| Literature DB >> 26062538 |
Katja Grašič1, Anne R Mason, Andrew Street.
Abstract
Prospective payment arrangements are now the main form of hospital funding in most developed countries. An essential component of such arrangements is the classification system used to differentiate patients according to their expected resource requirements. In this article we describe the evolution and structure of Healthcare Resource Groups (HRGs) in England and the way in which costs are calculated for patients allocated to each HRG. We then describe how payments are made, how policy has evolved to incentivise improvements in quality, and how prospective payment is being applied outside hospital settings.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26062538 PMCID: PMC4468579 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-015-0050-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
HRG root structure
| Chapter | Chapter Description |
|---|---|
| A | Nervous System |
| B | Eyes and Periorbita |
| C | Mouth Head Neck and Ears |
| D | Respiratory System |
| E | Cardiac Surgery and Primary Cardiac Conditions |
| F | Digestive System |
| G | Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic System |
| H | Musculoskeletal System |
| J | Skin, Breast and Burns |
| K | Endocrine and Metabolic System |
| L | Urinary Tract and Male Reproductive System |
| M | Female Reproductive System |
| N | Obstetrics |
| P | Diseases of Childhood and Neonates |
| Q | Vascular System |
| R | Radiology and Nuclear Medicine |
| S | Haematology, Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy and Specialist Palliative Care |
| U | Undefined Groups |
| V | Multiple Trauma, Emergency Medicine and Rehabilitation |
| W | Immunology, Infectious Diseases and other contacts with Health Services |
| X | Critical Care and High Cost Drugs |
Source: National Casemix Office, 2014 [35]
Overview of the evolution of the English HRG system
| 1st DRG version | 2nd DRG version | 3rd DRG version | 4th DRG version | 5th DRG version | 6th DRG version | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date of introduction | May 1992 | August 1994 | June 1997 | October 2003 | October 2006 | Phase 1: April 2013 |
| (Main) Purpose | Patient classification | Patient classification | Patient classification | Patient classification, reimbursement | Patient classification, reimbursement | Patient classification, reimbursement |
| DRG system | HRG1 | HRG2 | HRG3.1 | HRG3.5 | HRG4 | HRG4+ |
| Cost and/or performance data used for development | Adaptation of United States DRGs | Data analysis of groupings | Clinical review to refine for ICD-10. Statistical analysis | Clinical Working Groups refined categories. | Expert working groups’ | Expert working groups, clinical communities, as well as international casemix developments and best practice* |
| micro-costing data | ||||||
| Statistical analysis | ||||||
| Number of DRGs | 534 | 533 | 572 | 610 | Updated annually: | Updated annually: |
| 1389 (2006/7) to 1657 (2011/12) | 2100 | |||||
| Applied to | Public hospitals | Public hospitals | Public hospitals | Public hospitals/private hospitals or treatment centres treating NHS patients | Public hospitals/private hospitals or treatment centres treating NHS patients | Public/private hospitals or treatment centres treating NHS patients |
| Acute admissions | Acute admissions | Acute admissions | Acute admissions | Acute admissions | Acute admissions | |
| Outpatients | Outpatients | |||||
| Critical Care | Accident and Emergency | |||||
| Critical Care |
*Developed in partnership with the clinical community, as represented and endorsed by the Royal Colleges Associations and Professional Bodies. The increased applicability of the Casemix classification to emerging policy requirements has been influenced by findings from the Department of Health's International Review of Classifications, as well as international casemix developments and best practice
Sources: Anthony, 1993 [2]; Benton, 1998 [3]; Casemix Design Authority, 2009 [4]; NHS Information Centre for Health and Social Care, 2008 [5]; Information Standards Board for Health and Social Care, 2009 [6]; National Casemix Office, 2013 [7]; National Casemix Office, 2014 [35]
Fig. 1HRG4–Classification flow chart for inpatients. Sources: Code to Group Worksheet, HSCIC
Fig. 2Composition of HRG code HB11A (Major Hip Procedures for Non-Trauma, Category 2, with Major CC). Sources: Code to Group Worksheet, HSCIC
Fig. 3English cost-accounting system. Sources: Department of Health, 2009 [24]; Healthcare Financial Management Association, 2012 [34]
Payment arrangements, 2014/15
| Admitted patients | Outpatients | A&E | Post discharge rehabilitation | Unbundled HRGs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Currency | HRG spell | Treatment function code (TFC): attendance by specialty | HRG Attendance | Bed days | Events |
| HRGs: for procedures | |||||
| Structure | Tariffs for: | Tariffs for: | Tariffs vary by: | Tariffs for 4 types of post discharge rehabilitation: | Chemotherapy |
