Johnson A N, Aquilina D
J Health Polit Policy Law. 1986 Winter;10(4):659-74. doi: 10.1215/03616878-10-4-659.
The Healthcare Educational and Research Foundation (HERF) in Minneapolis undertook a two-year research project to study the effects of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and competition on the hospital industry in Minneapolis/St. Paul. This article summarizes HERF's major findings surrounding three key questions: (1) do the HMOs in Minneapolis/St. Paul use fewer hospital resources relative to conventional payers?; (2) do recent overall community trends in inpatient use suggest evidence of hospital utilization-reducing effects attributable to HMOs?; and (3) given the highly visible competitive process among Minneapolis/St. Paul providers, do hospital cost and revenue data suggest any evidence of cost-containment? The findings (based on data through 1982) indicate that for comparable patients, Twin Cities HMOs appear to use fewer medical care resources per hospitalized patient. There was, however, no clear evidence of community-wide, utilization-reducing effects directly attributable to the "competitive effect" of HMO introduction and development in the market. In addition, there was no empirical evidence that HMOs (which had enrolled 25 percent of the consumer market by 1982), or other large buyers of inpatient services, have selected hospitals on the basis of price as hypothesized by competition advocates.
明尼阿波利斯的医疗保健教育与研究基金会(HERF)开展了一项为期两年的研究项目,以研究健康维护组织(HMO)及竞争对明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗地区医院行业的影响。本文总结了HERF围绕三个关键问题的主要研究发现:(1)相对于传统付款人,明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗地区的HMO使用的医院资源是否更少?(2)近期住院使用方面的整体社区趋势是否表明存在可归因于HMO的减少医院利用的效应?(3)鉴于明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗地区供应商之间竞争过程明显,医院成本和收入数据是否表明存在任何成本控制的证据?研究结果(基于截至1982年的数据)表明,对于可比患者,双城地区的HMO似乎每名住院患者使用的医疗资源更少。然而,没有明确证据表明市场上HMO引入和发展所产生的“竞争效应”直接导致了全社区范围内医院利用的减少。此外,没有实证证据表明HMO(到1982年已覆盖25%的消费市场)或其他住院服务的大买家,如竞争倡导者所假设的那样,基于价格来选择医院。