A longitudinal study of hospitalization rates for patients with chronic disease: results from the Medical Outcomes Study
Nelson, Eugene C. ; McHorney, Colleen A. ; Manning, Willard G. Jr. ; Rogers, William H. ; Zubkoff, Michael ; Greenfield, Sheldon ; Ware, John E. Jr. ; Tarlov, Alvin R.
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Aged
Boston
Chicago
Chronic Disease
Fee-for-Service Plans
Female
Health Resources
Health Services Research
Hospitalization
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Los Angeles
Male
Middle Aged
Prepaid Health Plans
Prospective Studies
Socioeconomic Factors
Biostatistics
Epidemiology
Health Services Research
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To prospectively compare inpatient and outpatient utilization rates between prepaid (PPD) and fee-for-service (FFS) insurance coverage for patients with chronic disease.
DATA SOURCE/STUDY SETTING: Data from the Medical Outcomes Study, a longitudinal observational study of chronic disease patients conducted in Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles.
STUDY DESIGN: A four-year prospective study of resource utilization among 1,681 patients under treatment for hypertension, diabetes, myocardial infarction, or congestive heart failure in the practices of 367 clinicians.
DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: Insurance payment system (PPD or FFS), hospitalizations, and office visits were obtained from patient reports. Disease and severity indicators, sociodemographics, and self-reported functional status were used to adjust for patient mix and to compute expected utilization rates.
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Compared to FFS, PPD patients had 31 percent fewer observed hospitalizations before adjustment for patient differences (p = .005) and 15 percent fewer hospitalizations than expected after adjustment (p = .078). The observed rate of FFS hospitalizations exceeded the expected rate by 9 percent. These results are not explained by system differences in patient mix or trends in hospital use over four years. Half of the PPD/FFS difference in hospitalization rate is due to intrinsic characteristics of the payment system itself.
CONCLUSIONS: PPD patients with chronic medical conditions followed prospectively over four years, after extensive patient-mix adjustment, had 15 percent fewer hospitalizations than their FFS counterparts owing to differences intrinsic to the insurance reimbursement system.
Source
Health Serv Res. 1998 Feb;32(6):759-74. Link to article on publisher's site