Title: Health Care Organization
1Health Care Organization
- Jan Probst, PhD
- Department of Health Administration
2Housekeeping
- Introductions
- Review syllabus
- Field questions
3People need
- Need versus demand
- What is health?
- Health as function
4Goals of health care system
- Prolong life/defer death
- Minimize departure from norms, discomfort,
disability - Promote wellness
- Promote satisfaction with environment
- Extend resistance/promote capacity
- Increase participationLRD, p 45
5 A patient needs...
- Preventive Care
- Primary care
- Specialized care
- Chronic care
- Hospital care
- Long-term care
- Subacute care
- Rehabilitative care
- End-of-life care
Shi Singh 1998, p. 20
6The system.responds?
Shi Singh 1998, p. 8
7Where we are comes from where we were
- Three streams of history
- Emergence of physicians
- Changing role of hospitals
- Evolution of supporting professions
- A tangled web of dollars and control
8Who succeeded Louis XIV?
Bernier, O. (1987)
9On the shoulders of giants
- Competing theories
- Homeopathic
- Osteopathic
- Allopathic
- Chiropractic
- Emergence of a learned profession
10Emergence of allopathic medicine
- Legitimate complexity
- Bacteriology
- Anesthesia
- Antisepsis
- Asepsis
- Licensing
Starr, P. (1982)
11Formalization of training
- Early options school or apprenticeship
- Flexner report (1910)
- Requirements for entry
- Standardized training
- Self-regulating
12Current Medical Practice
- Number of physicians (1997)
- 756,710 total, 664,556 active physicians
- 25.3 physicians per 10,000 population
- 645,203 Nonfederal, 19,353 Federal
- Type of practice
- 216,598 (32.6) primary care generalists
13Unbalanced scales
14Hospitals
- Introduced by the Romans
- Charitable institutions
- Emergence of specialization
- Sick Poor
- Types of sickness
15Transition to physician workplace
- Specialized (aseptic) environment
- Specialized tools (X-ray)
16The hospitals dilemma
- Specialized equipment is expensive
- Charity cannot cover these costs
- Individuals cant always pay (Great Depression)
- Commission on the Costs of Medical Care (1932)
recommended national health insurance
17Hospital ownership
- Voluntary hospitals (not for profit)
- Sectarian
- Nonsectarian
- For-profit hospitals
- Government hospitals
18Hospitals Unique Structure
- Hospital provides nursing, technical capability
and hotel services - Physicians recruit patients and direct the
process of care
19Other health manpower
- Approximately 11M people work in health care
- Nurses the first support profession
- 60 in auxiliary roles
20Evolution of Nursing
- Florence Nightengale
- Military model
- Uniforms
- Hierarchy
- Linked to physicians
- Wildly popular from 3 schools in 1873 to 1,129
in 1920 - Licensing beginning 1903
21Nursing under Pressure
- A supportive occupation
- Difficult to practice independently
- Institutional practice
- Predominantly female
- Service over money
22The patient needsplanning?
Preventive Care Primary care Specialized
care Chronic care Hospital care Long-term
care Subacute care Rehabilitative
care End-of-life care
Shi Singh 1998, p. 20
23Wrapping up history
- Legitimate complexity entails extensive training
- Director of a team--by law
- Direct care in offices, hospitals and other care
sites - Nursing and other professions support medicine
- Support is not without tension
24Wrapping up history
- Specialists versus generalists
- Finance creates a tangled web
- Doctor insurance/hospital insurance leads to
mixed lines of authority - Emerging managed care trends attempt to increase
control at all levels
25BREAK
26Money, money
- Who pays the piper?
- Everyone, and they all want a different tune
- Government
- People out of pocket
- Insurers
27Topics
- National health care expenditures
- Amounts
- Trends
- Major financing mechanisms and their impact
- How financing affects management
- Other national systems
28Your job, my bill
- GDP in 1997 8,111B
- Health care
- 1,092B or 13.5 of GDP
- 21.1 of all Federal expenditures
- 14.6 of all State local government expenditures
Health 1999, NCHS
29Moderating growth
- Health care as GDP, 1960-1995
30Who pays?
- Overall
- 53.6 private
- 46.4 government
31How its paid
- Most persons have insurance thru work
- Blacks (24.5) and Hispanics (20.1) more likely
than Whites (9.4) to receive Medicaid - Hispanics (31.6) most likely to be uninsured
Health coverage for persons under 65
32Different care, different payor
Hospital Funding
Physician funding
Nursing home care
33Evolution of payment mechanisms
- The chicken
- The Great Depression
- The Commission on the Costs of Health Care (1932)
- Group practice versus the Blues
34Key characteristics of Fee for Service Insurance
- Separate payment lines
- Physicians (others)
- Hospitals
- Independence for each practitioner
- Cost reimbursement
- Employer funding Cui bono?
