TY - JOUR
T1 - Aligning quality and payment for heart failure care
T2 - Defining the challenges
AU - Havranek, Edward P.
AU - Krumholz, Harlan M.
AU - Dudley, R. Adams
AU - Adams, Kirkwood
AU - Gregory, Douglas
AU - Lampert, Steven
AU - Lindenfeld, Joann
AU - Massie, Barry M.
AU - Pina, Ileana
AU - Restaino, Susan
AU - Rich, Michael W.
AU - Konstam, Marvin A.
PY - 2003/8
Y1 - 2003/8
N2 - Hospitals may not support programs that improve the quality of care delivered to heart failure patients because these programs lower readmission rates and empty beds, and therefore further diminish already-declining revenues. A conflict between the highest quality of care and financial solvency does not serve the interests of patients, physicians, hospitals, or payers. In principle, resolution of this conflict-is simple: reimbursement systems should reward higher quality care. In practice, resolving the conflict is not simple. A recent roundtable discussion sponsored by the Heart Failure Society of America identified 4 major challenges to the design and implementation of reimbursement schemes that promote higher quality care for heart failure: defining quality, accounting for differences in disease severity, crafting novel payment mechanisms, and overcoming professional parochialism. This article describes each of these challenges in turn.
AB - Hospitals may not support programs that improve the quality of care delivered to heart failure patients because these programs lower readmission rates and empty beds, and therefore further diminish already-declining revenues. A conflict between the highest quality of care and financial solvency does not serve the interests of patients, physicians, hospitals, or payers. In principle, resolution of this conflict-is simple: reimbursement systems should reward higher quality care. In practice, resolving the conflict is not simple. A recent roundtable discussion sponsored by the Heart Failure Society of America identified 4 major challenges to the design and implementation of reimbursement schemes that promote higher quality care for heart failure: defining quality, accounting for differences in disease severity, crafting novel payment mechanisms, and overcoming professional parochialism. This article describes each of these challenges in turn.
KW - Heart failure management
KW - Quality of care
KW - Reimbursement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=10744224297&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1054/jcaf.2003.30
DO - 10.1054/jcaf.2003.30
M3 - Article
C2 - 13680543
AN - SCOPUS:10744224297
SN - 1071-9164
VL - 9
SP - 251
EP - 254
JO - Journal of cardiac failure
JF - Journal of cardiac failure
IS - 4
ER -