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	<title>건강과 대안 &#187; Integrated Delivery Systems</title>
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		<title>[의료개혁] 21st-Century Health Care — The Case for Integrated Delivery Systems</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Oct 2009 11:51:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>건강과대안</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[21st-Century Health Care — The Case for Integrated Delivery Systems 출처 : NEJM • September 23rd, 2009 •http://content.nejm.org/cgi/reprint/NEJMp0906917.pdf Francis J. Crosson, M.D. It was 1933. The United States [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><H2>21st-Century Health Care — The Case for Integrated Delivery Systems</H2><br />
<DIV class=postmetadata>출처 : <A title="Posts by NEJM" href="http://healthcarereform.nejm.org/?author=9"><FONT color=#000000>NEJM</FONT></A> • September 23rd, 2009 •<BR><A href="http://content.nejm.org/cgi/reprint/NEJMp0906917.pdf">http://content.nejm.org/cgi/reprint/NEJMp0906917.pdf</A></DIV><br />
<DIV class="entry clearfloat"><br />
<P>Francis J. Crosson, M.D.</P><br />
<P>It was 1933. The United States was in the midst of a severe<SUP> </SUP>economic downturn that was to become the Great Depression. Data<SUP> </SUP>from 1929 showed that U.S. health care expenditures had reached<SUP> </SUP>4% of the U.S. gross domestic product, a sum that was believed<SUP> </SUP>to threaten the country’s financial recovery. <SPAN id=more-1887></SPAN>After nearly a<SUP> </SUP>year of work, the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care, chaired<SUP> </SUP>by Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, the president of Stanford University,<SUP> </SUP>published its findings and recommendations.<SUP>1</SUP> The first boldface<SUP> </SUP>recommendation read, “Medical service should be more largely<SUP> </SUP>furnished by groups of physicians and related practitioners,<SUP> </SUP>so organized as to maintain high standards of care and to retain<SUP> </SUP>the personal relations between patients and physicians.”<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>The committee had reached this recommendation after reviewing<SUP> </SUP>evidence that the group-practice environment tended to produce<SUP> </SUP>higher-quality and more efficient care than disaggregated forms<SUP> </SUP>of practice. Nonetheless — with notable exceptions, such<SUP> </SUP>as the Mayo Clinic, the Geisinger Health System, Kaiser Permanente<SUP> </SUP>(where I work), and other isolated instances of integrated delivery<SUP> </SUP>systems based on group practices — the transition the<SUP> </SUP>committee called for has not taken place. I believe it needs<SUP> </SUP>to happen this time around.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>The United States must make health care coverage available to<SUP> </SUP>all citizens. The recent experiment in Massachusetts has shown<SUP> </SUP>that near-universal coverage can be attained but that waste<SUP> </SUP>resulting from unnecessary and unsafe care must be eliminated<SUP> </SUP>if the system is to be financially sustainable. The primary<SUP> </SUP>cause of unnecessary care is the costly brew of expensive technology<SUP> </SUP>and fee-for-service payment of physicians.<SUP>2</SUP> Most physicians<SUP> </SUP>want to do the right thing for their patients. It is easiest<SUP> </SUP>for them to do so when their decisions about what services to<SUP> </SUP>provide are guided, as much as possible, by science and patients’<SUP> </SUP>needs rather than by personal financial considerations. This<SUP> </SUP>goal can be accomplished reasonably well through prospective<SUP> </SUP>payment of a physician group that, in turn, pays its physicians<SUP> </SUP>appropriate salaries. The Massachusetts Special Commission on<SUP> </SUP>the Health Care Payment System recently announced its intention<SUP> </SUP>of moving away from fee-for-service payment in favor of prospective<SUP> </SUP>payment, believing that this change could significantly slow<SUP> </SUP>the growth of health care spending.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>But there is a problem. Prospective payment for physicians’<SUP> </SUP>services has been shown to work well at the medical-group or<SUP> </SUP>health-system level but not at the individual-physician or small-practice<SUP> </SUP>level. In fact, experiments with individual capitation by health<SUP> </SUP>plans in the 1990s turned out to be financially unmanageable<SUP> </SUP>for physicians and created concerns that for some the degree<SUP> </SUP>of potential personal financial gain or loss made the approach<SUP> </SUP>ethically challenging.