Can Accountable Care Organizations Improve the Value of Health Care by Solving the Cost and Quality Quandaries? (Policy Briefs/Timely Analysis of Health Policy Issues)Experts agree that the way health care is currently paid for in the United States, especially in the traditional, fee-for-service Medicare program, does not support coordinated care that is high quality and cost-efficient. To address these problems, policy-makers are taking a close look at accountable care organizations (ACOs).
This policy brief explores what ACO are, how they compare to previous reform concepts such as Health Maintenance Organizations and Provider Sponsored Organizations, key design and implementation issues, and opportunities and challenges.
The authors conclude that ACOs are no real game changers in the short term, but are nevertheless important to try.
| Posted to Web: November 05, 2009 | Publication Date: October 01, 2009 |
Can Accountable Care Organizations Improve the Value of Health Care by Solving the Cost and Quality Quandaries? - Summary (Summary)Experts agree that the way health care is currently paid for in the United States, especially in the traditional, fee-for-service Medicare program, does not support coordinated care that is high quality and cost-efficient. To address these problems, policy-makers are taking a close look at accountable care organizations (ACOs).
This policy brief explores what ACO are, how they compare to previous reform concepts such as Health Maintenance Organizations and Provider Sponsored Organizations, key design and implementation issues, and opportunities and challenges.
The authors conclude that ACOs are no real game changers in the short term, but are nevertheless important to try.
| Posted to Web: November 05, 2009 | Publication Date: October 01, 2009 |
Structuring, Financing and Paying for Effective Chronic Care Coordination (Discussion Papers)Growing evidence demonstrates that certain approaches to financing and paying for chronic care coordination for patients are effective not only for improving patient well-being but can also reduce health care spending. However, chronic care approaches should vary for different patient populations and can be carried out effectively by diverse organizations and professionals reflecting the heterogeneity of health care delivery throughout the US. The Report considers the different populations in need of care coordination, summarizes current evidence of effectiveness, describes the various entities that can serve as focal points for coordinating care, and details the possible financing and payment options that can support these approaches.
| Posted to Web: September 11, 2009 | Publication Date: July 01, 2009 |
How Does the Quality of U.S. Health Care Compare Internationally? (Policy Briefs/Timely Analysis of Health Policy Issues)In a review of published literature, authors Elizabeth Docteur and Robert Berenson, explored the question, How Does the Quality of U.S. Health Care Compare Internationally? The findings don't provide a definitive answer but suggest no support for the oft-repeated claim that "U.S. health care is the best in the world." The U.S. does relatively well in some areas, including cancer care, and less well in others, including conditions amenable to prevention and coordinated management of chronic conditions. The authors conclude that concerns that health reform could compromise currently excellent care are unwarranted; health reform can only help.
| Posted to Web: August 24, 2009 | Publication Date: August 20, 2009 |
Health Care Town Hall Debating Points (Fact Sheet / Data at a Glance)Emotions are flaring as constituents speak their minds to members of Congress home for August recess. That's to be expected, since health care is both a personal and public issue, but let's not forget to debate the basics:
| Posted to Web: August 07, 2009 | Publication Date: August 07, 2009 |
How We Can Pay for Health Reform (Research Report)In this paper and brief, the authors discuss alternative ways that health reform could be financed. They analyze different options including several proposals for delivery system reforms and for reduction in Medicare and Medicaid payments. They estimate the cost savings that could occur due to the introduction of a public plan option. Finally, they explore a range of revenue options. The key message of the paper is that health reform can be paid for, but it is best to obtain funds from a large number of measures to spread the burden broadly.
| Posted to Web: July 30, 2009 | Publication Date: July 29, 2009 |
"Contact Your Doctor": Bad Advice? (Opinion)Immediate concerns over swine flu might be waning, but public health and government officials continue their fight against the illness, directing people with flu symptoms to see their doctor. But advice like this takes for granted a well-functioning health care system. Many Americans don't have a doctor to contact, either because they don't have health insurance or because primary-care physicians are in seriously short supply.
| Posted to Web: May 08, 2009 | Publication Date: May 08, 2009 |
Health Reform in the 21st Century: Reforming the Health Care Delivery System (Testimony)Medicare and other insurers generally ignore the importance of established chronic illnesses in generating demands on the health care system and escalating costs, Institute Fellow Robert Berenson told the House Ways and Means Committee. At the same time, delivery system reforms are likely to fail unless immediate steps are taken to address the likely collapse of the primary care physician workforce in many parts of the country. He also underscored the need for a public plan -- patterned on Medicare but separate from it -- as an option for those seeking care.
| Posted to Web: April 01, 2009 | Publication Date: April 01, 2009 |
Aligning Incentives: The Case for Delivery System Reform (Testimony)In testimony before the Senate Finance Committee, Robert Berenson, M.D. explores possible reasons that integrated care organizations that include multispecialty group practices have not become a major feature of the U.S. health system despite prominent success stories. These organizations are often penalized financially for undertaking activities that reduce costs because the benefits of efficiency are not internalized to the organization. Berenson makes the case that current payment incentives embedded in Medicare and private payer approaches promote behavior that may not benefit patients, such as rewarding preventable hospitalizations and producing a mismatch between the services patients need and those that fee schedules encourage.
| Posted to Web: September 16, 2008 | Publication Date: September 16, 2008 |
Use of Physician Services under Medicare's Resource-Based Payments (Occasional Paper)This paper demonstrates that while fees for physician evaluation and management increased over the first ten years of the Medicare Fee Schedule, the quantity of imaging services and non-major procedures increased even more, making the share of program spending on evaluation and management services in 2002 the same as it was in 1992. Two factors explained the differential spending growth across types of services: the introduction of new services and the process for reviewing and revising fees. The authors argue that differences in expenditure growth across service types affect Medicare's costs and should be considered in the program's spending control policies.
| Posted to Web: January 18, 2008 | Publication Date: January 01, 2007 |