| Literature DB >> 27180236 |
Maria Caballer-Tarazona1, Antonio Clemente-Collado2, David Vivas-Consuelo3.
Abstract
Public-private partnership (PPP) initiatives are extending around the world, especially in Europe, as an innovation to traditional public health systems, with the intention of making them more efficient.There is a varied range of PPP models with different degrees of responsibility from simple public sector contracts with the private, up to the complete privatisation of the service. As such, we may say the involvement of the private sector embraces the development, financing and provision of public infrastructures and delivery services.In this paper, one of the oldest PPP initiatives developed in Spain and transferred to other European and Latin American countries is evaluated for first time: the integrated healthcare delivery Alzira model.Through a comparison of public and PPP hospital performance, cost and quality indicators, the efficiency of the PPP experience in five hospitals is evaluated to identify the influence of private management in the results.Regarding the performance and efficiency analysis, it is seen that the PPP group obtains good results, above the average, but not always better than those directly managed. It is necessary to conduct studies with a greater number of PPP hospitals to obtain conclusive results.Entities:
Keywords: Data envelopment analysis; Health management; Hospital efficiency; Public-private partnership
Year: 2016 PMID: 27180236 PMCID: PMC4870542 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-016-0095-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Adjusted patients weights
| Surgical processes | DRGs |
|---|---|
| Hospital processes | DRGs weights |
| First outpatient visits | 0.033 |
| Follow up outpatient visits | 0.02 |
| Emergencies | 0.04 |
Source: IASIST 2009 [16]
Fig. 1Cluster 1 (Medium and small hospitals)
Fig. 2Cluster 2 (big hospitals)
Significant differences between management models
| Better performance in PPP hospitals | ||
| PPP hospitals | Public hospitals | |
| First consultations* | 73050.80 | 48824.95 |
| Wait for first consultations (days)* | 14.52 | 20.06 |
| Outpatient replacement rate* | 80.67 % | 60.09 % |
| MR equipment** | 1 | 0 |
| Management agreements score** | 84.18 | 73.52 |
| Rate of hip fracture operations with more than 2 days delay** | 0.169 | 0.588 |
| Better performance in public hospitals | ||
| Medical material cost in emergency** | 725782.24 | 248565.34 |
*T-statistic for average differences (p < 0.05)
**Mann-Whitney test for median differences (p < 0.05)
Regression analysis results
| Medical area | Surgical area | Outpatient consultations | Emergency | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typified coefficient | ||||
| Number of beds (medical inpatient area) | 0.955 | |||
| Model of management | 0.247 | |||
| Adjusted patients (surgical area) | 0.598 | |||
| Number of beds (Surgical area) | 0.419 | |||
| Examination rooms | 0.888 | |||
| Adjusted patients (emergency area) | 0.80 | |||
| Plaster cast rooms (emergency area) | 0.236 | |||
| R2 | 0.860 | 0.981 | 0.776 | 0.883 |
|
| 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
Fig. 3Efficiency analysis for small and medium hospitals (cluster 1)
Fig. 4Efficiency analysis for large hospitals (cluster 2)