35First appearance of the ratchet
- Baseline 50 per delivery (usual when the
patient paid) - Year One 75 per delivery (50 insurer, 25
patient) - Year Two 125 per delivery
36Moral Hazard One
- Fees can be self-determined
- Fees can be self-generated
37Empty places at the table
- Medicare
- An entitlement program (age disability)
- Federal standard across US
- Medicaid
- An eligibility program
- State administered with Federal match dollars
38Medicare structure
- Part B Physician and other outpatient services
- Funded 75 tax , 25 enrollee payment
- Copays (usually 20 of approved charges) and
deductibles - Medigaps Provide supplemental coverage
- Part A Hospital care
- Automatic with Social Security funded by general
tax revenue - Coypayments and deductibles
- Deductible 716 per benefit period
39Medicaid
- Health care for the poor
- Federal match dollars fund 55 (SC 73)
- Minimum service specifications
- Who is eligible?
- AFDC
- Old Age Assistance
- Aid to the Blind
- Permanently totally Disabled
- Needy children lt 21
40Effects of Medicare coverage
- The sickest persons now had resources
- Demographics plus fee ratchet
- Concentration of costs with a single, publicly
accountable payor - STOP THE INSANITY!
41Medicare cost containment
- Assignment
- Physician only charges Medicare-allowable fee.
- Patients only pay 20 of that fee (no extra bill)
- Diagnostic Related Groups (DRGs)
- A preset amount per diagnosis for hospitalization
(prospective payment system) - Keep the change --gt get patients out quickly
42More Medicare cost containment
- Resource Based Relative Value System (RBRVS)
- Applies to physicians
- Equal pay for equal work
- Private FFS insurance frequently copies Medicare
43Common themes
- Patient has free choice of provider
- Constrained only by willingness of provider
- A fee for service structure
- Patient seeks care (service)
- Provider bills for care (fee)
- Insurer (and patient) pay
- No overall organizing principle except the patient
44Something completely different
- Prepaid group practice of the 1930s
- HMOs of the 1970s
- Managed Care of the 1990s
- Government promotion in 1970s
- Industry promotion in 1990s
45Types of MC organization
- Closed Panel (or staff model) Health Maintenance
Organizations (HMOs) - Employee physicians provide services
- Group model variant MD groups
- Preferred Provider Organizations
- Physician list, free or discount
- Independent Practice Associations
- Per member per month, network without walls,
gate-keeping
46Common MC elements
- Assignment to a primary care provider
- Restrictive formularies for medicine
- Limited providers for hospitalization
- Preventive and patient education services
- MD incentives for cost-effective care
- Utilization review
47Thoughts.
48Managed care and you.
- The essential element of a successful PPO or IPA
is an ability to identify accurately efficient
health-care providers who provide quality care at
reasonable rates - In the search to save money, physicians are a
prime target
Gottleib Einhorn 1997
49Moral hazard, revisited
- To attract and retain physicians who are willing
to practice in what the plans deem a
cost-effective manner, many plans offer
opportunities to physicians for stock options or
bonus payments, or both. - Incentives to delay/deny care
Gottleib Einhorn 1997
50The current market
Conventional
HMO
POS
employees covered by each type of coverage
PPO
51The impossible triad
Quality
Access
Cost
52Other options
- National Health Service
- UK model
- National Health Insurance
- Canadian model
53Looking North
- United States
- Private
- Mixed not everything
- Need insurance copay
- Mixed
- Per patient
- Feature
- Delivery
- Coverage
- Access
- Physicians
- Hospitals
Canada Private Everyone, everything No
barrier Fee schedule Prospective global budget
54Global budget
- How much is the system going to spend for care?
- More internal freedom
- No need to run up charges
55Canada hasnt controlled cost growth.
Health Care expenditures as GDP
56But they are happier
- In 1990, most Americans wanted change
- At the same time, most Canadians were happy
57A more recent survey
Kellogg Fndn, 1999
58Wrapping up
- We spend a lot of money on health care
- Aging population
- Technology
- We live in interesting times
- Fee for service
- Managed care
- Various options are possible
59The future is clouded
- Legislative sniping at managed care
- Problems of equity
- Medicaid
- Uninsured
60Advice for the future
- Utilization review and other types of profiling
will profoundly affect practice