Abstract
BackgroundBecause managed care is increasingly prevalent in health care finance and delivery, it is important to ascertain its effects on health care quality relative to that of fee-for-service plans. Some stakeholders are concerned that basing gatekeeping, provider selection, and utilization management on cost may lower quality of care. To date, research on this topic has been inconclusive, largely because of variation in research methods and covariates. Patient age has been the only consistently evaluated outcome predictor. This study provides a comprehensive assessment of the association between managed care and inpatient mortality for Medicare and privately insured patients.MethodsA cross-sectional design was used to examine the association between managed care and inpatient mortality for four common inpatient conditions. Data from the 2009 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases for 11 states were linked to data from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey Database. Hospital discharges were categorized as managed care or fee for service. A phased approach to multivariate logistic modeling examined the likelihood of inpatient mortality when adjusting for individual patient and hospital characteristics and for county fixed effects.ResultsResults showed different effects of managed care for Medicare and privately insured patients. Privately insured patients in managed care had an advantage over their fee-for-service counterparts in inpatient mortality for acute myocardial infarction, stroke, pneumonia, and congestive heart failure; no such advantage was found for the Medicare managed care population. To the extent that the study showed a protective effect of privately insured managed care, it was driven by individuals aged 65 years and older, who had consistently better outcomes than their non-managed care counterparts.ConclusionsPrivately insured patients in managed care plans, especially older adults, had better outcomes than those in fee-for-service plans. Patients in Medicare managed care had outcomes similar to those in Medicare FFS. Additional research is needed to understand the role of patient selection, hospital quality, and differences among county populations in the decreased odds of inpatient mortality among patients in private managed care and to determine why this result does not hold for Medicare.
Highlights
Because managed care is increasingly prevalent in health care finance and delivery, it is important to ascertain its effects on health care quality relative to that of fee-for-service plans
One recent study of observed rates of inpatient mortality suggested that mortality may be declining more rapidly for Medicare patients compared with privately insured patients for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stroke, pneumonia, and congestive heart failure (CHF) [3]
We used hospital administrative data to examine the association between managed care and inpatient mortality, controlling for patient and hospital characteristics and county fixed effects
Summary
Because managed care is increasingly prevalent in health care finance and delivery, it is important to ascertain its effects on health care quality relative to that of fee-for-service plans. Two studies that compared Medicare beneficiaries in managed care and fee-for-service settings found no differences in inpatient mortality [4, 5] These studies examined patients hospitalized for only one medical condition. Additional studies included all payers and found that patients in managed care had lower inpatient mortality rates compared with patients in fee-for-service plans [7, 8]. One of these studies was limited to intensive care unit data in a single state, and the other study examined a single diagnosisrelated group
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