Anderson Ryan E, Ayanian John Z, Zaslavsky Alan M, McWilliams J Michael
Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Cambridge, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2014 Sep;29(9):1296-304. doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-2900-3. Epub 2014 May 31.
The Medicare Accountable Care Organization (ACO) programs encourage integration of providers into large groups and reward provider groups for improving quality, but not explicitly for reducing health care disparities. Larger group size and better overall quality may or may not be associated with smaller disparities.
To examine differences in patient characteristics between provider groups sufficiently large to participate in ACO programs and smaller groups; the association between group size and racial disparities in quality; and the association between quality and disparities among larger groups.
Using 2009 Medicare claims for 3.1 million beneficiaries with cardiovascular disease or diabetes and linked data on provider groups, we compared racial differences in quality by provider group size, adjusting for patient characteristics. Among larger groups, we used multilevel models to estimate correlations between group performance on quality measures for white beneficiaries and black-white disparities within groups.
Four process measures of quality, hospitalization for ambulatory care-sensitive conditions (ACSCs) related to cardiovascular disease or diabetes, and hospitalization for any ACSC.
Beneficiaries served by larger groups were more likely to be white and live in areas with less poverty and more education. Larger group size was associated with smaller disparities in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol testing and retinal exams, but not in other process measures or hospitalization for ACSCs. Among larger groups, better quality for white beneficiaries in one measure (hospitalization for ACSCs related to cardiovascular disease or diabetes) was correlated with smaller racial disparities (r = 0.28; P = 0.02), but quality was not correlated with disparities in other measures.
Larger provider group size and better performance on quality measures were not consistently associated with smaller racial disparities in care for Medicare beneficiaries with cardiovascular disease or diabetes. ACO incentives rewarding better quality for minority groups and payment arrangements supporting ACO development in disadvantaged communities may be required for ACOs to promote greater equity in care.
医疗保险责任医疗组织(ACO)项目鼓励医疗服务提供者整合为大型团体,并对提高质量的医疗服务提供者团体给予奖励,但未明确奖励减少医疗保健差异的行为。团体规模较大和整体质量较高可能与较小的差异相关,也可能无关。
研究有资格参与ACO项目的大型医疗服务提供者团体与小型团体在患者特征上的差异;团体规模与质量方面种族差异之间的关联;以及大型团体中质量与差异之间的关联。
利用2009年310万患有心血管疾病或糖尿病受益人的医疗保险理赔数据以及医疗服务提供者团体的相关数据,我们比较了不同规模医疗服务提供者团体在质量上的种族差异,并对患者特征进行了调整。在大型团体中,我们使用多层次模型来估计白人受益人的质量指标团体表现与团体内部黑白差异之间的相关性。
四项质量过程指标、与心血管疾病或糖尿病相关的非卧床护理敏感疾病(ACSC)住院治疗情况以及任何ACSC的住院治疗情况。
由大型团体服务的受益人更有可能是白人,并且居住在贫困程度较低、教育程度较高的地区。团体规模较大与低密度脂蛋白(LDL)胆固醇检测和视网膜检查方面较小的差异相关,但在其他过程指标或ACSC住院治疗方面则不然。在大型团体中,白人受益人在一项指标(与心血管疾病或糖尿病相关的ACSC住院治疗)上质量较好与较小的种族差异相关(r = 0.28;P = 0.02),但质量与其他指标的差异无关。
对于患有心血管疾病或糖尿病的医疗保险受益人,较大的医疗服务提供者团体规模和较好的质量表现与较小的种族差异之间并非始终相关。ACO可能需要激励措施来奖励少数群体更好的质量,并需要支付安排来支持弱势社区的ACO发展,以促进医疗保健方面更大的公平性。