Literature DB >> 19296779

Quality-based financial incentives in health care: can we improve quality by paying for it?

Douglas A Conrad1, Lisa Perry.   

Abstract

This article asks whether financial incentives can improve the quality of health care. A conceptual framework drawn from microeconomics, agency theory, behavioral economics, and cognitive psychology motivates a set of propositions about incentive effects on clinical quality. These propositions are evaluated through a synthesis of extant peer-reviewed empirical evidence. Comprehensive financial incentives--balancing rewards and penalties; blending structure, process, and outcome measures; emphasizing continuous, absolute performance standards; tailoring the size of incremental rewards to increasing marginal costs of quality improvement; and assuring certainty, frequency, and sustainability of incentive payoffs--offer the prospect of significantly enhancing quality beyond the modest impacts of prevailing pay-for-performance (P4P) programs. Such organizational innovations as the primary care medical home and accountable health care organizations are expected to catalyze more powerful quality incentive models: risk- and quality-adjusted capitation, episode of care payments, and enhanced fee-for-service payments for quality dimensions (e.g., prevention) most amenable to piece-rate delivery.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19296779     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.031308.100243

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Public Health        ISSN: 0163-7525            Impact factor:   21.981


  48 in total

1.  Effects of individual physician-level and practice-level financial incentives on hypertension care: a randomized trial.

Authors:  Laura A Petersen; Kate Simpson; Kenneth Pietz; Tracy H Urech; Sylvia J Hysong; Jochen Profit; Douglas A Conrad; R Adams Dudley; LeChauncy D Woodard
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2013-09-11       Impact factor: 56.272

2.  A report on eight early-stage state and regional projects testing value-based payment.

Authors:  Douglas Conrad; David Grembowski; Claire Gibbons; Miriam Marcus-Smith; Susan E Hernandez; Judy Chang; Anne Renz; Bernard Lau; Erin dela Cruz
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 6.301

3.  The differential effect of compensation structures on the likelihood that firms accept new patients by insurance type.

Authors:  Justin B Bullock; W David Bradford
Journal:  Int J Health Econ Manag       Date:  2016-01-22

4.  Financial reinforcers for improving medication adherence: findings from a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Nancy M Petry; Carla J Rash; Shannon Byrne; Shehryar Ashraf; William B White
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  2012-07-14       Impact factor: 4.965

Review 5.  High-quality health systems in the Sustainable Development Goals era: time for a revolution.

Authors:  Margaret E Kruk; Anna D Gage; Catherine Arsenault; Keely Jordan; Hannah H Leslie; Sanam Roder-DeWan; Olusoji Adeyi; Pierre Barker; Bernadette Daelmans; Svetlana V Doubova; Mike English; Ezequiel García-Elorrio; Frederico Guanais; Oye Gureje; Lisa R Hirschhorn; Lixin Jiang; Edward Kelley; Ephrem Tekle Lemango; Jerker Liljestrand; Address Malata; Tanya Marchant; Malebona Precious Matsoso; John G Meara; Manoj Mohanan; Youssoupha Ndiaye; Ole F Norheim; K Srinath Reddy; Alexander K Rowe; Joshua A Salomon; Gagan Thapa; Nana A Y Twum-Danso; Muhammad Pate
Journal:  Lancet Glob Health       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 26.763

6.  Pay for performance for salaried health care providers: methodology, challenges, and pitfalls.

Authors:  John R Britton
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2014

7.  Incentives in a public addiction treatment system: Effects on waiting time and selection.

Authors:  Maureen T Stewart; Sharon Reif; Beth Dana; AnMarie Nguyen; Maria Torres; Margot T Davis; Grant Ritter; Dominic Hodgkin; Constance M Horgan
Journal:  J Subst Abuse Treat       Date:  2018-09-07

8.  Using Incentives to Improve Resource Utilization: A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of an ICU Quality Improvement Program.

Authors:  David J Murphy; Peter F Lyu; Sara R Gregg; Greg S Martin; Jason M Hockenberry; Craig M Coopersmith; Michael Sterling; Timothy G Buchman; Jonathan Sevransky
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 7.598

Review 9.  Systematic review: Effects, design choices, and context of pay-for-performance in health care.

Authors:  Pieter Van Herck; Delphine De Smedt; Lieven Annemans; Roy Remmen; Meredith B Rosenthal; Walter Sermeus
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2010-08-23       Impact factor: 2.655

10.  The risks of rewards in health care: how pay-for-performance could threaten, or bolster, medical professionalism.

Authors:  Matthew K Wynia
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 5.128

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