Gans Daphna, Hadler Max W, Chen Xiao, Wu Shang-Hua, Dimand Robert, Abramson Jill M, Ferrell Betty, Diamant Allison L, Kominski Gerald F
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA; UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, Los Angeles, California, USA.
UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, Los Angeles, California, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2016 Sep;52(3):329-35. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2016.02.020. Epub 2016 May 24.
In 2010, California launched Partners for Children (PFC), a pediatric palliative care pilot program offering hospice-like services for children eligible for full-scope Medicaid delivered concurrently with curative care, regardless of the child's life expectancy.
We assessed the change from before PFC enrollment to the enrolled period in 1) health care costs per enrollee per month (PEPM), 2) costs by service type and diagnosis category, and 3) health care utilization (days of inpatient care and length of hospital stay).
A pre-post analysis compared enrollees' health care costs and utilization up to 24 months before enrollment with their costs during participation in the pilot, from January 2010 through December 2012. Analyses were conducted using paid Medicaid claims and program enrollment data.
The average PEPM health care costs of program enrollees decreased by $3331 from before their participation in PFC to the enrolled period, driven by a reduction in inpatient costs of $4897 PEPM. PFC enrollees experienced a nearly 50% reduction in the average number of inpatient days per month, from 4.2 to 2.3. Average length of stay per hospitalization dropped from an average of 16.7 days before enrollment to 6.5 days while in the program.
Through the provision of home-based therapeutic services, 24/7 access to medical advice, and enhanced, personally tailored care coordination, PFC demonstrated an effective way to reduce costs for children with life-limiting conditions by moving from costly inpatient care to more coordinated and less expensive outpatient care. PFC's home-based care strategy is a cost-effective model for pediatric palliative care elsewhere.
2010年,加利福尼亚州启动了儿童伙伴计划(PFC),这是一项儿科姑息治疗试点项目,为符合全面医疗补助条件的儿童提供临终关怀类服务,与治愈性治疗同时进行,无论儿童的预期寿命如何。
我们评估了从加入PFC之前到加入后的这段时间里,1)每个参保人每月的医疗费用(PEPM)、2)按服务类型和诊断类别划分的费用,以及3)医疗服务利用率(住院天数和住院时长)的变化。
一项前后分析比较了参保人在2010年1月至2012年12月参与试点期间的费用,以及参保前长达24个月的医疗费用和利用率。分析使用了已支付的医疗补助索赔和项目参保数据。
项目参保人的平均PEPM医疗费用从参与PFC之前到参保期间减少了3331美元,这是由PEPM住院费用减少4897美元所推动的。PFC参保人每月的平均住院天数减少了近50%,从4.2天降至2.3天。每次住院的平均住院时长从参保前的平均16.7天降至项目期间的6.5天。
通过提供居家治疗服务、全天候获得医疗建议以及加强个性化定制的护理协调,PFC展示了一种有效的方法,即通过从昂贵的住院治疗转向更协调、更便宜的门诊治疗,来降低患有危及生命疾病儿童的费用。PFC的居家护理策略是其他地方儿科姑息治疗的一种具有成本效益的模式。