Service use and costs for Medicare beneficiaries in risk-based HMOs and CMPs: some interim results from the National Medicare Competition Evaluation.
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 78 (8) , 937-943
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.78.8.937
Abstract
The Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) initiated the Medicare Competition Demonstration in 1982 in anticipation of congressional intent to establish a national program. Interim results on the 1984 service use and cost experience of the health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and competitive medical plans (CMPs) participating in the demonstrations indicate that Medicare enrollees in the demonstration experienced a median of 1,951 hospital days per 1,000 person years, 57 per cent of the median of 3,432 days per 1,000 in the local markets from which the plans drew enrollment. Independent practice association (IPA) HMOs experienced higher hospital use rates than staff and group model HMOs. These comparisons are not adjusted for various risk factors, the absence of which were likely to favor the demonstration plans. Plans with lower hospital service use were federally qualified and had been operating for more than five years. The median total annual revenue per enrollee across all plans was $2,312, compared to median annual expenses per enrollee of $2,250. The distribution of median annual expenses per enrollee by major category of expense was: institutional expenses ($1,038/enrollee), medical expenses ($720/enrollee), supplemental services expenses ($154/enrollee), and administrative and other expenses ($295/enrollee). Future analysis, using beneficiary-level data, will examine the impact of the demonstration and the nature and extent of evident biased selection and will compare the quality of care in the demonstrations to that in the fee-for-service sector.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The entry of HMOs into the Medicare market: implications for TEFRA's mandate.1986
- National health expenditures, 19841985
- A Controlled Trial of the Effect of a Prepaid Group Practice on Use of ServicesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Policy implications of startup utilization by enrollees in prepaid group plans.1984
- The dually entitled elderly Medicare and Medicaid population living in the community.1984
- Demographic characteristics and health care use and expenditures by the aged in the United States: 1977-1984.1984
- Membership Duration and Utilization Rates in a Prepaid Group PracticeMedical Care, 1981
- The Effect of Duration of Membership in a Prepaid Group Health Plan on the Utilization of ServicesMedical Care, 1976