Abstract

Rural China is piloting an integrated payment system, which prepays a budget to a medical alliance rather than a single hospital. This study aims to evaluate the effect of this reform on the direct economic burden and readmission rates of cerebral infarction inpatients. The settlement records of 78,494 cerebral infarction inpatients were obtained from the New Rural Cooperative Medical Scheme (NRCMS) database in Dingyuan and Funan Counties in the Anhui Province. The direct economic burden was estimated by total costs, out-of-pocket expenditures, the out-of-pocket ratio, and the compensation ratio of the NRCMS. Generalized additive models and multivariable linear/logistic regression were applied to measure the changes of the dependent variables along with the year. Within the county, the total costs positively correlated to the year (β = 313.10 in 2015; 163.06 in 2016). The out-of-pocket expenditures, out-of-pocket ratios, and the length-of-stay positively correlated to the year in 2015 (β = 105.10, 0.01, and 0.18 respectively), and negatively correlated to the year in 2016 (β = −58.40, −0.03, and −0.30, respectively). The odds ratios of the readmission rates were less than one within the county (0.70 in 2015; 0.53 in 2016). The integrated payment system in the Anhui Province has considerably reduced the direct economic burden for the rural cerebral infarction inpatients, and the readmission rate has decreased within the county. Inpatients’ health outcomes should be given further attention, and the long-term effect of this reform model awaits further evaluation.

Highlights

  • Provider payment system reform plays an important role in medical system reform

  • Dingyuan and Funan Counties were selected as samples through typical sampling, because they were among the first batches of pilot locations in the Anhui Province in 2015

  • The constituent ratio of cerebral infarction inpatients hospitalized within the county increased annually, whereas the constituent ratio of those outside the county decreased

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Summary

Introduction

Provider payment system reform plays an important role in medical system reform. This reform, in which health insurance funds are transferred from the purchaser to healthcare providers [1], can considerably influence healthcare providers’ medical behavior, and can further influence the quality and efficiency of healthcare services as well as the enrollees’ direct economic burden and benefit level from health insurance [2,3]. Prospective payment system (PPS), which is gradually replacing post-payment systems around the world, has been proven effective for controlling spending by encouraging improvements to medical institutions’ efficiency [4,5]. A global budget (GB), which indicates that healthcare providers are provided an amount of money to spend with total. Public Health 2019, 16, 1554; doi:10.3390/ijerph16091554 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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