| Literature DB >> 10310953 |
R E Schlenker, P W Shaughessy.
Abstract
The analyses reported in this article assessed the cost, case mix, and quality interrelationships among Colorado nursing homes. A unique set of patient-level data was collected specifically to measure case mix and quality. Case mix was found to be strongly associated with cost, accounting for up to 45 percent of the variation in cost per patient day. The relationship between quality and cost was weaker; quality variables accounted for only about 10 percent of the cost per day variation. Case mix was also associated with several facility characteristics found to be significant in other cost studies, suggesting that such facility characteristics serve as partial proxy measures for case mix. The cost-case mix relationships appear to be strong enough to justify incorporating case mix directly in nursing home reimbursement systems. In contrast, the weaker cost-quality association implies that it may not (yet) be appropriate to incorporate quality directly in reimbursement.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1984 PMID: 10310953 PMCID: PMC4191465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Care Financ Rev ISSN: 0195-8631
Comparisons of selected nursing home characteristics for the primary sample and the remaining secondary sample facilities: 1980
| Nursing home characteristics | Primary sample | Secondary sample | Significance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||||
| Number | Percent | Number | Percent | ||
| Occupancy rate | 74 | 92.7 | 83 | 90.9 | |
| Percent Medicaid patients | 74 | 69.5 | 83 | 70.9 | |
| Total | 74 | 100.0 | 83 | 100.0 | .102 |
| 0-60 beds | 28 | 37.8 | 25 | 30.1 | |
| 61-120 beds | 26 | 35.1 | 43 | 51.8 | |
| 121 beds or more | 20 | 27.0 | 15 | 18.1 | |
| Total | 74 | 100.0 | 83 | 100.0 | .060 |
| Forprofit | 49 | 66.2 | 66 | 79.5 | |
| Nonprofit | 25 | 33.8 | 17 | 20.5 | |
| Total | 74 | 100.0 | 83 | 100.0 | .303 |
| Rural | 29 | 39.2 | 26 | 31.3 | |
| Metropolitan | 45 | 60.8 | 57 | 68.7 | |
| Total | 74 | 100.0 | 83 | 100.0 | .863 |
| Skilled | 23 | 31.1 | 29 | 34.9 | |
| Intermediate | 14 | 18.9 | 14 | 16.9 | |
| Skilled and intermediate | 37 | 50.0 | 40 | 48.2 | |
| Total | 74 | 100.0 | 83 | 100.0 | .983 |
| Freestanding | 65 | 87.8 | 73 | 88.0 | |
| Hospital-based | 9 | 12.2 | 10 | 12.0 | |
Exact p-value for the chi-square test (unless otherwise noted).
Exact p-value listed for the Wilcoxon two-sample test is presented since the variable was not normally distributed (as indicated by the Kolmo-gorov-Smirnov test).
SOURCES: Colorado Department of Social Services, Denver, Colorado: Medicaid Cost Reports, 1980.
Colorado Department of Health, Denver, Colorado: Directory of Licensed Health Facilities, 1980.
Illustrative regressions relating nursing and total cost per patient day to case mix: 1980
| Variables | 65 freestanding nursing homes | 74 freestanding and hospital-based nursing homes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||
| Coefficient | Significance | Coefficient | Significance | |
| Independent variables, percent of patients with: | ||||
| Urinary tract infection | .156 | .011 | .249 | <.001 |
| Mental retardation and/or developmental disability | −.019 | .178 | −.022 | .152 |
| Dependent in toileting | .051 | <.001 | .041 | .083 |
| Digestive system disorders | .054 | .016 | .052 | <.001 |
| Constant | 6.710 | <.001 | 6.853 | <.001 |
| Independent variables, percent of patients with: | ||||
| Urinary tract infection | .188 | .140 | .734 | <.001 |
| Mental retardation and/or developmental disability | −.056 | .059 | −.060 | .122 |
| Dependent in toileting | .072 | .001 | .596 | .658 |
| Digestive system disorders | .056 | .230 | .101 | .003 |
| Constant | 20.909 | <.001 | 20.326 | <.001 |
The level of significance is based on a two-tailed t-test.
For freestanding nursing homes, the mean of the dependent variable is $10.14, and R2 is .33 (p < .001). For freestanding nursing and hospital-based nursing homes, the mean of the dependent variable is $10.47, and R2 is .43 (p < .001).
For freestanding nursing homes, the mean of the dependent variable is $25.26, and R2 is .25 (p < .001). For freestanding nursing and hospital-based nursing homes, the mean of the dependent variable is $27.29, and R2 is .45 (p < .001).
SOURCES: University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Center for Health Services Research: Primary Study Data, 1980.
Colorado Department of Social Services, Denver, Colorado: Medicaid Cost Reports, 1980.
Illustrative regressions relating nursing cost per patient day to case mix and quality: 1980
| Variables | 65 freestanding nursing homes | 74 freestanding and hospital- based nursing homes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||
| Coefficient | Significance | Coefficient | Significance | |
| Independent variables | ||||
| Urinary tract infection | .118 | .050 | .233 | <.001 |
| Mental retardation and/or developmental disability | −.009 | .501 | −.016 | .314 |
| Dependent in toileting | .051 | <.001 | .052 | <.001 |
| Digestive system disorder | .058 | .008 | .044 | .062 |
| Subcutaneous and/or complicated skin condition | .435 | .050 | .291 | .172 |
| Immobility | .294 | .265 | .158 | .583 |
| Constant | 6.747 | <.001 | 6.806 | <.001 |
The level of significance is based on a two-tailed t-test.
