Literature DB >> 7661493

Managed care and capitation in California: how do physicians at financial risk control their own utilization?

E A Kerr1, B S Mittman, R D Hays, A L Siu, B Leake, R H Brook.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the structure and range of utilization management methods initiated by physicians in response to capitation.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional questionnaire.
SETTING: A large network-model health maintenance organization (133 contracting physician groups) in California. PARTICIPANTS: 94 (71%) physician groups caring for 2.9 million capitated patients. MEASUREMENTS: Self-reported use of five major utilization management methods.
RESULTS: All physician groups reported using gate-keeping and preauthorization for certain referrals or tests. Most also used profiling of utilization patterns (79%), guidelines (70%), and managed care education (69%). Most physician groups asked gatekeepers to submit preauthorization requests for specialty referrals and restricted patient self-referral. For example, 60% of groups required preauthorization for an internal medicine subspecialty referral, and 7% allowed patient self-referral. Most groups also asked gatekeepers to obtain preauthorization for many tests (for example, 95% for magnetic resonance imaging and 53% for pulmonary function tests). Preauthorization requests were denied infrequently (less than 10% of the time) by more than 75% of groups. Of the 54 groups reporting utilization profiles to their physicians, 61% never adjusted for case-mix among patients and more than 60% suggested practice changes to their physicians based on utilization. Fewer than 35% of the groups used written guidelines for expensive tests that required preauthorization (such as angiography).
CONCLUSIONS: Physicians are responding to capitation by using utilization management techniques, some at early stages of development, that were previously used only by insurers. This physician-initiated management approach represents a fundamental transformation in the practice of medicine.

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Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7661493     DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-123-7-199510010-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-4819            Impact factor:   25.391


  33 in total

1.  Associations between primary care physician satisfaction and self-reported aspects of utilization management.

Authors:  E A Kerr; B S Mittman; R D Hays; J K Zemencuk; J Pitts; R H Brook
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Review 9.  Economists' perspectives on health care delivery in California as of 1995.

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Review 10.  The patient-provider relationship: opportunities as well as problems.

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