Hospital response to a new case-based payment system in China: the patient selection effect

Author:

Zhang Xinyu12ORCID,Tang Shenglan234ORCID,Wang Ruixin1ORCID,Qian Mengcen15ORCID,Ying Xiaohua15ORCID,Maciejewski Matthew L6789ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Health, Fudan University , 130 Dong’an Road, Shanghai 200030, China

2. Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University , 310 Trent Drive, Durham, NC 27710, United States

3. Global Health Research Center, Duke Kunshan University , No. 8 Duke Avenue, Kunshan, Jiangsu 215316, China

4. SingHealth Duke-NUS Global Health Institute, Duke-NUS , 8 College Road, Singapore 169857, Singapore

5. Key Laboratory of Health Technology Assessment, National Health Commission (Fudan University) , 130 Dong’an Road, Shanghai 200030, China

6. Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation (ADAPT), Durham Veterans Affairs Health Care System , 508 Fulton Street, Durham, NC 27705, United States

7. Department of Population Health Sciences, Duke University , 215 Morris Street, Durham, NC 27701, United States

8. Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Duke University , 40 Duke Medicine Circle, Durham, NC 27710, United States

9. Duke-Margolis Health Policy Center, Duke University , 230 Science Drive, Durham, NC 27708, United States

Abstract

Abstract Providers have intended and unintended responses to payment reforms, such as China’s new case-based payment system, i.e. Diagnosis-Intervention Packet (DIP) under global budget, that classified patients based on the combination of principal diagnosis and procedures. Our study explores the impact of DIP payment reform on hospital selection of patients undergoing total hip/knee arthroplasty (THA/TKA) or with arteriosclerotic heart disease (AHD) from July 2017 to June 2021 in a large city. We used a difference-in-differences approach to compare the changes in patient age, severity reflected by the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), and a measure of treatment intensity [relative weight (RW)] in hospitals that were and were not subject to DIP incentives before and after the DIP payment reform in July 2019. Compared with non-DIP pilot hospitals, trends in patient age after the DIP reform were similar for DIP and non-DIP hospitals for both conditions, while differences in patient severity grew because severity in DIP hospitals increased more for THA/TKA (P = 0.036) or dropped in non-DIP hospitals for AHD (P = 0.011) following DIP reform. Treatment intensity (measured via RWs) for AHD patients in DIP hospitals increased 5.5% (P = 0.015) more than in non-DIP hospitals after payment reform, but treatment intensity trends were similar for THA/TKA patients in DIP and non-DIP hospitals. When the DIP payment reform in China was introduced just prior to the pandemic, hospitals subject to this reform responded by admitting sicker patients and providing more treatment intensity to their AHD patients. Policymakers need to balance between cost containment and the unintended consequences of prospective payment systems, and the DIP payment could also be a new alternative payment system for other countries.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

VA Health Services Research and Development

National Healthcare Security Research Center (Capital Medical University) in China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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