Abstract

BackgroundThe casemix-based payment system has been adopted in many countries, although it often needs complementary adjustment taking account of each hospital’s unique production structure such as teaching and research duties, and non-profit motives. It has been challenging to numerically evaluate the impact of such structural heterogeneity on production, separately of production inefficiency. The current study adopted stochastic frontier analysis and proposed a method to assess unique components of hospital production structures using a fixed-effect variable.MethodsThere were two stages of analyses in this study. In the first stage, we estimated the efficiency score from the hospital production function using a true fixed-effect model (TFEM) in stochastic frontier analysis. The use of a TFEM allowed us to differentiate the unobserved heterogeneity of individual hospitals as hospital-specific fixed effects. In the second stage, we regressed the obtained fixed-effect variable for structural components of hospitals to test whether the variable was explicitly related to the characteristics and local disadvantages of the hospitals.ResultsIn the first analysis, the estimated efficiency score was approximately 0.6. The mean value of the fixed-effect estimator was 0.784, the standard deviation was 0.137, the range was between 0.437 and 1.212. The second-stage regression confirmed that the value of the fixed effect was significantly correlated with advanced technology and local conditions of the sample hospitals.ConclusionThe obtained fixed-effect estimator may reflect hospitals’ unique structures of production, considering production inefficiency. The values of fixed-effect estimators can be used as evaluation tools to improve fairness in the reimbursement system for various functions of hospitals based on casemix classification.

Highlights

  • The casemix-based payment system has been adopted in many countries, it often needs complementary adjustment taking account of each hospital’s unique production structure such as teaching and research duties, and non-profit motives

  • One of the most popular methods of improving economic efficiency of service production in acute-care hospitals is the inclusive payment system based on casemix classification

  • Inclusive payment requires complementary adjustment to account for hospitals’ external conditions that are not amenable to efficiency management, such as teaching duties, research and development, and local disadvantages relating to the socio-economic environment

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Summary

Introduction

The casemix-based payment system has been adopted in many countries, it often needs complementary adjustment taking account of each hospital’s unique production structure such as teaching and research duties, and non-profit motives. One of the most popular methods of improving economic efficiency of service production in acute-care hospitals is the inclusive payment system based on casemix classification. U.S Medicare adopts adjustment factors according to the number of residents per hospital bed, local price index, and local economic deprivation related to the availability of free care [3]. It is challenging, to discriminate such unique components of hospital production structures and their production inefficiency

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