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Incorporating shared savings programs into primary care: from theory to practice. | LitMetric

Incorporating shared savings programs into primary care: from theory to practice.

BMC Health Serv Res

IQ Healthcare (Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare), Radboud University Medical Center, Address: PO Box 9101, 114, 6500, Nijmegen, HB, The Netherlands.

Published: December 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Health care policies in many countries are focusing on enhancing the roles of primary care physicians, making them accountable for spending and quality, but traditional payment models do not incentivize this effectively.
  • A shared savings program is proposed as a solution, allowing physicians to benefit from cost savings achieved by meeting quality targets; a structured approach is developed for designing such a program specifically for a Dutch primary care provider chain.
  • Key components of the program involve defining its scope, calculating expenditures, setting savings benchmarks, and establishing rules for sharing savings, with an emphasis on minimizing risk for both payers and providers through strong patient-physician relationships.

Article Abstract

Background: In several countries, health care policies gear toward strengthening the position of primary care physicians. Primary care physicians are increasingly expected to take accountability for overall spending and quality. Yet traditional models of paying physicians do not provide adequate incentives for taking on this new role. Under a so-called shared savings program physicians are instead incentivized to take accountability for spending and quality, as the program lets them share in cost savings when quality targets are met. We provide a structured approach to designing a shared savings program for primary care, and apply this approach to the design of a shared savings program for a Dutch chain of primary care providers, which is currently being piloted.

Methods: Based on the literature, we defined five building blocks of shared savings models that encompass the definition of the scope of the program, the calculation of health care expenditures, the construction of a savings benchmark, the assessment of savings and the rules and conditions under which savings are shared. We apply insights from a variety of literatures to assess the relative merits of alternative design choices within these building blocks. The shared savings program uses an econometric model of provider expenditures as an input to calculating a casemix-corrected benchmark.

Results: The minimization of risk and uncertainty for both payer and provider is pertinent to the design of a shared savings program. In that respect, the primary care setting provides a number of unique opportunities for achieving cost and quality targets. Accountability can more readily be assumed due to the relatively long-lasting relationships between primary care physicians and patients. A stable population furthermore improves the confidence with which savings can be attributed to changes in population management. Challenges arise from the institutional context. The Dutch health care system has a fragmented structure and providers are typically small in size.

Conclusion: Shared savings programs fit the concept of enhanced primary care. Incorporating a shared savings program into existing payment models could therefore contribute to the financial sustainability of this organizational form.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4696086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-015-1250-0DOI Listing

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