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The Early Effects of Medicare's Mandatory Hospital Pay‐for‐Performance Program
Authors:Andrew M Ryan PhD  James F Burgess PhD Jr  Michael F Pesko PhD  William B Borden MD  MPH  Justin B Dimick MD  MPH
Institution:1. Department of Healthcare Policy and Research, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY;2. Veterans Affairs Boston Health Care System, US Department of Veteran Affairs, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA;3. Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Abstract:

Objective

To evaluate the impact of hospital value-based purchasing (HVBP) on clinical quality and patient experience during its initial implementation period (July 2011–March 2012).

Data Sources

Hospital-level clinical quality and patient experience data from Hospital Compare from up to 5 years before and three quarters after HVBP was initiated.

Study Design

Acute care hospitals were exposed to HVBP by mandate while critical access hospitals and hospitals located in Maryland were not exposed. We performed a difference-in-differences analysis, comparing performance on 12 incentivized clinical process and 8 incentivized patient experience measures between hospitals exposed to the program and a matched comparison group of nonexposed hospitals. We also evaluated whether hospitals that were ultimately exposed to HVBP may have anticipated the program by improving quality in advance of its introduction.

Principal Findings

Difference-in-differences estimates indicated that hospitals that were exposed to HVBP did not show greater improvement for either the clinical process or patient experience measures during the program''s first implementation period. Estimates from our preferred specification showed that HVBP was associated with a 0.51 percentage point reduction in composite quality for the clinical process measures (p > .10, 95 percent CI: ?1.37, 0.34) and a 0.30 percentage point reduction in composite quality for the patient experience measures (p > .10, 95 percent CI: ?0.79, 0.19). We found some evidence that hospitals improved performance on clinical process measures prior to the start of HVBP, but no evidence of this phenomenon for the patient experience measures.

Conclusions

The timing of the financial incentives in HVBP was not associated with improved quality of care. It is unclear whether improvement for the clinical process measures prior to the start of HVBP was driven by the expectation of the program or was the result of other factors.
Keywords:Pay‐for‐performance  hospitals  econometrics  health services research
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