John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, Honolulu, HI.
Hawaii J Health Soc Welf. 2022 Jul;81(7):193-197.
The Hawai'i Medical Service Association's (HMSA) Population-based Payments for Primary Care (3PC) system has been in effect since 2016. There is limited literature regarding physician opinions on this payment transformation policy change. The objective of this study was to evaluate physician responses to a survey regarding the 3PC payment transformation system and identify methods to support physicians in Hawai'i. An online survey was sent to 2478 Hawai'i physicians and yielded 250 responses. A total of 77% respondents reported being unhappy with payment transformation, while 12.9% and 10.1% reported being indifferent and happy, respectively. Of responding physicians, 60.6% reported a decrease in overall income, whereas 24.9% and 14.5% reported no change or an overall increase, respectively. Open-ended responses were categorized into theme clusters: negative impact on primary care, increased administrative burdens, decreased quality of patient care, decreased physician reimbursement, preference to treat healthier patients, harm to private practice, harm to newer practices, ignored physician sentiments, and worsened physician shortage in Hawai'i. Respondents, especially those working in primary care, are dissatisfied with payment transformation. Future research is needed to compare the thematic clusters identified in the current study with relevant literature.
夏威夷医疗服务协会(HMSA)的基于人群的初级保健支付(3PC)系统自 2016 年以来一直生效。关于医生对这一支付转型政策变化的看法,相关文献有限。本研究的目的是评估医生对 3PC 支付转型系统调查的反应,并确定在夏威夷支持医生的方法。向 2478 名夏威夷医生发送了在线调查,共收到 250 份回复。共有 77%的受访者表示对支付转型不满意,而 12.9%和 10.1%的受访者表示漠不关心和高兴。在接受调查的医生中,60.6%的人报告总收入下降,而 24.9%和 14.5%的人分别报告没有变化或总收入增加。开放式回复被归类为主题群:对初级保健的负面影响、行政负担增加、患者护理质量下降、医生报销减少、更愿意治疗更健康的患者、对私人执业的伤害、对新执业的伤害、忽视医生意见、以及加剧夏威夷的医生短缺。受访者,尤其是从事初级保健的受访者,对支付转型不满意。未来需要进行研究,将当前研究中确定的主题群与相关文献进行比较。