Paying for primary care: a cross-sectional analysis of cost and morbidity distributions across primary care payment models in Ontario Canada.

Soc Sci Med

Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Ontario, Canada; Canadian Centre for Health Economics, Canada.

Published: January 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Policy-makers aim to strike a balance in financial incentives to enhance productivity and quality in primary care, avoiding risk-selection issues with capitation payment systems.
  • The study analyzed data from over 11 million patients and 8,600 primary care physicians in Ontario to assess risk-selection in capitation-based payments.
  • Findings indicate that capitation models tend to attract healthier, lower-cost patients, but there is no evidence that physicians are limiting care for sicker, high-cost patients.

Article Abstract

Policy-makers desire an optimal balance of financial incentives to improve productivity and encourage improved quality in primary care, while also avoiding issues of risk-selection inherent to capitation-based payment. In this paper we analyze risk-selection in capitation-based payment by using administrative data for patients (n = 11,600,911) who were rostered (i.e., signed an enrollment form, or received a majority of care) with a primary care physician (n = 8621) in Ontario, Canada in 2010/11. We analyze this data using a relative distribution approach and compare distributions of patient costs and morbidity across primary care payment models. Our results suggest a relationship between being in a capitation-based payment scheme and having low cost patients (and presumably healthy patients) compared to fee-for-service physicians. However, we do not have evidence that physicians in capitation-based models are reducing the care they provide to sick and high cost patients. These findings suggest there is a relationship between payment type and risk-selection, particularly for low-cost and healthy patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.11.001DOI Listing

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