Alternative Payment Models and Associations With Stroke Outcomes, Spending, and Service Utilization: A Systematic Review

Author:

Brown Kelby12ORCID,El Husseini Nada13,Grimley Rohan4ORCID,Ranta Annemarei5ORCID,Kass-Hout Tareq6,Kaplan Samantha1,Kaufman Brystana G.278ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC (K.B., N.E.H., S.K.).

2. Margolis Center for Health Policy Duke University, Durham, NC (K.B., B.G.K.).

3. Department of Neurology, Duke University, Durham, NC (N.E.H.).

4. School of Medicine, Griffith University, Birtinya, Queensland, Australia (R.G.).

5. University of Otago School of Medicine, Wellington, New Zealand (A.R.).

6. Department of Neurology, The University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago, IL (T.K.-H.).

7. Population Health Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham NC (B.G.K.).

8. Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation (ADAPT), Durham VA Medical Center, NC (B.G.K.).

Abstract

Stroke contributes an estimated $28 billion to US health care costs annually, and alternative payment models aim to improve outcomes and lower spending over fee-for-service by aligning economic incentives with high value care. This systematic review evaluates historical and current evidence regarding the impacts of alternative payment models on stroke outcomes, spending, and utilization. Included studies evaluated alternative payment models in 4 categories: pay-for-performance (n=3), prospective payments (n=14), shared savings (n=5), and capitated payments (n=14). Pay-for-performance models were not consistently associated with improvements in clinical quality indicators of stroke prevention. Studies of prospective payments suggested that poststroke spending was shifted between care settings without consistent reductions in total spending. Shared savings programs, such as US Medicare accountable care organizations and bundled payments, were generally associated with null or decreased spending and service utilization and with no differences in clinical outcomes following stroke hospitalizations. Capitated payment models were associated with inconsistent effects on poststroke spending and utilization and some worsened clinical outcomes. Shared savings models that incentivize coordination of care across care settings show potential for lowering spending with no evidence for worsened clinical outcomes; however, few studies evaluated clinical or patient-reported outcomes, and the evidence, largely US-based, may not generalize to other settings.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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