Ware J E, Bayliss M S, Rogers W H, Kosinski M, Tarlov A R
The Health Institute, New England Medical Center, Boston, Mass. 02111, USA.
JAMA. 1996 Oct 2;276(13):1039-47.
To compare physical and mental health outcomes of chronically ill adults, including elderly and poor subgroups, treated in health maintenance organization (HMO) and fee-for-service (FFS) systems.
A 4-year observational study of 2235 patients (18 to 97 years of age) with hypertension, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), recent acute myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, and depressive disorder sampled from HMO and FFS systems in 1986 and followed up through 1990. Those aged 65 years and older covered under Medicare and low-income patients (200% of poverty) were analyzed separately.
Offices of physicians practicing family medicine, internal medicine, endocrinology, cardiology, and psychiatry, in HMO and FFS systems of care. Types of practices included both prepaid group (72% of patients) and independent practice association (28%) types of HMOs, large multispecialty groups, and solo or small, single-specialty practices in Boston, Mass, Chicago, Ill, and Los Angeles, Calif.
Differences between initial and 4-year follow-up scores of summary physical and mental health scales from the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) for all patients and practice settings.
On average, physical health declined and mental health remained stable during the 4-year follow-up period, with physical declines larger for the elderly than for the nonelderly (P<.001). In comparisons between HMO and FFS systems, physical and mental health outcomes did not differ for the average patient; however, they did differ for subgroups of the population differing in age and poverty status. For elderly patients (those aged 65 years and older) treated under Medicare, declines in physical health were more common in HMOs than in FFS plans (54% vs 28%; P<.001). In 1 site, mental health outcomes were better (P<.05) for elderly patients in HMOs relative to FFS but not in 2 other sites. For patients differing in poverty status, opposite patterns of physical health (P<.05) and for mental health (P<.001) outcomes were observed across systems; outcomes favored FFS over HMOs for the poverty group and favored HMOs over FFS for the nonpoverty group.
During the study period, elderly and poor chronically ill patients had worse physical health outcomes in HMOs than in FFS systems; mental health outcomes varied by study site and patient characteristics. Current health care plans should carefully monitor the health outcomes of these vulnerable subgroups.
比较在健康维护组织(HMO)和按服务收费(FFS)系统中接受治疗的慢性病成年人(包括老年亚组和贫困亚组)的身心健康状况。
一项对2235名患者(年龄在18至97岁之间)进行的为期4年的观察性研究,这些患者患有高血压、非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)、近期急性心肌梗死、充血性心力衰竭和抑郁症,于1986年从HMO和FFS系统中抽样,并随访至1990年。对65岁及以上符合医疗保险条件的老年人和低收入患者(贫困线的200%)分别进行分析。
HMO和FFS医疗系统中从事家庭医学、内科、内分泌学、心脏病学和精神病学的医生办公室。医疗实践类型包括预付费团体(72%的患者)和独立执业协会(28%)类型的HMO、大型多专科团体以及马萨诸塞州波士顿、伊利诺伊州芝加哥和加利福尼亚州洛杉矶的单人或小型单专科诊所。
所有患者和医疗实践环境下,医疗结果研究36项简短健康调查(SF - 36)中身心健康综合量表的初始评分与4年随访评分之间的差异。
在4年的随访期内,平均而言,身体健康状况下降,心理健康状况保持稳定,老年人身体下降幅度大于非老年人(P <.001)。在HMO和FFS系统的比较中,普通患者的身心健康状况没有差异;然而,不同年龄和贫困状况人群的亚组之间存在差异。对于符合医疗保险条件的老年患者(65岁及以上),HMO中身体健康下降的情况比FFS计划中更常见(54%对28%;P <.001)。在一个研究地点,HMO中的老年患者心理健康状况相对于FFS更好(P <.05),但在其他两个地点并非如此。对于贫困状况不同的患者,不同系统中观察到身体健康(P <.05)和心理健康(P <.001)结果的相反模式;贫困组的结果更倾向于FFS而非HMO,非贫困组则更倾向于HMO而非FFS。
在研究期间,患有慢性病的老年和贫困患者在HMO中的身体健康状况比在FFS系统中更差;心理健康状况因研究地点和患者特征而异。当前的医疗保健计划应仔细监测这些弱势群体亚组的健康状况。