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>Successfully replacing fee-for-service physician payment with<SUP> </SUP>forms of prospective payment will require changes in the organization<SUP> </SUP>of physician practices and in the structural relationships between<SUP> </SUP>physicians and hospitals. Physicians will have to work together<SUP> </SUP>across specialties, work in tandem with hospitals, and be able<SUP> </SUP>to respond collectively to new payment methods. These changes<SUP> </SUP>have not materialized more broadly to date because of a classic<SUP> </SUP>chicken-and-egg conundrum. Payers have little incentive to develop<SUP> </SUP>innovative prospective payment methods unless there are enough<SUP> </SUP>delivery systems capable of receiving and succeeding with these<SUP> </SUP>payments. Conversely, physicians and hospitals have little incentive<SUP> </SUP>to do the hard work of integration when the payment system provides<SUP> </SUP>little reason to do so.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>Thus, two interacting sets of changes need to occur: movement<SUP> </SUP>away from fee-for-service payment of physicians toward prospective<SUP> </SUP>payment, and multispecialty integration of physicians combined<SUP> </SUP>with hospitals to form new “accountable” systems of care. The<SUP> </SUP>case for such change was well presented last year by the Commonwealth<SUP> </SUP>Fund Commission on a High Performance Health System.<SUP>3</SUP> There<SUP> </SUP>are two non–mutually-exclusive ways in which the changes<SUP> </SUP>envisioned by the commission could take place: rapid transition<SUP> </SUP>for established integrated delivery systems and gradual transition<SUP> </SUP>for the majority of physicians and hospitals. There are already<SUP> </SUP>100 or more integrated delivery systems in the United States<SUP> </SUP>— they are especially common in the West and upper Midwest<SUP> </SUP>— that are able to accept prospective payment and that<SUP> </SUP>could make care more efficient as a consequence. Other health<SUP> </SUP>care communities, on the other hand, are still quite disaggregated.<SUP> </SUP>In such places, the transition from fee-for-service and solo<SUP> </SUP>or small-group practices to prospective payment and integrated<SUP> </SUP>delivery systems will need to proceed in a more stepwise fashion.<SUP> </SUP>This process can begin with early forms of payment reform, which<SUP> </SUP>will in turn drive greater structural integration, which can<SUP> </SUP>increase the capacity for additional payment reform, and so<SUP> </SUP>on. The ultimate degree of integration will depend on local<SUP> </SUP>market realities — not every accountable system of care<SUP> </SUP>must be cut from the same structural mold. Similarly, assumption<SUP> </SUP>of all risk on the part of delivery systems is not a necessary<SUP> </SUP>component of a successful model. Kaiser Permanente’s history<SUP> </SUP>shows that risk sharing between the payer and the care delivery<SUP> </SUP>system can work quite well.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>The development of more integrated, accountable care systems<SUP> </SUP>should bring other benefits in addition to the opportunity to<SUP> </SUP>reduce costs. A number of studies have shown that integrated<SUP> </SUP>care is positively correlated with improved quality, which is<SUP> </SUP>achieved through the coordination of care among specialties,<SUP> </SUP>the effective use of information technology–based decision-support<SUP> </SUP>tools, and other key aspects of integrated systems. Such integrated<SUP> </SUP>health care entities are increasingly attractive to newly minted<SUP> </SUP>physicians, particularly primary care physicians, who perceive<SUP> </SUP>them as offering a supportive environment and recognize the<SUP> </SUP>ability of group practices to moderate, at least to some degree,<SUP> </SUP>the growing income disparity between primary care physicians<SUP> </SUP>and specialists. The growth of integrated care systems may thus<SUP> </SUP>be at least a partial correction to the growing tendency of<SUP> </SUP>U.S. medical students to shun primary care as a career.