Test 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Primary, Secondary, Tertiary levels of care

A

Primary: general visits
- Ex: PCP
Secondary: more specialized treatment
- Ex: ob/gyn or surgery
Tertiary: rare and complex care
-Ex: organ transplants

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2
Q

Regionalized model of healthcare

A

Highly structured
Base is primary care, organization upward as needed
General physician practitioners (GPs) practice exclusively at the primary care level
Relies on resources coordinated in a geographic region

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3
Q

Dispersed model of healthcare

A

More fluid model – allows patients to go where they wish, tertiary expertise emphasized
Primary care is spread among specialists, total supply of generalists

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4
Q

Why the dispersed model has grown in the U.S.

A
  1. Biomedical Model
    -Medical training was reformed with an emphasis on:
    - Academically oriented training
    - Technology and basic science
    - Specialist training
  2. Financial Incentives
    - Medicare encourages specialization through extra payments to hospitals to cover costs associated with residency training
    - Blue Shield - Reimbursement for specialized procedures - fees remained high despite the physician time needed for procedures declined
    - Hill Burton Hospital Construction Act of 1946: billions toward expansion of hospital capacity instead of ambulatory services
  3. Professionalism
    - Physicians have been sovereign, American Medical Association (AMA) has supported physician independence
    - System has been weighted toward hospital and specialty care
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5
Q

Arguments for and against a dispersed model

A

For:
- Pluralism enables providers and facilities to be more available
- Americans value choice of providers, access to specialists and technology

Against:
- It lacks coordination
- Quality of care can be maintained with use of fewer resources
- It is not consistent with the health needs of the majority of the population
- Costly

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6
Q

Vertical integration

A

Consolidates all levels of care, staff, and facilities under one organizational ownership

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7
Q

First generation HMOs - Kaiser Permanente Model

A

-Does not cover an entire population but responsible for delivering all services to a population of enrolled
-Physician group practice provides care to members under a capitated plan
-Enables a more population based model of health
-Vertical integration

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8
Q

Virtual integration

A

Hospitals and insurers recruit office based fee for service community physicians into an IPA creating a basis for an HMO and negotiate contracts with the physicians to provide care

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9
Q

Independent Practice Association Model (IPAs)

A
  • IPAs consist of independent, community-based physicians who maintain their own practices and fee-for-service arrangements
  • Allows insurers, etc. to respond to market changes by renegotiating contract bargains with providers
  • Has the advantage of low capital costs because the HMO does not have to own buildings
  • Virtual integration
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10
Q

Integrated Medical Group Model

A
  • Physicians do not own their practices but the medical group organization employs them
  • Virtual Integration
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11
Q

Health expenditures as a percent of GDP

A

-Total healthcare expenditure is the sum of public and private health expenditure. It covers the provision of health services (preventitive and curative), family planning activities, nutrition activites, and emergency aid designed for health

-In 2021 U.S. national health care expenditures were approximately 18% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

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12
Q

Health costs and outcomes model

A

-Provides a framework for discussion, analysis and decision making
- Enables examination of the relationship between healthcare costs and benefits in terms of improved health outcomes

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13
Q

Assumptions of Health costs and outcomes model

A
  • The relevent outcome of interest is the overall health of a population rather than one individual
  • It is possible to quantitate health at a population level
    -Y axis = health outcomes = aspects of health status directly under the influence of healthcare, not the broader economic and social factors
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14
Q

Examples of Painless Cost Control

A
  • Controlling fees and provider incomes
  • Cutting the price of pharmaceuticals and other supplies
  • Reducing administrative waste
  • Eliminating medical intervention of no benefit
  • Substituting less costly technologies that are equally effective
  • Increasing the provision of those preventive services that cost less than the illness they prevent
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15
Q

Types of Financing Controls

A
  • Competitive strategies (primary U.S Model): Health insurance plans compete on basis of price and market forces pressure plans to restrain their premium prices and overall costs as employers, employees, and individuals are more cost conscious in choosing plans
  • Regulatory strategies: Government regulation of taxes serves as a control over public expenditures for health care
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16
Q

Types of Reimbursement Controls

A

Changing the Unit of Payment
Patient Cost Sharing
Utilization Management
Supply Limits
Controlling the Type of Supply

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17
Q

What should cost containment policies focus on?

A

1- Macro-management issues of capacity and budgets (setting the supply thermostat)

2- Global cost containment tools
- Paying by capitation or aggregated method
- Limiting size and specialty mix of providers
- Concentrating high tech services regionally

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18
Q

Primary reasons why quality is lacking in the U.S.

A

Lack of access to care
Practice variations

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19
Q

Practice defects requiring change

A

Overuse
Underuse of effective care
Misuse and errors in medical waste
Inefficiency and waste

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20
Q

“Never Events”

A

Medicare/Aid have stopped reimbursing hospitals and physicians for:
- Surgery on the wrong body part or wrong patient
- Wrong surgery on a patient
- Foreign object left in patient after surgery
- Death/disability associated with intravascular air embolisms, incompatible blood, or hypoglycemia
- Stage 3 or 4 pressure ulcers after admission

21
Q

Donabedian’s quality assessment model:

A
  1. Structure
    - Facilities
    - hospital/place itself
    - Licensing and accreditation
    - Equipment
    - Staffing levels
    - Staff qualifications
    - Delivery system
  2. Process
    - Actual delivery of Services
    - Interpersonal aspects of care
    - Communication
    - Respect and dignity
    - Compassion and concern
    - Technical aspects of care
    - Diagnosis and treatment procedures
    - Waiting time
    - Cost of services
  3. Outcomes
22
Q

What is Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS)?

