Early Experience With Pay-for-Performance: From Concept to Practice
CONTEXT The adoption of pay-for-performance mechanisms for quality improvement is growing rapidly. Although there is intense interest in and optimism about pay-for-performance programs, there is little published research on pay-for-performance in health care. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the impact of a pr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2005-10, Vol.294 (14), p.1788-1793 |
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Zusammenfassung: | CONTEXT The adoption of pay-for-performance mechanisms for quality improvement
is growing rapidly. Although there is intense interest in and optimism about
pay-for-performance programs, there is little published research on pay-for-performance
in health care. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the impact of a prototypical physician pay-for-performance
program on quality of care. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS We evaluated a natural experiment with pay-for-performance using administrative
reports of physician group quality from a large health plan for an intervention
group (California physician groups) and a contemporaneous comparison group
(Pacific Northwest physician groups). Quality improvement reports were included
from October 2001 through April 2004 issued to approximately 300 large physician
organizations. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Three process measures of clinical quality: cervical cancer screening,
mammography, and hemoglobin A1c testing. RESULTS Improvements in clinical quality scores were as follows: for cervical
cancer screening, 5.3% for California vs 1.7% for Pacific Northwest; for mammography,
1.9% vs 0.2%; and for hemoglobin A1c, 2.1% vs 2.1%. Compared with
physician groups in the Pacific Northwest, the California network demonstrated
greater quality improvement after the pay-for-performance intervention only
in cervical cancer screening (a 3.6% difference in improvement [P = .02]). In total, the plan awarded $3.4 million (27% of
the amount set aside) in bonus payments between July 2003 and April 2004,
the first year of the program. For all 3 measures, physician groups with baseline
performance at or above the performance threshold for receipt of a bonus improved
the least but garnered the largest share of the bonus payments. CONCLUSION Paying clinicians to reach a common, fixed performance target may produce
little gain in quality for the money spent and will largely reward those with
higher performance at baseline. |
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ISSN: | 0098-7484 1538-3598 |
DOI: | 10.1001/jama.294.14.1788 |