An agent-based simulation model of patient choice of health care providers in accountable care organizations.
Abdullah AlibrahimAbdullah AlibrahimPublished in: Health care management science (2016)
Accountable care organizations (ACO) in the United States show promise in controlling health care costs while preserving patients' choice of providers. Understanding the effects of patient choice is critical in novel payment and delivery models like ACO that depend on continuity of care and accountability. The financial, utilization, and behavioral implications associated with a patient's decision to forego local health care providers for more distant ones to access higher quality care remain unknown. To study this question, we used an agent-based simulation model of a health care market composed of providers able to form ACO serving patients and embedded it in a conditional logit decision model to examine patients capable of choosing their care providers. This simulation focuses on Medicare beneficiaries and their congestive heart failure (CHF) outcomes. We place the patient agents in an ACO delivery system model in which provider agents decide if they remain in an ACO and perform a quality improving CHF disease management intervention. Illustrative results show that allowing patients to choose their providers reduces the yearly payment per CHF patient by $320, reduces mortality rates by 0.12 percentage points and hospitalization rates by 0.44 percentage points, and marginally increases provider participation in ACO. This study demonstrates a model capable of quantifying the effects of patient choice in a theoretical ACO system and provides a potential tool for policymakers to understand implications of patient choice and assess potential policy controls.
Keyphrases
- pain management
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- heart failure
- case report
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- primary care
- affordable care act
- palliative care
- cardiovascular disease
- type diabetes
- skeletal muscle
- quality improvement
- mental health
- metabolic syndrome
- left ventricular
- social media
- climate change
- weight loss
- cardiovascular events
- patient reported
- glycemic control