| • electives & day cases | • first attendance | • Type of investigation | • Cardiac | • a core HRG (covering the primary diagnosis or procedure) –national price | |
| • non-electives | • follow-up attendance | • Category of treatment | • Pulmonary | • unbundled HRGs for chemotherapy drug procurement—local currencies and prices | |
| • short-stay elective | • multi-professional/single professional appointments | • Provider type | • Hip replacement | • unbundled HRGs for chemotherapy delivery—national prices | |
| • short-stay emergencies (>2 days) | • separate national prices for diagnostic imaging | • Knee replacement | Radiotherapy: | ||
| • Best practice tariffs | Procedures carried out in outpatient setting subject to non-mandatory tariff based on HRGs | National prices to shift responsibility for patient care following discharge to the acute provider who treated the patient. Applicable only where a single trust provides both acute and community services. | • unbundled HRGs for planning and treatment—national or local prices | ||
| • Pathway payments | Non-mandatory tariff for outpatient appointments not carried out face to face | ||||
| o Maternity care | |||||
| o Cystic fibrosis | |||||
| Long-stay outlier payment triggered at predetermined length of stay (dependent on HRG). | |||||
| Specialized service adjustments | Best practice tariffs for 17 types of care | Local prices for outpatient attendances that are not pre-booked or consultant-led. | Type 3 A&E departments are eligible for the simplest currency only | ||
| Top-up payment for specialized services for children, spinal surgery, neurosciences and orthopaedic activity | NHS Walk-in Centres are paid by local prices, not by the tariff | ||||
| Rules and Flexibilities | Unbundling: see column 5 | Unbundling of care pathway subject to local agreement | Local flexibilities could be applied to support service redesign | ||
| Emergency admissions: the marginal rate emergency rule | |||||
| Emergency readmissions: the 30 day emergency readmission rule |
Sources: Monitor 2013 [12]; Department of Health, 2009 [24]
Note: Teaching and research are funded entirely separately, and their costs are not included in the national tariff. ‘Currency’ is the unit of payment
Introduction and development of best practice tariffs
|
| Cataracts | Aims to reduce the number of times patients are assessed before and after surgery by setting a price for the whole pathway rather than pricing each spell of activity; the pathway should be in line with recommendations provided by Royal College of Ophthalmologists |
| Cholecystectomy (gall bladder removal) | Encourages keyhole surgery in a day case setting where clinically appropriate | |
| Fragility hip fracture | Makes an additional payment for providing rapid surgery and orthogeriatric care | |
| Stroke | Makes additional payments for urgent brain imaging and care in an acute stroke unit. | |
|
| Adult renal dialysis | Aims to improve care for patients undergoing haemodialysis |
| Day case procedures | Encourages providers to increase their day case rates in a number of surgical procedures including hernia repair and prostate resection; by 2014/15 fifteen high volume procedures are included in the tariff. | |
| Interventional radiology | Incentivises use of minimally invasive techniques rather than open surgery where clinically appropriate; in 2014/15 seven procedures are included in the Best Practice Tariff programme | |
| Paediatric diabetes | Aims to improve quality of diabetes care; from 2014 includes also inpatient stays for young people with diabetes | |
| Primary total hip and knee replacements | Encourages best clinical management of patients and reductions in length of stay | |
| Transient ischaemic attack (or mini-stroke) | Paid for timely and effective outpatient systems for treating patients with TIA | |
|
| Major trauma | Encourages best practice treatment and management of trauma patients within a regional trauma network; in 2014/15 there was a change in best practice criteria |
| Same day emergency care | Promotes management of 12 clinical scenarios on a same day basis in an ambulatory emergency care manner | |
| Procedures in outpatients | Encourages three procedures (diagnostic cystoscopy, diagnostic hysteroscopy and hysteroscopic sterilisation ) to be performed in an outpatient setting | |
| Paediatric diabetes | Applies to providers who provide services in accordance with the best practice specification | |
|
| Early inflammatory arthritis | Services must meet four criteria, dealing with early referral and treatment start as well as regular subsequent appointments |
| Endoscopy procedures | Encourages providers to meet quality standards in line with the |Joint Advisory Group accreditation scheme for endoscopy services. | |
| Paediatric epilepsy | Intended for follow up appointments | |
| Parkinson’s disease | Aims to reduce waiting time for treatment | |
| Pleural effusions | Applies to unilateral effusions and increasing use of thoracic ultrasound. | |
|
| Hip and knee replacement | Payments linked to patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) |
Sources: Department of Health, 2013 [18]; Monitor, 2013 [12]