Early impacts of the Pennsylvania Rural Health Model on potentially avoidable utilization

Author:

Bourne Donald S1ORCID,Roberts Eric T2ORCID,Sabik Lindsay M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health , Pittsburgh, PA 15261 , United States

2. Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, and Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics , Philadelphia, PA 19104 , United States

Abstract

Abstract The Pennsylvania Rural Health Model (PARHM) is a novel alternative payment model for rural hospitals that aims to test whether hospital-based global budgets, coupled with delivery transformation plans, improve the quality of health care and health outcomes in rural communities. Eighteen hospitals joined PARHM in 3 cohorts between 2019 and 2021. This study assessed PARHM’s impact on changes in potentially avoidable utilization (PAU)—a measure of admission rates policymakers explicitly targeted for improvement in PARHM. Using a difference-in-differences analysis and all-payer hospital discharge data for Pennsylvania hospitals from 2016 through 2022, we found no significant overall reduction in community-level PAU rates up to 4 years post–PARHM implementation, relative to changes in rural Pennsylvania communities whose hospitals did not join PARHM. However, heterogeneous treatment effects were observed across cohorts that joined PARHM in different years, and between critical access vs prospective payment system hospitals. These findings offer insight into how alternative payment models in rural health care settings may have heterogeneous impacts based on contextual factors and highlight the importance of accounting for these factors in proposed expansions of alternative payment models for rural health systems.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference42 articles.

1. The rising rate of rural hospital closures;Kaufman;J Rural Health,2016

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