4.4 Article

The 2010 expansion of activity-based hospital payment in Israel: an evaluation of effects at the ward level

期刊

BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
卷 19, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4083-4

关键词

Activity-based payments; Procedure-related group (PRG); Diagnosis-related group (DRG); Hospital financial incentives; Health-policy reform; Provider-payment reform

资金

  1. Israel National Institute for Health Policy Research (NIHP) [77-16]

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BackgroundIn 2010, Israel intensified its adoption of Procedure-Related Group (PRG) basedhospital payments, a local version of DRG(Diagnosis-related group). PRGs were created for certain procedures by clinical fields such as urology, orthopedics, and ophthalmology. Non-procedural hospitalizations and other specific procedures continued to be paid for as per-diems (PD). Whether this payment reform affected inpatient activities, measured by the number of discharges and average length of stay (ALoS), is unclear.MethodsWe analyzed inpatient data provided by the Ministry of Health from all 29 public hospitals in Israel. Our observations were hospital wards for the years 2008-2015, as proxies to clinical fields. We investigated the impact of this reform at the ward level using difference-in-differences analyses among procedural wards. Those for which PRG codes were created were treatment wards, other procedural wards served as controls. We further refined the analysis of effects on each ward separately.ResultsDischarges increased more in the wards that were part of the control group than in the treatment wards as a group. However, a refined analysis of each treated ward separately reveals that discharges increased in some, but decreased in other wards. ALoS decreased more in treatment wards. Difference-in-differences results could not suggest causality between the PRG payment reform and changes in inpatient activity.ConclusionsFactors that may have hampered the effects of the reform are inadequate pricing of procedures, conflicting incentives created by other co-existing hospital-payment components, such as caps and retrospective subsidies, and the lack of resources to increase productivity. Payment reforms for health providers such as hospitals need to take into consideration the entire provider market, available resources, other - potentially conflicting - payment components, and the various parties involved and their interests.

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