Department of Research and Sponsored Programs, Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
JAMA Pediatr. 2016 Feb;170(2):148-54. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2015.3446.
Little is known about the effect of pediatric accountable care organizations (ACOs) on the use and costs of health care resources, especially in a Medicaid population.
To assess the association between the length of consistent primary care (length of attribution) as part of an ACO and the use and cost of health care resources in a pediatric Medicaid population.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A retrospective study of Medicaid claims data for 28,794 unique pediatric patients covering 346,277 patient-attributed months within a single children's hospital. Data were collected for patients attributed from September 1, 2013, to May 31, 2015. The effect of the length of attribution within a single hospital system's ACO on the use and costs of health care resources were estimated using zero-inflated Poisson distribution regression models adjusted for patient characteristics, including chronic conditions and a measure of predicted patient use of resources.
Receiving a plurality of primary care at an ACO clinic during the preceding 12 months (attribution to the ACO).
The primary outcome measure was the length of attribution at an ACO clinic compared with subsequent inpatient hospitalization and subsequent use and cost of outpatient and ancillary health care resources.
Among the 28,794 pediatric patients receiving treatment covering 346,277 patient-attributed months during the study period, continuous attribution to the ACO for more than 2 years was associated with a decrease (95% CI) of 40.6% (19.4%-61.8%) in inpatient days but an increase (95% CI) of 23.3% (2.04%-26.3%) in office visits, 5.8% (1.4%-10.2%) in emergency department visits, and 15.3% (12.5%-18.0%) in the use of pharmaceuticals. These changes in the use of health care resources combined resulted in a cost reduction of 15.7% (95% CI, 6.6%-24.8%). At the population level, the impact of consistent primary care was muted by the many patients in the ACO having shorter durations of participation.
These findings suggest significant and durable reductions of inpatient use and cost of health care resources associated with longer attribution to the ACO, with attribution as a proxy for exposure to the ACO's consistent primary care. Consistent primary care among the pediatric Medicaid population is challenging, but these findings suggest substantial benefits if consistency can be improved.
关于儿科责任医疗组织(ACO)对医疗保健资源的使用和成本的影响,人们知之甚少,尤其是在医疗补助人群中。
评估作为 ACO 一部分的儿科医疗补助人群中,持续初级保健(归因长度)与医疗保健资源的使用和成本之间的关联。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项针对一家儿童医院的 28794 名独特儿科患者的 Medicaid 索赔数据的回顾性研究,涵盖了 346277 名患者归因月。数据是在 2013 年 9 月 1 日至 2015 年 5 月 31 日期间收集的,归因于患者。使用零膨胀泊松分布回归模型估计了单个医院系统 ACO 内归因长度对医疗保健资源使用和成本的影响,该模型针对患者特征(包括慢性病和资源使用预测指标)进行了调整。
在过去 12 个月中在 ACO 诊所接受多次初级保健(归因于 ACO)。
主要结果测量指标是与随后的住院治疗和随后的门诊和辅助医疗资源的使用和成本相比,在 ACO 诊所的归因长度。
在研究期间接受治疗并覆盖 346277 名患者归因月的 28794 名儿科患者中,连续 2 年以上归因于 ACO 与住院天数减少(95%CI)40.6%(19.4%-61.8%)相关,但门诊就诊增加(95%CI)23.3%(2.04%-26.3%),急诊就诊增加 5.8%(1.4%-10.2%),药物使用增加 15.3%(12.5%-18.0%)。这些医疗保健资源使用变化综合导致成本降低 15.7%(95%CI,6.6%-24.8%)。在人群层面上,由于 ACO 中有许多患者的参与时间较短,因此一致的初级保健对这一结果产生了一定程度的缓和。
这些发现表明,与 ACO 的较长归因相关联的住院使用和医疗保健资源成本显著且持久降低,归因是 ACO 一致初级保健的替代指标。儿科医疗补助人群中持续的初级保健具有挑战性,但如果能够改善一致性,这些发现表明将带来实质性的益处。