Fostering Accountable Health Care: Moving Forward In Medicare
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2009
- journal article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 28 (Supplement) , w219-w231
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.28.2.w219
Abstract
To succeed, health care reform must slow spending growth while improving quality. We propose a new approach to help achieve more integrated and efficient care by fostering local organizational accountability for quality and costs through performance measurement and “shared savings” payment reform. The approach is practical and feasible: it is voluntary for providers, builds on current referral patterns, requires no change in benefits or lock-in for beneficiaries, and offers the possibility of sustained provider incomes even as total costs are constrained. We simulate the potential expenditure impact and show that significant Medicare savings are possible.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Beyond Pay for Performance — Emerging Models of Provider-Payment ReformNew England Journal of Medicine, 2008
- Building a Medical Neighborhood for the Medical HomeNew England Journal of Medicine, 2008
- Rethinking Medical Professionalism: The Role of Information Technology and Practice InnovationsThe Milbank Quarterly, 2008
- Relationship Between Regional Per Capita Medicare Expenditures and Patient Perceptions of Quality of CareJAMA, 2008
- Coordinating Care — A Perilous Journey through the Health Care SystemNew England Journal of Medicine, 2008
- How Many Are Underinsured? Trends Among U.S. Adults, 2003 And 2007Health Affairs, 2008
- The Challenge of Rising Health Care Costs — A View from the Congressional Budget OfficeNew England Journal of Medicine, 2007
- Assigning Ambulatory Patients and Their Physicians to Hospitals: A Method for Obtaining Population‐Based Provider Performance MeasurementsHealth Services Research, 2006
- Medicare Spending, The Physician Workforce, And Beneficiaries' Quality Of CareHealth Affairs, 2004
- Geography And The Debate Over Medicare ReformHealth Affairs, 2002