Effect of Prospective Reimbursement on Nursing Home Costs.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

4-1-1993

Keywords

Cost Control, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Diagnosis-Related Groups, Health Care Costs, Health Care Rationing, Health Facility Size, Health Services Accessibility, Health Services Research, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Maine, Medicaid, Medical Audit, Nursing Homes, Ownership, Prospective Payment System, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Regression Analysis, United States, Workload

Publication Title

Health Services Research

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study evaluates the effect of Maine's Medicaid nursing home prospective payment system on nursing home costs and access to care for public patients.

DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: The implementation of a facility-specific prospective payment system for nursing homes provided the opportunity for longitudinal study of the effect of that system. Data sources included audited Medicaid nursing home cost reports, quality-of-care data from state facility survey and licensure files, and facility case-mix information from random, stratified samples of homes and residents. Data were obtained for six years (1979-1985) covering the three-year period before and after implementation of the prospective payment system.

STUDY DESIGN: This study used a pre-post, longitudinal analytical design in which interrupted, time-series regression models were estimated to test the effects of prospective payment and other factors, e.g., facility characteristics, nursing home market factors, facility case mix, and quality of care, on nursing home costs.

PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Prospective payment contributed to an estimated $3.03 decrease in total variable costs in the third year from what would have been expected under the previous retrospective cost-based payment system. Responsiveness to payment system efficiency incentives declined over the study period, however, indicating a growing problem in achieving further cost reductions. Some evidence suggested that cost reductions might have reduced access for public patients.

CONCLUSIONS: Study findings are consistent with the results of other studies that have demonstrated the effectiveness of prospective payment systems in restraining nursing home costs. Potential policy trade-offs among cost containment, access, and quality assurance deserve further consideration, particularly by researchers and policymakers designing the new generation of case mix-based and other nursing home payment systems.

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