Bachman S S
MEDSTAT Group, Cambridge, MA 02140, USA.
Psychiatr Serv. 1996 Aug;47(8):837-41. doi: 10.1176/ps.47.8.837.
States finance some community-based mental health services through purchase-of-service contracts. The study examined ways in which six states monitor these contracts.
Data were gathered during site visits to Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Oregon, Tennessee, and Texas, where more than 100 state policy makers, providers, consumers, and advocates were interviewed about mental health purchase-of-service contracting. Relevant documents about contracting practices for mental health services in each state were also examined.
Findings suggest that states monitor their mental health contracts in two ways. First, long-term contracts are monitored using traditional methods, focusing on the structure and process of delivering services. Newer contracts for specific services are more likely to be monitored using performance measures currently being developed. States have had difficulty creating and implementing performance-based contracting for publicly funded mental health services.
It is likely that contracting will continue to be the method states use for future policy initiatives. It may be more appropriate for policy makers to set their sights on developing a simplified set of outcome measures that will give them some information about provider performance, even if the information is imperfect.
各州通过服务购买合同为一些社区心理健康服务提供资金。本研究考察了六个州监督这些合同的方式。
在对马萨诸塞州、密歇根州、纽约州、俄勒冈州、田纳西州和得克萨斯州进行实地考察期间收集数据,就心理健康服务购买合同对100多名州政策制定者、服务提供者、消费者和倡导者进行了访谈。还审查了每个州心理健康服务合同签订做法的相关文件。
研究结果表明,各州通过两种方式监督其心理健康合同。第一,长期合同采用传统方法进行监督,重点关注服务提供的结构和过程。针对特定服务的新合同更有可能采用目前正在制定的绩效指标进行监督。各州在为公共资助的心理健康服务创建和实施基于绩效的合同方面存在困难。
合同很可能会继续作为各州未来政策举措所采用的方法。政策制定者不妨着眼于制定一套简化的成果指标,即使这些信息并不完美,也能让他们了解一些服务提供者的表现,这样或许更为合适。