A

Used increasingly to evaluate the quality of health plans operating in the US

Goal is to compare performance and publicize that information to help clinicians improve clinical care and to counter financial incentives to restrict appropriate care

23
Q

Indicators of Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS)

A

Children immunized
Mammograms
Pap smears
Prenatal exams
Eye exams for diabetic patients
Osteoporosis screnning
Flu shots
BMI Assessment

24
Q

Proposals to improve quality of healthcare

A

Licensure, Accreditation, and Peer Review
Clinical practice guidelines
Measuring practice patterns
Continuous quality improvement
Electronic health records
AI
Interdisciplinary teams
Public reporting of quality
Pay for performance
Balancing payment incentives

25
Q

Clinical Decision Making Models - Four-Box model

A
  1. Medical indications
    - The goals of medicine
  2. Patient preferences
    - Examination of the patient’s ability to participate in decision-making must be considered.
  3. Quality of life
    - Third-party assessment (Whose responsibility is it to decide when the patient cannot?)
  4. Contextual features
    - External issues to consider such as economic constraints, family preferences, burdens on caregivers, other psychosocial parameters, and legal issues
26
Q

Patient Self-Determination Act

A

All health care facilities receiving Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement are required to ask patients if they possess formal advance directives.

This act also directs these facilities to provide patient education regarding their rights in relation to these documents

27
Q

Decision making capacity and competence

A

Competence assumed in adults unless proven otherwise in a court of law (a global description)

DMC - Criterion applied clinically to assess a patient’s ability to make authentic, self-determining decisions (task specific)

28
Q

A Patient is determined to have DMC if he/she:

A

Can comprehend the clinical information being presented regarding his/her condition

Can understand each of the treatment or NON-treatment options and their consequences

Has the ability to make and communicate a choice

Can demonstrate a rational thought process in weighing the risks and benefits in relation to his/her personal, authentic values

29
Q

Advance directive

A

A legal document that allows an individual to state his/her wishes for future medical decisions under certain qualifying conditions

30
Q

Types of Advanced Directives

A

Living Will
DPAHC (Durable Power of Atty. For Health Care)
Informal Advance Directives

31
Q

Living Will

A

Written request to forego life-sustaining treatments in the event of a terminal condition when the patient lacks DMC

31
Q

Durable power of attorney

A

Allows an individual to name a proxy or surrogate decision-maker who can speak for him/her should he or she become unable to participate in medical decision-making

32
Q

Informal advance directives

A

Statements a person has made regarding certain health care situations and treatments, or a physician documentation of a discussion of the patient’s wishes regarding future health care

33
Q

Substitute judgment

A

Making decisions the patient would have, based on his/her values and preferences

33
Q

Surrogate (Proxy) Decision-Maker

A

One who has the moral and legal authority to make decisions for an individual who cannot make decisions for him/herself. The proxy can be assigned through an advance directive or informally in certain circumstances

34
Q

Best interest standard

A

In the absence of knowledge of what decision the patient would have made, making a decision that is felt to be in the patient’s ‘best interest’

35
Q

Informed consent

A

A formal process is undergone between the patient and the health care provider during which the patient is informed of the risks and benefits of a proposed diagnostic procedure or treatment. It may or may not include the signing of a formal document, but should always involve a discussion between the patient and the professional responsible for administering the procedure

36
Q

Assent

A

The informal agreement obtained from a person who is unable to fully participate in the informed consent process, but who can provide a preference related to medical care

37
Q

Refusal of treatment

A

Adults who possess DMC have the right to refuse medical treatment; even life-sustaining treatment

A surrogate decision-maker has the right to refuse medical treatment for a non-capacitant individual provided the decision is made based on the patient’s values, expressed wishes, or (lastly) on what is considered to be in the patient’s ‘best interest’

38
Q

4 main components of reform under the ACA

A

Individual mandate
Employer Mandate
Medicaid Expansion
Insurance Market Regulation

38
Q

Withholding treatment vs withdrawing treatment

A

Withholding and withdrawal of care are viewed equal under the law and within the principles of healthcare ethics, however they feel different from a psychological perspective for those involved.

39
Q

Employer “pay or play” requirements

A

Employers with more than 50 employees now have approximately a $2000/employee penalty excluding the first 30 employees if they don’t offer an employer sponsored plan to at least 95% of full time employees

40
Q

Small business tax credits

A

Employers with fewer than 25 employees with an average yearly wage less than $50,000 can purchase employee health insurance with a tax credit up to 35% of the employer’s contribution

41
Q

What is a Health Insurance exchange

A

A portal where people can shop for individual health insurance

People between 133-400% of federal poverty level can buy private policies with premium and cost sharing credits 133% of FPL ($20,784 for a single person)

42
Q

Efforts that will contain costs

A

An innovation center has been created in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Medicare payments are reduced to hospitals for excess admissions and hospital acquired infections

FDA is approving more generic drugs

Waste, fraud, and abuse will be monitored more vigorously

43
Q

Weakness of regulatory cost containment strategy

A

Increasing taxes is a political process
Inadequate tax support can result in budget deficits

44
Q

Weakness of competitive cost containment strategy

A

The US has not been successful in controlling costs or quantity of care

Result is rising insurance plan premiums

45
Q
A