Medicare Reimbursement for Preventive Care: Changes in Performance of Services, Quality of Life, and Health Care Costs

A randomized, controlled trial was conducted to assess the effects of a financial and office systems intervention to increase preventive care in physicians' offices for patients aged 65 years or older. A total of 1,914 patients from 10 primary-care medical practices in central North Carolina we...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical care 1995-04, Vol.33 (4), p.315-331
Hauptverfasser: Morrissey, Joseph P., Harris, Russell P., Kincade-Norburn, Jean, McLaughlin, Curtis, Garrett, Joanne M., Jackman, Anne M., Stein, Jane S., Lannon, Carole, Schwartz, Robert J., Patrick, Donald L., Koch, Gary G.
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container_end_page 331
container_issue 4
container_start_page 315
container_title Medical care
container_volume 33
creator Morrissey, Joseph P.
Harris, Russell P.
Kincade-Norburn, Jean
McLaughlin, Curtis
Garrett, Joanne M.
Jackman, Anne M.
Stein, Jane S.
Lannon, Carole
Schwartz, Robert J.
Patrick, Donald L.
Koch, Gary G.
description A randomized, controlled trial was conducted to assess the effects of a financial and office systems intervention to increase preventive care in physicians' offices for patients aged 65 years or older. A total of 1,914 patients from 10 primary-care medical practices in central North Carolina were randomized within practices to an intervention and a usual-care control group. The intervention consisted of full Medicare reimbursement to physicians for preventive care and health promotion packages (thus making these services free for patients), regular prompting of physicians to routinely schedule preventive care visits, a new office system in which nurses carried out many preventive procedures, and a form for charting preventive care. The performance of screening tests dramatically increased in the intervention group relative to control (P < 0.001), but there was evidence of lack of follow-up of abnormal findings by physicians. At the 2-year follow-up, there were minimal differences between intervention and control groups in health-related quality-of-life indicators. Relative to the $294 per patient 3-year cost to Medicare for waivered services, the intervention was reimbursed-cost neutral or slightly cost reducing ($190 over 3 years) for Medicare. It is concluded that adding reimbursement for preventive services to Medicare-even with the office systems changes made in this study-will not by itself lead to effective implementation of preventive services in community medical practices. To enhance patient benefit from preventive services, greater attention needs to be focused on an organized approach to patient follow-up.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/00005650-199504000-00001
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ispartof Medical care, 1995-04, Vol.33 (4), p.315-331
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Aged
Female
Health Care Costs
Health Promotion - methods
Humans
Male
Medicare - economics
North Carolina
Pilot Projects
Preventive Health Services - economics
Preventive Health Services - organization & administration
Primary Health Care
Quality of Health Care
Quality of Life
United States
title Medicare Reimbursement for Preventive Care: Changes in Performance of Services, Quality of Life, and Health Care Costs
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