Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, Winnipeg, Canada.
Milbank Q. 2012 Sep;90(3):457-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2012.00671.x.
It is widely hoped that accountable care organizations (ACOs) will improve health care quality and reduce costs by fostering integration among diverse provider groups. But how do implementers actually envision integration, and what will integration mean in terms of managing the many social identities that ACOs bring together?
Using the lens of the social identity approach, this qualitative study examined how four nascent ACOs engaged with the concept of integration. During multiday site visits, we conducted interviews (114 managers and physicians), observations, and document reviews.
In no case was the ACO interpreted as a new, overarching entity uniting disparate groups; rather, each site offered a unique interpretation that flowed from its existing strategies for social-identity management: An independent practice association preserved members' cherished value of autonomy by emphasizing coordination, not "integration"; a medical group promoted integration within its employed core, but not with affiliates; a hospital, engaging community physicians who mistrusted integrated systems, reimagined integration as an equal partnership; an integrated delivery system advanced its careful journey towards intergroup consensus by presenting the ACO as a cultural, not structural, change.
The ACO appears to be a model flexible enough to work in synchrony with whatever social strategies are most context appropriate, with the potential to promote alignment and functional integration without demanding common identification with a superordinate group. "Soft integration" may be a promising alternative to the vertically integrated model that, though widely assumed to be ideal, has remained unattainable for most organizations.
人们普遍希望责任医疗组织(ACO)通过促进不同医疗服务提供者群体之间的整合,提高医疗服务质量并降低成本。但是,实施者实际上如何设想整合,以及整合在管理 ACO 聚集的众多社会身份方面意味着什么?
本定性研究使用社会认同方法的视角,考察了四个新兴 ACO 如何参与整合概念。在为期多天的现场访问中,我们进行了访谈(114 名管理人员和医生)、观察和文件审查。
在任何情况下,ACO 都没有被解释为一个新的、涵盖所有不同群体的总体实体;相反,每个站点都提供了独特的解释,这些解释源于其现有的社会认同管理策略:一个独立的实践协会通过强调协调而不是“整合”,维护成员对自主权的珍视价值;一个医疗集团在其雇佣的核心成员中促进整合,但与附属机构没有整合;一家医院与不信任整合系统的社区医生合作,将整合重新构想为平等的合作伙伴关系;一个综合交付系统通过将 ACO 呈现为文化而非结构上的变革,在推进其走向群体间共识的谨慎之旅中取得进展。
ACO 似乎是一个足够灵活的模型,可以与最符合情境的任何社会策略协同工作,有可能在不要求与上级群体共同认同的情况下促进一致性和功能性整合。“软性整合”可能是一种有前途的替代方案,替代垂直整合模式,尽管这种模式被广泛认为是理想的,但对大多数组织来说仍然难以实现。