CONTEXT: In recent decades, practitioners and policymakers have turned to value-based payment initiatives to help contain spending on health care and to improve the quality of care. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation funded 7 grantees across the country to design and implement value-based, multistakeholder payment reform projects in 6 states and 3 regions of the United States. METHODS: As the external evaluator of these projects, we reviewed documents, conducted Internet searches, interviewed key stakeholders, cross-validated factual and narrative interpretation, and performed qualitative analyses to derive cross-site themes and implications for policy and practice. FINDINGS: The nature of payment reform and its momentum closely reflects the environmental context of each project. Federal legislation such as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and federal and state support for the development of the patient-centered medical home and accountable care organizations encourage value-based payment innovation, as do local market conditions for payers and providers that combine a history of collaboration with independent innovation and experimentation by individual organizations. Multistakeholder coalitions offer a useful facilitating structure for galvanizing payment reform. But to achieve the objectives of reduced cost and improved quality, multistakeholder payment innovation must overcome such barriers as incompatible information systems, the technical difficulties and transaction costs of altering existing billing and payment systems, competing stakeholder priorities, insufficient scale to bear population health risk, providers' limited experience with risk-bearing payment models, and the failure to align care delivery models with the form of payment. CONCLUSIONS: From the evidence adduced in this article, multistakeholder, value-based payment reform requires a trusted, widely respected "honest broker" that can convene and maintain the ongoing commitment of health plans, providers, and purchasers. Change management is complex and challenging, and coalition governance requires flexibility and stable leadership, as market conditions and stakeholder engagement and priorities shift over time. Another significant facilitator of value-based payment reform is outside investment that enables increased investment in human resources, information infrastructure, and care management by provider organizations and their collaborators. Supportive community and social service networks that enhance population health management also are important enablers of value-based payment reform. External pressure from public and private payers is fueling a "burning bridge" between the past of fee-for-service payment models and the future of payments based on value. Robust competition in local health plan and provider markets, coupled with an appropriate mix of multistakeholder governance, pressure from organized purchasers, and regulatory oversight, has the potential to spur value-based payment innovation that combines elements of "reformed" fee-for-service with bundled payments and global payments.
CONTEXT: In recent decades, practitioners and policymakers have turned to value-based payment initiatives to help contain spending on health care and to improve the quality of care. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation funded 7 grantees across the country to design and implement value-based, multistakeholder payment reform projects in 6 states and 3 regions of the United States. METHODS: As the external evaluator of these projects, we reviewed documents, conducted Internet searches, interviewed key stakeholders, cross-validated factual and narrative interpretation, and performed qualitative analyses to derive cross-site themes and implications for policy and practice. FINDINGS: The nature of payment reform and its momentum closely reflects the environmental context of each project. Federal legislation such as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and federal and state support for the development of the patient-centered medical home and accountable care organizations encourage value-based payment innovation, as do local market conditions for payers and providers that combine a history of collaboration with independent innovation and experimentation by individual organizations. Multistakeholder coalitions offer a useful facilitating structure for galvanizing payment reform. But to achieve the objectives of reduced cost and improved quality, multistakeholder payment innovation must overcome such barriers as incompatible information systems, the technical difficulties and transaction costs of altering existing billing and payment systems, competing stakeholder priorities, insufficient scale to bear population health risk, providers' limited experience with risk-bearing payment models, and the failure to align care delivery models with the form of payment. CONCLUSIONS: From the evidence adduced in this article, multistakeholder, value-based payment reform requires a trusted, widely respected "honest broker" that can convene and maintain the ongoing commitment of health plans, providers, and purchasers. Change management is complex and challenging, and coalition governance requires flexibility and stable leadership, as market conditions and stakeholder engagement and priorities shift over time. Another significant facilitator of value-based payment reform is outside investment that enables increased investment in human resources, information infrastructure, and care management by provider organizations and their collaborators. Supportive community and social service networks that enhance population health management also are important enablers of value-based payment reform. External pressure from public and private payers is fueling a "burning bridge" between the past of fee-for-service payment models and the future of payments based on value. Robust competition in local health plan and provider markets, coupled with an appropriate mix of multistakeholder governance, pressure from organized purchasers, and regulatory oversight, has the potential to spur value-based payment innovation that combines elements of "reformed" fee-for-service with bundled payments and global payments.
Authors: Elliott S Fisher; Stephen M Shortell; Sara A Kreindler; Aricca D Van Citters; Bridget K Larson Journal: Health Aff (Millwood) Date: 2012-11 Impact factor: 6.301
Authors: Steven A Farmer; Margaret L Darling; Meaghan George; Paul N Casale; Eileen Hagan; Mark B McClellan Journal: JAMA Cardiol Date: 2017-02-01 Impact factor: 14.676
Authors: Joana Cunha-Cruz; Peter Milgrom; R Michael Shirtcliff; Howard L Bailit; Colleen E Huebner; Douglas Conrad; Sharity Ludwig; Melissa Mitchell; Jeanne Dysert; Gary Allen; JoAnna Scott; Lloyd Mancl Journal: Trials Date: 2015-06-20 Impact factor: 2.279
Authors: Kensaku Kawamoto; Polina V Kukhareva; Charlene Weir; Michael C Flynn; Claude J Nanjo; Douglas K Martin; Phillip B Warner; David E Shields; Salvador Rodriguez-Loya; Richard L Bradshaw; Ryan C Cornia; Thomas J Reese; Heidi S Kramer; Teresa Taft; Rebecca L Curran; Keaton L Morgan; Damian Borbolla; Maia Hightower; William J Turnbull; Michael B Strong; Wendy W Chapman; Travis Gregory; Carole H Stipelman; Julie H Shakib; Rachel Hess; Jonathan P Boltax; Joseph P Habboushe; Farrant Sakaguchi; Kyle M Turner; Scott P Narus; Shinji Tarumi; Wataru Takeuchi; Hideyuki Ban; David W Wetter; Cho Lam; Tanner J Caverly; Angela Fagerlin; Chuck Norlin; Daniel C Malone; Kimberly A Kaphingst; Wendy K Kohlmann; Benjamin S Brooke; Guilherme Del Fiol Journal: JAMIA Open Date: 2021-07-31