Systems Utilization Research for Stanford Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
Clinical Excellence Research Center, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2021 Aug;56(4):615-625. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.13649. Epub 2021 Mar 31.
Excess administrative costs in the US health care system are routinely referenced as a justification for comprehensive reform. While there is agreement that these costs are too high, there is little understanding of what generates administrative costs and what policy options might mitigate them.
Literature review and national utilization and expenditure data.
We developed a simulation model of physician billing and insurance-related (BIR) costs to estimate how certain policy reforms would generate savings. Our model is based on structural elements of the payment process in the United States and considers each provider's number of health plan contracts, the number of features in each health plan, the clinical and nonclinical processes required to submit a bill for payment, and the compliance costs associated with medical billing.
For several types of visits, we estimated fixed and variable costs of the billing process. We used the model to estimate the BIR costs at a national level under a variety of policy scenarios, including variations of a single payer "Medicare-for-All" model that extends fee-for-service Medicare to the entire population and policy efforts to reduce administrative costs in a multi-payer model. We conducted sensitivity analyses of a wide variety of model parameters.
Our model estimates that national BIR costs are reduced between 33% and 53% in Medicare-for-All style single-payer models and between 27% and 63% in various multi-payer models. Under a wide range of assumptions and sensitivity analyses, standardizing contracts generates larger savings with less variance than savings from single-payer strategies.
Although moving toward a single-payer system will reduce BIR costs, certain reforms to payer-provider contracts could generate at least as many administrative cost savings without radically reforming the entire health system. BIR costs can be meaningfully reduced without abandoning a multi-payer system.
美国医疗保健系统中存在过多的管理成本,这通常被认为是进行全面改革的理由。尽管人们普遍认为这些成本过高,但对于产生管理成本的原因以及哪些政策选择可能减轻这些成本,人们的理解甚少。
文献回顾和国家利用及支出数据。
我们开发了一个医生计费和保险相关(BIR)成本的模拟模型,以估算某些政策改革将如何产生节省。我们的模型基于美国支付过程的结构要素,并考虑了每个提供者的健康计划合同数量、每个健康计划的特征数量、提交计费支付所需的临床和非临床流程以及与医疗计费相关的合规成本。
对于几种类型的就诊,我们估算了计费流程的固定和可变成本。我们使用该模型在各种政策情景下估算全国范围内的 BIR 成本,包括各种单一支付者“全民医疗保险”模式的变化,即将按服务收费的 Medicare 扩展到整个人口,以及在多支付者模式下降低管理成本的政策努力。我们对模型的各种参数进行了广泛的敏感性分析。
我们的模型估计,在全民医疗保险模式的单一支付者模型中,全国 BIR 成本降低 33%至 53%,在各种多支付者模型中降低 27%至 63%。在广泛的假设和敏感性分析下,与单一支付者策略相比,标准化合同产生的节省更大,波动性更小。
虽然向单一支付者系统转变将降低 BIR 成本,但对支付者-提供者合同进行某些改革,即使不彻底改革整个医疗体系,也可能产生至少同样多的管理成本节省。在不放弃多支付者系统的情况下,可以显著降低 BIR 成本。