Health Care Delivery Research, MedStar Health Research Institute, Hyattsville, Maryland, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2022 Jan;29(1):83-94. doi: 10.1111/acem.14351. Epub 2021 Aug 25.
In 2014, Maryland (MD) implemented a "global budget revenue" (GBR) program that prospectively sets hospital budgets. This program introduced incentives for hospitals to tightly control volume and meet budget targets. We examine GBR's effects on emergency department (ED) visits, admissions, and returns.
We performed an interrupted time-series analysis with difference-in-differences comparisons using 2012 to 2015 Healthcare Cost Utilization and Project data from MD, New York (NY), and New Jersey (NJ). We examined GBR's effects on ED visits/1,000 population, admissions from the ED, and ED returns at 72 h and 9 days. We also examined rates of admission, intensive care unit (ICU) stay, and in-hospital mortality among returns. To evaluate racial/ethnic and payer outcome disparities among ED returns, we performed a triple differences analysis.
ED visits decreased with GBR adoption in MD relative to NY and NJ, by five and six visits/1,000 population, respectively. ED admissions declined relative to NY and NJ, by 0.6% and 1.8%, respectively. There was also a post-GBR decline in ED returns by 0.7%. Admissions among returns declined by 2%, while ICU and in-hospital mortality among returns remained relatively stable. ED return outcomes varied by racial/ethnic and payer group. Non-Hispanic Whites and non-Hispanic Blacks experienced a similar decline in returns, while returns remained unchanged among Hispanics/Latinos, widening the disparity gap. Payer group disparities between privately insured and Medicare, Medicaid, and uninsured individuals improved, with the disparity reduction most pronounced among the uninsured.
GBR adoption was associated with lower ED utilization and admissions. ED returns and admissions among returns also decreased, while mortality and ICU stays among returns remained stable, suggesting that GBR has not led to adverse patient outcomes from fewer admissions. However, changes in ED return disparities varied by subgroup, indicating that improvements in care transitions may be uneven across patient populations.
2014 年,马里兰州(MD)实施了一项“全球预算收入”(GBR)计划,该计划对医院预算进行前瞻性设定。该计划为医院提供了激励措施,以严格控制数量并达到预算目标。我们研究了 GBR 对急诊部(ED)就诊、入院和返回的影响。
我们使用来自 MD、纽约州(NY)和新泽西州(NJ)的 2012 年至 2015 年医疗保健成本利用和项目数据,进行了中断时间序列分析,采用差分差异比较。我们研究了 GBR 对 ED 就诊/每千人、ED 入院和 ED 72 小时和 9 天返回的影响。我们还研究了返回者的入院率、重症监护病房(ICU)入住率和院内死亡率。为了评估 ED 返回者的种族/民族和支付者结果差异,我们进行了三重差异分析。
与 NY 和 NJ 相比,MD 采用 GBR 后,ED 就诊减少了 5 次和 6 次/每千人。ED 入院率与 NY 和 NJ 相比分别下降了 0.6%和 1.8%。ED 返回也出现了 GBR 后下降了 0.7%。返回者的入院率下降了 2%,而返回者的 ICU 和院内死亡率保持相对稳定。ED 返回结果因种族/民族和支付者群体而异。非西班牙裔白人和非西班牙裔黑人的返回率下降幅度相似,而西班牙裔/拉丁裔的返回率保持不变,从而扩大了差距。私人保险和医疗保险、医疗补助和无保险人群之间的支付者群体差异有所改善,无保险人群的差异缩小最为明显。
GBR 的采用与 ED 利用率和入院率降低有关。ED 返回和返回者的入院率也有所下降,而返回者的死亡率和 ICU 入住率保持稳定,表明较少的入院率并未导致患者不良后果。然而,ED 返回差异的变化因亚组而异,表明在患者群体中,医疗过渡的改善可能不均衡。