The Shifting Mission of Health Care Delivery Organizations
New payment models reward health care providers for producing outcomes rather than for performing procedures. Drs. Richard Bohmer and Thomas Lee examine the implications of this shift for the mission and operations of health care organizations. An important transition has begun in payment for health...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The New England journal of medicine 2009-08, Vol.361 (6), p.551-553 |
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description | New payment models reward health care providers for producing outcomes rather than for performing procedures. Drs. Richard Bohmer and Thomas Lee examine the implications of this shift for the mission and operations of health care organizations.
An important transition has begun in payment for health care delivery in the United States: organizations that have long been paid for transactions, such as visits or procedures, are beginning — at least in some markets — to be paid instead for producing outcomes. As physicians and hospital leaders contemplate the implications of new payment models, they realize that the transition will be long, difficult, and messy, with major ramifications for providers.
After decades of discussion about the problems inherent in fee-for-service medicine, skepticism about whether real change is under way would be understandable. But it would be reckless in . . . |
doi_str_mv | 10.1056/NEJMp0903406 |
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An important transition has begun in payment for health care delivery in the United States: organizations that have long been paid for transactions, such as visits or procedures, are beginning — at least in some markets — to be paid instead for producing outcomes. As physicians and hospital leaders contemplate the implications of new payment models, they realize that the transition will be long, difficult, and messy, with major ramifications for providers.
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An important transition has begun in payment for health care delivery in the United States: organizations that have long been paid for transactions, such as visits or procedures, are beginning — at least in some markets — to be paid instead for producing outcomes. As physicians and hospital leaders contemplate the implications of new payment models, they realize that the transition will be long, difficult, and messy, with major ramifications for providers.
After decades of discussion about the problems inherent in fee-for-service medicine, skepticism about whether real change is under way would be understandable. 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Drs. Richard Bohmer and Thomas Lee examine the implications of this shift for the mission and operations of health care organizations.
An important transition has begun in payment for health care delivery in the United States: organizations that have long been paid for transactions, such as visits or procedures, are beginning — at least in some markets — to be paid instead for producing outcomes. As physicians and hospital leaders contemplate the implications of new payment models, they realize that the transition will be long, difficult, and messy, with major ramifications for providers.
After decades of discussion about the problems inherent in fee-for-service medicine, skepticism about whether real change is under way would be understandable. But it would be reckless in . . .</abstract><cop>Waltham, MA</cop><pub>Massachusetts Medical Society</pub><pmid>19657119</pmid><doi>10.1056/NEJMp0903406</doi><tpages>3</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Biological and medical sciences Delivery of Health Care - economics Delivery of Health Care - organization & administration Fee-for-Service Plans - economics General aspects Hospitalization Hospitals Medical sciences Organizational Objectives Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care) Payment systems Quality of Health Care - economics Reimbursement Mechanisms Reimbursement, Incentive United States |
title | The Shifting Mission of Health Care Delivery Organizations |
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