of incentive schemes by having a stronger theoretical basis, including a broader range of outcomes, and conducting more extensive subgroup analysis. Studies should more consistently describe i) the type of payment scheme at baseline or in the control group, ii) how payments to medical groups were used and distributed within the groups, and iii) the size of the new payments as a percentage of total revenue. Further research comparing the relative costs and effects of financial incentives with other behaviour change interventions is also required.
在一些国家,初级医疗保健中混合支付方案的使用正在增加,其中包括利用经济激励措施直接奖励“绩效”和“质量”。美国有许多这样的例子,英国全科医生的质量与结果框架(QoF)就是一项全系统重大改革的范例。尽管这些方案很受欢迎,但目前几乎没有严格的证据表明它们在提高初级医疗保健质量方面取得了成功,也没有证据表明相对于其他提高医疗质量的方法,这种方法是否具有成本效益。
本综述的目的是研究支付方式和水平的变化对初级保健医生(PCP)提供的医疗质量的影响,并确定:
i) 已提高质量的不同类型的经济激励措施;
ii) 通过经济激励措施提高了医疗质量的患者群体特征;
iii) 对经济激励措施做出反应的初级保健医生的特征。
我们检索了Cochrane有效实践与护理组织(EPOC)试验注册库、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)以及Cochrane系统评价数据库(CDSR)(Cochrane图书馆)、MEDLINE、HealthSTAR、EMBASE、CINAHL、PsychLIT和ECONLIT。还对基于互联网的经济学和卫生经济学工作论文集进行了检索。最后,通过检索到的文章的参考文献列表、关键组织的网站以及与该领域关键作者的直接联系来确定研究。如果文章发表于2000年至2009年8月,则纳入本综述。
评估不同经济干预措施对初级保健医生(PCP)提供的医疗质量影响的随机对照试验(RCT)、前后对照研究(CBA)和中断时间序列分析(ITS)。医疗质量被定义为患者报告的结局指标、临床行为以及中间临床和生理指标。
两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估研究质量,如有分歧则与另外两位综述作者协商。对于每项纳入研究,我们报告估计的效应量和置信区间。
本综述纳入了七项研究。其中三项研究评估了单阈值目标支付,一项研究考察了达到特定结局的每位患者的固定费用,一项研究评估了基于医疗组绩效相对排名的支付(锦标赛式支付),一项研究考察了锦标赛式支付和阈值支付的组合,一项研究评估了从混合支付方案转变为薪资支付。三项整群随机对照试验研究了戒烟;一项前后对照研究考察了患者对医疗质量的评估;一项前后对照研究考察了宫颈癌筛查、乳腺钼靶筛查和糖化血红蛋白;一项中断时间序列分析关注糖尿病的四个结局;一项对照中断时间序列分析(差异-in-差异设计)考察了宫颈癌筛查、乳腺钼靶筛查、糖化血红蛋白、儿童免疫接种、衣原体筛查和适当的哮喘药物治疗。七项研究中的六项显示,对于某些主要结局指标,对医疗质量有积极但适度的影响,但并非所有指标都如此。一项研究发现对医疗质量没有影响。研究设计不佳导致大多数研究存在较大的偏倚风险。特别是,由于初级保健医生有能力选择是否参与激励方案或健康计划,没有一项研究解决选择偏倚问题。
利用经济激励措施奖励初级保健医生提高初级医疗保健服务质量的做法正在增加。然而,没有足够的证据支持或不支持使用经济激励措施来提高初级医疗保健质量。实施应谨慎进行,激励方案在实施前应更仔细地设计。除了使激励设计更多地基于理论外,有大量文献讨论了这些方案的经验,可从中吸取一些教训,用于影响或修改激励方案的设计。需要采用更严格的研究设计来考虑医生参与激励方案的选择。在存在选择偏倚和其他未观察到的异质性来源的情况下,应考虑使用工具变量技术来帮助识别治疗效果。在随机试验中,必须注意使用正确的分析单位,并应更加关注盲法。研究还应通过建立更强的理论基础,包括更广泛的结局范围,并进行更广泛的亚组分析,来研究激励方案可能产生的意外后果。研究应更一致地描述:i)基线或对照组的支付方案类型;ii)向医疗组的支付如何在组内使用和分配;iii)新支付占总收入的百分比。还需要进一步研究比较经济激励措施与其他行为改变干预措施的相对成本和效果。