TY - JOUR
T1 - Global budget versus cost ceiling: a natural experiment in hospital payment reform in the Netherlands
AU - Gaspar, Katalin
AU - Portrait, France Rose Marie
AU - van der Hijden, Eric
AU - Koolman, Xander
PY - 2020/2
Y1 - 2020/2
N2 - Global budget (GB) arrangements have become a popular method worldwide to control the rise in healthcare expenditures. By guaranteeing hospital funding, payers hope to eliminate the drive for increased production, and incentivize providers to deliver more efficient care and lower utilization. We evaluated the introduction of GB contracts by certain large insurers in Dutch hospital care in 2012 and compared health care utilization to those insurers who continued with more traditional production-based contracts, i.e., cost ceiling (CC) contracts. We used the share of GB hospital funding per postal code region to study the effect of contract types. Our findings show that having higher share of GB financing was associated with lower growth in treatment intensity, but it was also associated with higher growth in the probability of having at least one hospital visit. While the former finding is in line with our expectation, the latter is not and suggests that hospital visits may take longer to respond to contract incentives. Our study covers the years of 2010–2013 (2 years before and 2 years following the introduction of the new contracts). Therefore, our results capture only short-term effects.
AB - Global budget (GB) arrangements have become a popular method worldwide to control the rise in healthcare expenditures. By guaranteeing hospital funding, payers hope to eliminate the drive for increased production, and incentivize providers to deliver more efficient care and lower utilization. We evaluated the introduction of GB contracts by certain large insurers in Dutch hospital care in 2012 and compared health care utilization to those insurers who continued with more traditional production-based contracts, i.e., cost ceiling (CC) contracts. We used the share of GB hospital funding per postal code region to study the effect of contract types. Our findings show that having higher share of GB financing was associated with lower growth in treatment intensity, but it was also associated with higher growth in the probability of having at least one hospital visit. While the former finding is in line with our expectation, the latter is not and suggests that hospital visits may take longer to respond to contract incentives. Our study covers the years of 2010–2013 (2 years before and 2 years following the introduction of the new contracts). Therefore, our results capture only short-term effects.
KW - Global budget
KW - Policy evaluation
KW - Provider incentive
KW - Provider payment
KW - Regulated competition
KW - The Netherlands
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U2 - 10.1007/s10198-019-01114-6
DO - 10.1007/s10198-019-01114-6
M3 - Article
SN - 1618-7598
VL - 21
SP - 105
EP - 114
JO - European Journal of Health Economics
JF - European Journal of Health Economics
IS - 1
ER -