What Happens to High-Cost Patients? An Analysis of the Trajectories of Billed Charges Over Time

A growing literature documents the substantial burden that a small proportion of high-cost, medically complex patients impose on health care systems. However, it is not clear whether high-cost patients remain costly over time. This study looks at the monthly distribution of billed charges for a coho...

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Veröffentlicht in:Population health management 2017-10, Vol.20 (5), p.362-367
Hauptverfasser: Horn, Brady P., Crandall, Cameron S., Binder, Douglas S., Sklar, David P.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A growing literature documents the substantial burden that a small proportion of high-cost, medically complex patients impose on health care systems. However, it is not clear whether high-cost patients remain costly over time. This study looks at the monthly distribution of billed charges for a cohort of high-cost, medically complex patients enrolled in an intensive care management program in a university health care system, and finds that the billing trajectory is heterogeneous and highly nonlinear, characterized by a substantial spike in billed charges prior to identification, followed by a considerable drop prior to enrollment and a sustained drop thereafter. The conclusion is that many high-cost patients experience costly events that resolve without intensive case management. These results also suggest that interventions should target only those high-cost patients with expected continued high cost and that pre-post study designs may overstate the impact of interventions for high-cost, medically complex patients.
ISSN:1942-7891
1942-7905
DOI:10.1089/pop.2016.0149