Sturm R, Jackson C A, Meredith L S, Yip W, Manning W G, Rogers W H, Wells K B
RAND, Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138, USA.
Health Serv Res. 1995 Jun;30(2):319-40.
We compare mental health utilization in prepaid and fee-for-service plans and analyze selection biases.
Primary data were collected every six months over a two-year interval for a panel of depressed patients participating in the Medical Outcomes Study, an observational study of adults in competing systems of care in three urban areas (Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles).
Patients visiting a participating clinician at baseline were screened for depression, followed by a telephone interview, which included the depression section of the NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Patients with current or past lifetime depressive disorder and those with depressed mood and three other lifetime symptoms were eligible for this analysis. We analyze mental health utilization based on periodic patient self-report. ANALYTIC METHODS: We use two-part models because of the presence of both nonuse and skewness of use. Standard errors are corrected nonparametrically for correlations across observations due to clustered sampling within participating physicians and repeated observations on the same individual.
The average number of mental health visits was 35-40 percent lower in the prepaid system, adjusted and unadjusted for observed differences in patient characteristics, including health status. Utilization differences were concentrated among patients of psychiatrists, with only minor differences among patients of general medical providers. Analyzing the effect of switches that patients make between payment systems over time, we found some evidence of adverse selection into fee-for-service plans based on baseline utilization, but not based on utilization at the end of the study. In particular, after adjusting for observed patient characteristics and health status, patients switching out of prepaid plans had higher baseline use than predicted, whereas patients switching out of fee-for-service had lower use than predicted. Switching itself appears to be related to an immediate decline in utilization and was not followed by an increase or "catch-up" effect.
The absence of the commonly found "catch-up" effect following switching and the significant decrease in utilization during the switching period suggests an interruption in care that does not occur for patients staying within a payment system. This finding emphasizes the need for integrating new patients quickly into a system, an issue that should not be neglected in the current policy discussion.
我们比较了预付制和按服务收费制计划中的心理健康服务利用情况,并分析了选择偏差。
在两年的时间间隔内,每六个月收集一次参与医疗结果研究的一组抑郁症患者的原始数据,该研究是对三个城市地区(波士顿、芝加哥和洛杉矶)相互竞争的医疗体系中的成年人进行的一项观察性研究。
在基线时拜访参与研究的临床医生的患者接受了抑郁症筛查,随后进行了电话访谈,其中包括美国国立精神卫生研究所诊断访谈表中的抑郁症部分。患有当前或过去有过抑郁障碍以及有抑郁情绪和其他三种终生症状的患者符合本分析的条件。我们根据患者定期的自我报告来分析心理健康服务利用情况。分析方法:由于存在未使用情况和使用的偏态性,我们使用两部分模型。由于参与研究的医生内部存在聚类抽样以及对同一个体的重复观察,因此对标准误差进行非参数校正以处理观察值之间的相关性。
在对患者特征(包括健康状况)的观察差异进行调整和未调整的情况下,预付制系统中的心理健康就诊平均次数要低35%-40%。利用差异集中在精神科医生的患者中,普通医疗服务提供者的患者之间只有细微差异。分析患者随时间在支付系统之间转换的影响,我们发现了一些证据,表明基于基线利用率存在逆向选择进入按服务收费制计划的情况,但不是基于研究结束时的利用率。特别是,在调整了观察到的患者特征和健康状况后,转出预付制计划的患者的基线使用量高于预期,而转出按服务收费制计划的患者的使用量低于预期。转换本身似乎与利用率的立即下降有关,并且之后没有出现增加或“追赶”效应。
转换后未出现常见的“追赶”效应以及转换期间利用率的显著下降表明,对于留在支付系统内的患者来说不会出现护理中断的情况。这一发现强调了迅速将新患者纳入系统的必要性,这是当前政策讨论中不应忽视的一个问题。