Incentive Implementation in Physician Practices: A Qualitative Study of Practice Executive Perspectives on Pay for Performance
- 1 February 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Medical Care Research and Review
- Vol. 63 (1_suppl) , 73S-95S
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1077558705283645
Abstract
Pay-for-performance (P4P) programs offer health care providers financial incentives to achieve predefined quality targets. Practice executives sit at a key nexus point for determining how P4P programs are implemented in physician practices. Using a qualitative interview design, this article examines the role practice executives play in the implementation of P4P programs and how their perspectives and decisions can influence the success of these programs. The authors identified five key findings related to practice executives’ views on P4P: quality incentives are better than utilization incentives, quality incentives are bonus rewards, quality incentives are agents for change, providers do not feel they have control over attaining quality targets, and the ways in which quality is measured are problematic. The authors discuss five different ways in which practice executives distribute rewards to physicians. These findings may help payers more effectively design and implement financial rewards for quality.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Penetrating the “Black Box”: Financial Incentives for Enhancing the Quality of Physician ServicesMedical Care Research and Review, 2004
- Assessing the Influence of Incentives on Physicians and Medical GroupsMedical Care Research and Review, 2004
- Paying Physicians for High-Quality CareNew England Journal of Medicine, 2004
- The Physician as Worker: What It Means and Why Now?Health Care Management Review, 2001
- The American College of Medical Practice Executivesʼ Competency StudyThe Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, 2000
- Medical Professionalism — Focusing on the Real IssuesNew England Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Why Don't Physicians Follow Clinical Practice Guidelines?JAMA, 1999
- The Impact of Financial Incentives on Quality of Health CareThe Milbank Quarterly, 1998
- Primary Care Physicians' Experience of Financial Incentives in Managed-Care SystemsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- The Reorganization of the Medical ProfessionMedical Care Review, 1985