Wu Vivian Y, Shen Yu-Chu, Yun Myeong-Su, Melnick Glenn
Sol Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2014 May 21;14:230. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-230.
United States health care spending rose rapidly in the 2000s, after a period of temporary slowdown in the 1990s. However, the description of the overall trend and the understanding of the underlying drivers of this trend are very limited. This study investigates how well historical hospital cost/revenue drivers explain the recent hospital spending trend in the 2000s, and how important each of these drivers is.
We used aggregated time series data to describe the trend in total hospital spending, price, and quantity between 2001 and 2009. We used the Oaxaca-Blinder method to investigate the relative importance of major hospital cost/spending drivers (derived from the literature) in explaining the change in hospital spending patterns between 2001 and 2007. We assembled data from Medicare Cost Reports, American Hospital Association annual surveys, Prospective Payment System (PPS) Impact Files, Medicare Provider Analysis and Review (MedPAR) Medicare claims data, InterStudy reports, National Health Expenditure data, and Area Resource Files.
Aggregated time series trends show that high hospital spending between 2001 and 2009 appears to be driven by higher payment per unit of hospital output, not by increased utilization. Results using the Oaxaca-Blinder regression decomposition method indicate that changes in historically important spending drivers explain a limited 30% of unit-payment growth, but a higher 60% of utilization growth. Hospital staffing and labor-related costs, casemix, and demographics are the most important drivers of higher hospital revenue, utilization, and unit-payment. Technology is associated with lower utilization, higher unit payment, and limited increases in total revenue. Market competition, primarily because of increased managed care concentration, moderates total revenue growth by driving lower unit payment.
Much of the rapidly rising hospital spending growth in the 2000s in the United States is driven by factors not commonly known or well measured. Future studies need to explore new factors and dynamics that drive longer-term hospital spending growth in recent years, particularly through the channel of higher prices.
在经历了20世纪90年代的一段暂时放缓期后,美国医疗保健支出在21世纪迅速增长。然而,对总体趋势的描述以及对这一趋势潜在驱动因素的理解非常有限。本研究调查了历史上的医院成本/收入驱动因素在多大程度上能够解释21世纪近期的医院支出趋势,以及这些驱动因素各自的重要性如何。
我们使用汇总的时间序列数据来描述2001年至2009年期间医院总支出、价格和数量的趋势。我们使用奥克萨卡-布林德方法来研究主要医院成本/支出驱动因素(源自文献)在解释2001年至2007年期间医院支出模式变化方面的相对重要性。我们收集了来自医疗保险成本报告、美国医院协会年度调查、前瞻性支付系统(PPS)影响文件、医疗保险提供者分析与审查(MedPAR)医疗保险理赔数据、InterStudy报告、国家卫生支出数据以及区域资源文件的数据。
汇总的时间序列趋势表明,2001年至2009年期间医院支出较高似乎是由每单位医院产出的支付增加所驱动,而非利用率提高。使用奥克萨卡-布林德回归分解方法的结果表明,历史上重要的支出驱动因素的变化解释了单位支付增长的30%,但利用率增长的60%。医院人员配备和与劳动力相关的成本、病例组合以及人口统计学因素是医院收入增加、利用率提高和单位支付增加的最重要驱动因素。技术与较低的利用率、较高的单位支付以及总收入的有限增长相关。市场竞争,主要是由于管理式医疗集中度的提高,通过压低单位支付来缓和总收入增长。
21世纪美国医院支出快速增长中的很大一部分是由鲜为人知或难以衡量的因素驱动的。未来的研究需要探索推动近年来医院长期支出增长的新因素和动态,特别是通过更高价格这一渠道。