| Literature DB >> 24216146 |
Martin-Immanuel Bittner1, Maria Donnelly, Arthur Rh van Zanten, Jakob Steen Andersen, Bertrand Guidet, Jose Javier Trujillano Cabello, Shane Gardiner, Gerard Fitzpatrick, Bob Winter, Michael Joannidis, Axel Schmutz.
Abstract
Reimbursement schemes in intensive care are more complex than in other areas of healthcare, due to special procedures and high care needs. Knowledge regarding the principles of functioning in other countries can lead to increased understanding and awareness of potential for improvement. This can be achieved through mutual exchange of solutions found in other countries. In this review, experts from eight European countries explain their respective intensive care unit reimbursement schemes. Important conclusions include the apparent differences in the countries' reimbursement schemes-despite all of them originating from a DRG system-, the high degree of complexity found, and the difficulties faced in several countries when collecting the data for this collaborative work. This review has been designed to assist the intensivist clinician and researcher in understanding neighbouring countries' approaches and in putting research into the context of a European perspective. In addition, steering committees and decision makers might find this a valuable source to compare different reimbursement schemes.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24216146 PMCID: PMC3843541 DOI: 10.1186/2110-5820-3-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Original questionnaire used to inform all authors about uniform requirements
| Health system – key facts | - Principal mode of financing (e.g., tax-based, insurance-based) |
| | - Number of patients admitted to hospitals per year (country-wide) |
| ICUs – key facts | - Number of patients admitted to ICUs per year (country-wide) |
| | - Number of ICUs (country-wide) |
| Reimbursement scheme | Please describe in detail, how ICU costs are being measured and how the reimbursement is being calculated; please refer to the clinical routine, as used in daily work: |
| | - Necessary documentation (is there extra documentation for budgeting purposes, or is the standard clinical documentation used?) |
| | - Coding (e.g., in a DRG-based system, where reimbursement is linked to diagnosis) |
| | - Are there differences concerning reimbursement of surgical vs. medical intensive care unit patients |
| | - Are there differences concerning reimbursement schemes for teaching hospitals and non-teaching hospitals (teaching refers to the education of physicians) |
| | - Possible modifiers (e.g., when a patient has to receive expensive medication, develops complications etc.) |
| | - What are, in your opinion, the most important advantages and disadvantages of your reimbursement scheme |
| | - Personal opinion: please explain, if you perceive a major imbalance between costs and reimbursement, i.e., if the reimbursement scheme does not adequately reflect the necessary clinical care |
| References | Please give references for the statements made; please feel free to include additional study results into the personal opinion part (e.g., a study conducted in your country validating your opinion or adding a crucial point) |
Overview: key data regarding the healthcare system and intensive care units in the countries covered in this review
| Germany
[ | 82 Mio | Insurance-based (statutory health insurance 90%, private medical insurance 10%) | 1260 | 31.8 | 25,500 | 17 Mio | 2 Mio. | 12% | 1092 | Yes |
| Ireland
[ | 4.6 Mio | Tax-based | 28 | 5,4 | 250 | 580,000 | 30,000 | 5% | 2205b | Yes |
| UK
[ | 62 Mio | Tax-based | 290a | 7.5 | 4,700 | 17 Mio | 200,000 | 1% | 1500 | No |
| Netherlands
[ | 16.7 Mio | Insurance-based | 94 | 9.3 | 1,600 | 1.9 Mio | 70,000 | 4% | 1290 | Yes |
| Austria
[ | 8.4 Mio | Insurance-based | 132 | 27 | 2,300 | 2.8 Mio | - | - | 2000c | No |
| Denmark
[ | 5.4 Mio | Tax-based | 49a | 7.5 | 400 | 1.1 Mio | 33,000 | 3% | 3302c | No |
| France
[ | 65 Mio | Insurance-based (statutory health insurance) | 238 | 11.2 | 7,300 | 17 Mio | 200,000 | 1% | - | Yes |
| Spain
[ | 47 Mio | Tax-based | 300a | 7.4 | 3,500 | 5.3 Mio | 240,000 | 5% | 900 to 2500 | Yes |
aTotal number of ICUs.
bOnly known for 1 hospital, AMNCH Tallaght.
cfor category 3 ICUs.
Basic mode of functioning of the respective national ICU reimbursement schemes, based on experts’ responses
| Item | Grading | |||||||
| | GER | IRL | UK | NETH | AUS | DEN | FRA | SPA |
| The reimbursement works per case (e.g., DRG-based). | ++ | - | + | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | + |
| The reimbursement works per ICU/hospital (e.g., share of reimbursement goes to all units involved). | -- | + | - | + | + | - | 0 | 0 |
| There is separate reimbursement for hotel costs. | -- | - | + | -- | - | -- | -- | 0 |
| The following factors are taken into account for coding/reimbursement: | | |||||||
| 1. Previous year’s ICU expenditure | -- | - | - | -- | - | + | -- | + |
| 2. Number of patients | -- | - | + | + | + | 0 | + | + |
| 3. Diagnosis (DRG) | ++ | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| 4. Nursing workload scores (e.g., TISS-28, NEMS) | + | -- | + | - | ++ | - | -- | 0 |
| 5. Severity of illness scores (e.g., SAPS, APACHE) | ++ | -- | - | - | -- | - | + | 0 |
| 6. Length of stay | + | + | + | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | ++ |
| 7. Level of organ support | + | -- | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | + |
| Are there any plans for changes of the system in the near future? | + | + | 0 | + | + | -- | 0 | 0 |