Do We Get What We Pay For? Examining the Relationship Between Payments and Clinical Outcomes in High-Volume Elective Surgery in a Commercially-Insured Population.
Madison K ArenchildAnaeze C OffodileLee ReverePublished in: Inquiry : a journal of medical care organization, provision and financing (2021)
Studies evaluating the cost and quality of healthcare services have produced inconsistent results. We seek to determine if higher paid hospitals have higher quality outcomes compared to those receiving lower payments, after accounting for clinical and market level factors. Using inpatient commercial claims from the IBM® MarketScan® Research Databases, we used an ordinal logistic regression to analyze the association between hospital median payments for elective hip and knee procedures and 3 quality outcomes: prolonged length of stay, complication rate, and 30-day readmission rate. Patient-level and market factor covariates were appropriately adjusted. Hospital-level payments were found to be not significantly correlated with hospital quality of care. This research suggests that higher payments cannot predict higher quality outcomes. This finding has implications for provider-payer negotiations, value-based insurance designs, strategies to increase high-value care provision, and consumer choices in an increasingly consumer-oriented healthcare landscape.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- health insurance
- palliative care
- affordable care act
- primary care
- minimally invasive
- patients undergoing
- health information
- emergency department
- type diabetes
- single cell
- adipose tissue
- artificial intelligence
- pain management
- atrial fibrillation
- deep learning
- acute coronary syndrome
- drug induced
- skeletal muscle