A quality-based payment strategy for nursing home care in Minnesota.
Open Access
- 1 February 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Gerontologist
- Vol. 47 (1) , 108-115
- https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/47.1.108
Abstract
This article describes a pay-for-performance system developed for Minnesota nursing homes. In effect, nursing homes can retain a greater proportion of the difference between their costs and the average costs on the basis of their quality scores. The quality score is a derived and weighted composite measure currently composed of five elements: staff retention (25 points), staff turnover (15 points), use of pool staff (10 points), nursing home quality indicators (40 points), and survey deficiencies (10 points). Information on residents' quality of life and satisfaction, derived from interviews with a random sample of residents in each Minnesota nursing home, is now available for inclusion in the quality measure. The new payment system was designed to create a business case for quality when used in addition to a nursing home report card that uses the same quality elements to inform potential consumers about the quality of nursing homes. Although the nursing home industry has announced general support for the new approach, it has lobbied the legislature to delay its implementation, claiming concerns about operational details.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical Practice Guidelines and Quality of Care for Older Patients With Multiple Comorbid DiseasesJAMA, 2005
- Providing Outcomes Information to Nursing Homes: Can It Improve Quality of Care?The Gerontologist, 2003
- Improving nursing home quality of care through outcomes data: the MDS quality indicatorsInternational Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2003
- Nursing Home Case‐Mix Reimbursement in Mississippi and South DakotaHealth Services Research, 2002
- Informing Consumer Decisions in Health Care: Implications from Decision‐Making ResearchThe Milbank Quarterly, 1997
- Heading in the Right DirectionThe Gerontologist, 1994
- Establishing an Empirical Basis for Long-Term CareThe Gerontologist, 1994
- Regulating the Behavior of Nursing Homes Through Positive Incentives: An Analysis of illinois' Quality Incentive Program (QUIP)The Gerontologist, 1991
- The Quality of CareJAMA, 1988
- Paying nursing homes for better careJournal of Community Health, 1976