NOTES: The dependent variable is nursing cost per patient day. The mean of the variable for 65 freestanding nursing homes is $10.14, and R2 is .41 (p < .001). The mean of the variable for 74 freestanding and hospital-based nursing homes is $10.47, and R2 is .45 (p < .001).
SOURCES: University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Center for Health Services Research: Primary Study Data, 1980.
Colorado Department of Social Services, Denver, Colorado: Medicaid Cost Reports, 1980.
Illustrative regressions relating nursing cost per patient day to case mix, quality, and facility characteristics: 1980
| Variables | 65 freestanding nursing homes | 74 freestanding and hospital-based nursing homes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||
| Coefficient | Significance | Coefficient | Significance | |
| Independent variables | ||||
| Urinary tract infection | .032 | .562 | .123 | .009 |
| Mental retardation and/or developmental disability | −.002 | .871 | −.012 | .405 |
| Dependent in toileting | .045 | <.001 | .058 | <.001 |
| Digestive system disorder | .024 | .226 | .021 | .333 |
| Subcutaneous and/or complicated skin condition | .305 | .135 | − .104 | .621 |
| Immobility | .223 | .330 | .283 | .279 |
| Hospital-based | — | — | 1.847 | .014 |
| Nonprofit | 1.090 | .005 | 1.178 | .009 |
| Percent Medicaid patients | −.006 | .576 | .009 | .452 |
| Percent nursing pool use | 9.635 | <.001 | 9.881 | <.001 |
| Constant | 7.297 | <.001 | 5.451 | <.001 |
The level of significance is based on a two-tailed t-test.
NOTES: The dependent variable is nursing cost per patient day. The mean of the variable for 65 freestanding nursing homes is $10.14, and R2 is .58 (p < .001). The mean of the variable for 74 freestanding and hospital-based nursing homes is $10.47, and R2 is .62 (p < .001).
SOURCES: University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Center for Health Services Research: Primary Study Data, 1980.
Colorado Department of Social Services, Denver, Colorado: Medicaid Cost Reports, 1980.
Explanatory power (R2) of case mix, quality, and facility characteristics in nursing and total cost per patient day regressions: 1980
| Independent variables | Explanatory power (R2) | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| 65 freestanding nursing homes | 74 freestanding and hospital-based nursing homes | |
| Case mix | .33 | .43 |
| Case mix and quality | .41 | .45 |
| Case mix, quality, and facility characteristics | .58 | .62 |
| Facility characteristics alone | .41 | .41 |
| Case mix | .25 | .45 |
| Case mix and quality | .29 | .46 |
| Case mix, quality, and facility characteristics | .59 | .64 |
| Facility characteristics alone | .45 | .42 |
NOTES: The case-mix variables are based on the percents of patients with urinary tract infection, mental retardation and/or developmental disabilities, dependent in toileting, and digestive system disorders. The quality variables are a facility-level quality Z-score, by problem for subcutaneous and/or complicated skin condition, and immobility. The facility characteristic variables are hospital-based, nonprofit, percent of Medicaid patients, and percent nursing pool use (N = 74 freestanding and hospital-based only).
SOURCES: University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Center for Health Services Research: Primary Study Data, 1980.
Colorado Department of Social Services, Denver, Colorado: Medicaid Cost Reports, 1980.
Regression coefficients or elasticities of selected facility characteristics when case mix and quality variables are added to nursing cost per patient day regressions: 1980
| Independent variables | 65 freestanding | 74 freestanding and hospital- | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| |||||
| Coefficient | Significance | R2 | Coefficient | Significance | R2 | |
| Alone | — | — | — | 2.682 | <.001 | .18 |
| With case mix | — | — | — | 1.880 | .003 | .50 |
| With case mix and quality | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Alone | 1.173 | .017 | .09 | 1.820 | <.001 | .17 |
| With case mix | .875 | .041 | .38 | 1.260 | .002 | .50 |
| With case mix and quality | — | — | — | 1.213 | .003 | .52 |
| Elasticity | Elasticity | |||||
| Alone | −.229 | .007 | .11 | −.118 | .237 | .02 |
| With case mix | −.082 | .347 | .34 | −.004 | .961 | .43 |
| With case mix and quality | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Alone | .050 | <.001 | .24 | .033 | .011 | .09 |
| With case mix | .044 | <.001 | .47 | .020 | .070 | .46 |
| With case mix and quality | .039 | .001 | .50 | .017 | .126 | .47 |
Regression coefficients are presented for the categorical (0/1) hospital-based and nonprofit variables; elasticities (at the mean) are presented for the continuous Medicaid and nursing pool variables.
The level of significance is based on a two-tailed t-test.
The case mix and quality variables used are those listed in Tables 2-5.
Values for coefficients/elasticities, significance, or R2s are not presented in those instances where the facility characteristics used already became insignificant (p < .10) due to case-mix variables or when addition of quality variables neither lowered the regression coefficient/elasticity nor lessened its significance.
SOURCES: University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Center for Health Services Research: Primary Study Data, 1980.
Colorado Department of Social Services, Denver, Colorado: Medicaid Cost Reports, 1980.