Should payment for performance depend on mortality?

Archive ouverte

Loirat, Philippe | Ferrua, Marie | Lalloué, Benoît | Fourcade, Aude | Minvielle, Etienne

Edité par CCSD ; BMJ Publishing Group -

International audience. The introduction of the Hospital Value Based Purchasing (HVBP) programme, as shown recently by Jose F Figueroa and colleagues, did not improve 30 day mortality of Medicare beneficiaries admitted to US hospitals for three incentivised conditions. We agree with the authors’ conclusion that an “appropriate mix of quality metrics and incentives to improve patient outcomes” has yet to be identified.The programme was designed to promote better clinical outcomes for hospital patients and to improve their experience of care during hospital stays. However, if reducing mortality was the primary objective, a specific set of indicators should have been selected from relevant practice and organisational guidelines, which was not the case when the programme was designed. The absence of HVBP’s impact on mortality is therefore not surprising.In their conclusion Figueroa and colleagues say, “Nations considering similar pay for performance programs may want to consider alternative models.” This raises a question: should payment depend on achieving a decrease in mortality rates? The primary objective of pay for performance programmes could still be the development and maintenance of continuous quality improvement (CQI) programmes based on relevant process indicators to assess critical steps in patient management, such as the effective use of checklists in surgical procedures. These process indicators are apt to detect dangerous misconduct, less susceptible to bias, and more actionable.However, a problem remains: such CQI programmes in hospitals rely on a limited number of people repeatedly trying to motivate a large number of health professionals who are insensitive to the benefits of CQI. Instead of diverting the small percentage of budget devoted to pay for performance programmes it could be more profitable, for patients, to think of a better use for this money.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Financial Incentive to Improve Quality (IFAQ) developed within French hospitals: Results for the first experiment (2012-2014). Incitation Financière à l'Amélioration de la Qualité (IFAQ) pour les établissements de santé français: Résultats de l'expérimentation (2012-2014)

Archive ouverte | Ferrua, Marie | CCSD

International audience. The French Ministry of Health and the National Authority for Health launched an experiment of a Financial Incentive to Improve Quality (IFAQ) within 222 acute care hospitals, in June 2012. A ...

International experiences on pay-for-performance programs and implications for China

Archive ouverte | Jiang, Shu | CCSD

International audience. In the past decade, pay-for-performance (P4P) programs in the health care sector have been implemented throughout the world. These programs differ in their design, as they have different targ...

How to Design a Remote Patient Monitoring System? A French Case Study

Archive ouverte | Ferrua, Marie | CCSD

International audience. Background: Remote Patient Monitoring Systems (RPMS) based on e-health, Nurse Navigators (NNs) and patient engagement can improve patient follow-up and have a positive impact on quality of ca...

Chargement des enrichissements...