Abstract

As part of the EuroDRG project, researchers from eleven countries (i.e. Austria, England, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, and Spain) compared how their Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRG) systems deal with cholecystectomy patients. The study aims to assist surgeons and national authorities to optimize their DRG systems. National or regional databases were used to identify hospital cases with a procedure of cholecystectomy. DRG classification algorithms and indicators of resource consumption were compared for those DRGs that individually contained at least 1% of cases. Six standardised case vignettes were defined, and quasi prices according to national DRG-based hospital payment systems were ascertained and compared to an index case. European DRG systems vary widely: they classify cholecystectomy patients according to different sets of variables into diverging numbers of DRGs (between two DRGs in Austria and Poland to nine DRGs in England). The most complex DRG is valued at four times more resource intensive than the index case in Ireland but only 1.3 times more resource intensive than the index case in Austria. Large variations in the classification of cholecystectomy patients raise concerns whether all systems rely on the most appropriate classification variables. Surgeons, hospital managers and national DRG authorities should consider how other countries' DRG systems classify cholecystectomy patients in order to optimize their DRG systems and to ensure fair and appropriate reimbursement.

Highlights

  • Gallbladder surgery is one of the most frequent major surgeries in general surgery departments [1] and a cholecystectomy procedure is considered a benchmark procedure for a surgeon and surgical department [2,3]

  • DiagnosisRelated Groups (DRG) containing less than 1% of cases in the national database but which are essential for understanding the grouping logic are shaded in light grey and are not considered in the following analysis

  • On the left hand side, the figure specifies for each country the version of the DRG system and the percentage of all identified cholecystectomy cases that are shown in the graph

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Summary

Introduction

Systems (PCSs), which are commonly used to classify, benchmark and pay for hospital treatment [4]. In current DRG-type hospital payment systems, DRGs define the payment categories, i.e. hospital products [4]. As such, they are designed to increase the transparency about the services and provide incentives for the efficient use of resources within hospitals [4]. They are designed to increase the transparency about the services and provide incentives for the efficient use of resources within hospitals [4] Another type of standardized agreement in healthcare are clinical guidelines, which

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