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>How long would it take to achieve a stepwise transition from<SUP> </SUP>complete disaggregation to accountable care systems? Some observers<SUP> </SUP>believe that it will be impossible to attain this goal at least<SUP> </SUP>until the older generation of physicians retires. Others, who<SUP> </SUP>recall some constructive responses from physicians and hospitals<SUP> </SUP>to the apparent inevitability of managed care in the early 1990s,<SUP> </SUP>believe that the shift could proceed much more quickly —<SUP> </SUP>especially because many physicians are more dissatisfied with<SUP> </SUP>the status quo than they were 15 years ago. In addition, many<SUP> </SUP>hospitals, observing the disintegration of the traditional hospital-staff<SUP> </SUP>model of physician self-governance, are seeking new ways of<SUP> </SUP>“clinically integrating” with physicians. Finally, the advances<SUP> </SUP>in clinical information technology that have occurred in the<SUP> </SUP>past decade provide a practical integration tool that was largely<SUP> </SUP>absent previously.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P>What would need to happen to launch the process? Public and<SUP> </SUP>private payers would have to initiate the cascade of changes<SUP> </SUP>by offering new payment opportunities to delivery organizations<SUP> </SUP>that are willing and able to accept them. I, among others, have<SUP> </SUP>called for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the<SUP> </SUP>country’s largest payer, to build on the Medicare Physician<SUP> </SUP>Group Practice Demonstration by developing new models that will<SUP> </SUP>allow the agency to share financial risk with delivery systems.<SUP>4</SUP><SUP>,</SUP><SUP>5</SUP><SUP> </SUP>Models that prove successful could be adopted by private payers<SUP> </SUP>as well. Regulators would need to remove certain barriers to<SUP> </SUP>integration while ensuring that system development does not<SUP> </SUP>lead to abusive pricing. As in Massachusetts, government leaders<SUP> </SUP>could seal the deal by establishing a stable long-term vision<SUP> </SUP>for delivery-system reform that could be counted on by physicians<SUP> </SUP>and hospitals seeking to lead the necessary changes. Most important,<SUP> </SUP>though, is that we begin this process of incremental change<SUP> </SUP>as soon as possible.<SUP> </SUP></P><br />
<P><SPAN>Dr. Crosson reports serving as chairman of the Council of Accountable<SUP> </SUP>Physician Practices. No other potential conflict of interest<SUP> </SUP>relevant to this article was reported.<SUP> </SUP></SPAN></P><br />
<P><SPAN>All opinions expressed in this article are those of the author<SUP> </SUP>and do not necessarily represent the views of the Medicare Payment<SUP> </SUP>Advisory Commission (MedPAC), on which the author currently<SUP> </SUP>serves as vice-chairman.</SPAN></P><br />
<P><STRONG>Source Information</STRONG></P><br />
<P><SPAN>From the Kaiser Permanente Institute for Health Policy, Oakland, CA.<SUP> </SUP></SPAN></P><br />
<P>This article (10.1056/NEJMp0906917) was published on September 23, 2009, at NEJM.org.</P><br />
<P><STRONG>References</STRONG></P><br />
<OL compact><A name=R1><!-- null --></A><br />
<P></P><br />
<LI>Falk IS, Rorem CR, Ring MD. The costs of medical care: a summary of investigations on the economic aspects of the prevention and care of illness. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1933:515-93.<!-- HIGHWIRE ID="0:2009:NEJMp0906917v1:1" --> <!-- /HIGHWIRE --><A name=R2><!-- null --></A><br />
<LI>Gawande A. The cost conundrum: what a Texas town can teach us about health care. The New Yorker. June 1, 2009:36-44.<!-- HIGHWIRE ID="0:2009:NEJMp0906917v1:2" --><!-- /HIGHWIRE --><A name=R3><!-- null --></A><br />
<LI>Shih A, Davis K, Schoenbaum SC, Gautier A, Nuzum R, McCarthy D. Organizing the U.S. health care delivery system for high performance. New York: Commonwealth Fund, August 2008.<!-- HIGHWIRE ID="0:2009:NEJMp0906917v1:3" --><!-- /HIGHWIRE --><A name=R4><!-- null --></A><br />
<LI>Guterman S, Davis K, Schoenbaum SC, Shih A. Using Medicare payment policy to transform the health system: a framework for improving performance. Health Aff (Millwood) 2009;28:w238-w250.<!-- HIGHWIRE ID="0:2009:NEJMp0906917v1:4" --> <A href="http://content.nejm.org/cgi/ijlink?linkType=ABST&#038;journalCode=healthaff&#038;resid=28/2/w238" modo="false"><FONT color=#000000>[Free&nbsp;Full&nbsp;Text]</FONT></A><!-- /HIGHWIRE --><A name=R5><!-- null --></A><br />
<LI>Crosson FJ. Medicare: the place to start delivery system reform. Health Aff (Millwood) 2009;28:w232-w234.<!-- HIGHWIRE ID="0:2009:NEJMp0906917v1:5" --> <A href="http://content.nejm.org/cgi/ijlink?linkType=ABST&#038;journalCode=healthaff&#038;resid=28/2/w232"><FONT color=#000000>[Free&nbsp;Full&nbsp;Text]</FONT></A> </LI></OL></DIV></p>
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