Carey R M, Engelhard C L
Acad Med. 1996 Aug;71(8):839-45. doi: 10.1097/00001888-199608000-00011.
The managed care revolution is sweeping the country as a result of intense marketing on the part of managed care organizations and the widespread belief that price-sensitive managed care systems will control health costs. Although few believe that managed care alone can adequately stem the growth of nation health care spending, competition based on price has emerged as a powerful force in the health care sector. Academic health center (AHCs) stand to suffer with this new managed care regime because their special missions of teaching, research, and highly specialized clinical care make them more expensive than nonacademic hospitals and place them at a noncompetitive disadvantage. The traditional focus of the acute care hospital with individual departmentally designed programs will be narrow. Major changes will be required on the part of AHCs if they are to survive and preserve patient volume, maintain the integrity of medical education, advance scientific research, and provide highly specialized care. AHCs will have to make unprecedented adjustments in virtually every phase of their operations, particularly in the areas of clinical decision making and speedy patient-related information flow. A premium will be placed on multidisciplinary, inclusive medical services that can assume total health care risks for large populations. New ways of educating students in ambulatory settings with an emphasis on outcomes and population-based health will be needed along with the traditional responsibility of pursuing new approaches to the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease. The extent to which managed care will ultimately alter the traditional role of AHCs in the American health care system is unclear, but successful adaptation in the short term will require them to respond broadly, flexibly, and in a timely fashion to the anticipated health care scene.
由于管理式医疗组织大力营销,且人们普遍认为价格敏感型管理式医疗系统能够控制医疗成本,一场管理式医疗革命正在席卷全国。尽管很少有人相信仅靠管理式医疗就能充分遏制国家医疗支出的增长,但基于价格的竞争已成为医疗保健领域的一股强大力量。学术医疗中心(AHCs)在这种新的管理式医疗体制下可能会受损,因为它们教学、研究和高度专业化临床护理的特殊使命使其比非学术医院成本更高,处于非竞争性劣势。急性病医院传统上侧重于各科室自行设计的项目,范围较窄。如果AHCs想要生存并保持患者数量、维持医学教育的完整性、推进科研以及提供高度专业化护理,就需要做出重大改变。AHCs几乎在其运营的每个阶段都必须进行前所未有的调整,尤其是在临床决策和快速的患者相关信息流方面。能够承担大量人群全部医疗保健风险的多学科综合性医疗服务将受到重视。除了承担追求疾病诊断、治疗和预防新方法的传统责任外,还需要新的方法在门诊环境中教育学生,重点是结果和基于人群的健康。管理式医疗最终将在多大程度上改变AHCs在美国医疗保健系统中的传统角色尚不清楚,但短期内成功适应将要求它们广泛、灵活且及时地应对预期的医疗保健局面。