{"subscriber":false,"subscribedOffers":{}} Policy Makers Will Need A Way To Update Bundled Payments That Reflects Highly Skewed Spending Growth Of Various Care Episodes | Health Affairs

Research Article

Policy Makers Will Need A Way To Update Bundled Payments That Reflects Highly Skewed Spending Growth Of Various Care Episodes

Affiliations
  1. Allison B. Rosen ( [email protected] ) is an associate professor of quantitative health sciences at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, in Worcester.
  2. Ana Aizcorbe is the chief economist at the Bureau of Economic Analysis, in Washington, D.C.
  3. Alexander J. Ryu is a medical student at Harvard Medical School, in Boston.
  4. Nicole Nestoriak is a research economist at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in Washington, D.C.
  5. David M. Cutler is the Otto Eckstein Professor of Applied Economics at Harvard University.
  6. Michael E. Chernew is a professor in the Department of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School.

Bundled payment entails paying a single price for all services delivered as part of an episode of care for a specific condition. It is seen as a promising way to slow the growth of health care spending while maintaining or improving the quality of care. To implement bundled payment, policy makers must set base payment rates for episodes of care and update the rates over time to reflect changes in the costs of delivering care and the components of care. Adopting the fee-for-service paradigm of adjusting payments with uniform update rates would be fair and accurate if costs increased at a uniform rate across episodes. But our analysis of 2003 and 2007 US commercial claims data showed spending growth to be highly skewed across episodes: 10 percent of episodes accounted for 82.5 percent of spending growth, and within-episode spending growth ranged from a decline of 75 percent to an increase of 323 percent. Given that spending growth was much faster for some episodes than for others, a situation known as skewness, policy makers should not update episode payments using uniform update rates. Rather, they should explore ways to address variations in spending growth, such as updating episode payments one by one, at least at the outset.

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