Pape Utz J, Huckvale Kit, Car Josip, Majeed Azeem, Millett Christopher
Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2015 Mar 26;10(3):e0119185. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119185. eCollection 2015.
Pay-for-performance programs are often aimed to improve the management of chronic diseases. We evaluate the impact of a local pay for performance programme (QOF+), which rewarded financially more ambitious quality targets ('stretch targets') than those used nationally in the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF). We focus on targets for intermediate outcomes in patients with cardiovascular disease and diabetes. A difference-in-difference approach is used to compare practice level achievements before and after the introduction of the local pay for performance program. In addition, we analysed patient-level data on exception reporting and intermediate outcomes utilizing an interrupted time series analysis. The local pay for performance program led to significantly higher target achievements (hypertension: p-value <0.001, coronary heart disease: p-values <0.001, diabetes: p-values <0.061, stroke: p-values <0.003). However, the increase was driven by higher rates of exception reporting (hypertension: p-value <0.001, coronary heart disease: p-values <0.03, diabetes: p-values <0.05) in patients with all conditions except for stroke. Exception reporting allows practitioners to exclude patients from target calculations if certain criteria are met, e.g. informed dissent of the patient for treatment. There were no statistically significant improvements in mean blood pressure, cholesterol or HbA1c levels. Thus, achievement of higher payment thresholds in the local pay for performance scheme was mainly attributed to increased exception reporting by practices with no discernable improvements in overall clinical quality. Hence, active monitoring of exception reporting should be considered when setting more ambitious quality targets. More generally, the study suggests a trade-off between additional incentive for better care and monitoring costs.
绩效薪酬计划通常旨在改善慢性病管理。我们评估了一项地方绩效薪酬计划(QOF+)的影响,该计划在经济上奖励了比国家质量与结果框架(QOF)中使用的目标更具挑战性的质量目标(“延伸目标”)。我们关注心血管疾病和糖尿病患者中间结局的目标。采用差异中的差异方法来比较地方绩效薪酬计划实施前后的实践水平成就。此外,我们利用中断时间序列分析,分析了关于例外报告和中间结局的患者层面数据。地方绩效薪酬计划导致目标达成率显著提高(高血压:p值<0.001,冠心病:p值<0.001,糖尿病:p值<0.061,中风:p值<0.003)。然而,除中风患者外,所有疾病患者的例外报告率上升推动了这种增长(高血压:p值<0.001,冠心病:p值<0.03,糖尿病:p值<0.05)。例外报告允许从业者在满足某些标准时将患者排除在目标计算之外,例如患者对治疗的知情异议。平均血压、胆固醇或糖化血红蛋白水平没有统计学上的显著改善。因此,地方绩效薪酬计划中更高支付门槛的实现主要归因于医疗机构例外报告的增加,而整体临床质量没有明显改善。因此,在设定更具挑战性的质量目标时,应考虑对例外报告进行积极监测。更普遍地说,该研究表明在更好护理的额外激励和监测成本之间存在权衡。