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Kinder and Gentler: Physicians and Managed Care, 1997-2001Tracking Report No. 5 espite the managed care backlash, an overwhelming majority of U.S. physicians continue to contract with managed care health plans. In fact, according to a new Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) study, between 1997 and 2001 physicians reported a modest increase in the proportion of practice revenue from managed care contracts and the average number of contracts. At the same time, the nature of physicians relationships with health plans changed, with a significant decrease in plans use of capitation, or fixed monthly payments for each patient regardless of the amount of care provided. Meanwhile, physician practices moved away from using direct financial incentives to influence doctors clinical decision making, but did experience an increase in the overall influence of treatment guidelines and other practices commonly associated with managed care.
The Rise and Fall of Managed Care?anaged care plans achieved remarkable success in slowing health care cost trends in the mid-1990s. The reversal from high cost growth earlier in the decade was due, in part, to plans tightly managing access to care through such tools as primary care physicians (PCPs) acting as gatekeepers to specialists, requiring hospital admission preauthorizations and limiting patients choice of doctors and hospitals through narrow provider networks. But consumers and physicians rebelled against plans increased oversight and care restrictions. Despite this backlash, and scattered reports of physicians opting out of managed care contracts altogether, more than nine of 10 physicians in 1997 and 2001 owned or were members of a medical practice that had at least one contract with a managed care plan (Figure 1). Among physicians with managed care plan contracts, total average practice revenue from managed care plans actually increased to 46 percent in 2001, up from 43 percent in 1997 (see Table 1). Primary care physicians continued to receive a greater share of total revenue from managed care plans in 2001 than did specialists (49.7% versus 43.1%). Moreover, the average number of managed care plan contracts among physicians with at least one such contract increased from 12.4 in 1997 to 13.1 in 2001, probably reflecting plans response to consumer desires for broader physician networks. This small increase may actually understate the degree to which managed care plans broadened their provider networks. There was considerable consolidation among insurers between 1997 and 2001, and this would be expected to reduce the average number of physicians managed care plan contracts. In recent years, enrollment in preferred provider organizations (PPOs) has grown substantially at the expense of health maintenance organization (HMO) enrollment.1 This is likely due to PPOs tendency to place fewer restrictions on health care service use and allow more direct access to specialists. Despite this enrollment shift, primary care physicians in 2001 acted as gatekeepers for 44.6 percent of their patients, 3.6 percentage points greater than in 1997. Nearly all of this growth occurred before 1999, however, when HMO enrollment was still expanding. From 1999 to 2001, the use of primary care physicians acting as gatekeepers held steady.2 Figure 1Physicians and Managed Care Plan Contracts, 2001 Source: HSC Community Tracking Study Physician Survey Note: Estimates for 2001 are not statistically different from 1997.
Back to TopRisk Contracting Declineslthough managed care plans maintained a strong role in the practices of most doctors, the nature of physicians relationships with health plans changed between 1997 and 2001, with a significant decrease in health plans use of capitation, or fixed per-patient, monthly payments. Also known as risk contracting, capitation offers strong financial incentives to physicians to limit the amount of care provided to patients. Among physicians who owned or were members of a practice with at least one managed care plan contract, the proportion whose practice derived at least some revenue from capitation dropped about 9 percentage points to 48.6 percent in 2001 (see Table 2). This trend was evident among both primary care physicians and specialists, although specialists continued to be much less likely than primary care physicians to be in a practice receiving capitated payments—36.4 percent versus 66.7 percent in 2001. Among physicians whose practice did receive capitated payments, the portion of practice revenue from capitation remained unchanged between 1997 and 2001 after rising slightly in 1999.
Back to TopUse of Financial Incentivesoth health plans and physician practices sometimes tie specific financial incentives to overall compensation to influence physicians clinical decision making. These incentives include profiling—comparing a physicians pattern of medical resource use with those of other physicians—results of patient satisfaction surveys and quality of care measures such as rates of preventive care. Between 1997 and 2001, less than a third of all physicians had their overall compensation tied to specific financial incentives at the practice level (see Table 3). Use of profiling tied to physicians compensation declined to 12.2 percent in 2001, from 15.6 percent of physicians in 1997. Primary care physicians experienced a proportionally greater decline (25%) than did specialists (19%). There was no statistically significant change from 1997 to 2001 in the extent to which physicians compensation was tied to patient satisfaction surveys or quality measures. Nearly one-quarter (23.6%) of physicians reported that patient satisfaction survey results were used in determining their compensation in 2001, and about 17 percent of physicians reported that specific measures of quality of care, such as rates of preventive care services for their patients, were used in determining compensation. Primary care physicians were more likely to be subject to these types of incentives than were specialists (29.4% versus 19.8% for patient satisfaction incentives, and 23.8% versus 13.1% for quality measure incentives).
Back to TopImpact of Care Management Tools Growshile relatively few physicians are subject to explicit financial incentives, such tools as profiling, patient satisfaction surveys and treatment guidelines have broader applications for care management. Over time, the influence of these tools on physicians practice of medicine appears to be growing, regardless of whether they are tied to compensation. 3 Between 1997 and 2001, the proportion of physicians reporting that feedback from patient satisfaction surveys had a "very large," "large" or "moderate" effect on their practice of medicine increased by nearly 4 percentage points to 61.6 percent (see Table 4). The effect of profiling increased as well, but only among primary care physicians. In 2001, 40.1 percent of primary care physicians reported that profiling affected their practice of medicine, compared with just over 37 percent in 1997. Specialists remained less likely than primary care physicians to be affected by profiling, with 30.4 percent affected in 2001. Treatment guidelines promoted by government and professional medical organizations signal a growing trend toward evidence-based medicine, and managed care plans often encourage physicians to consider guidelines in their medical practice. Between 1997 and 2001, the number of conditions for which treatment guidelines were developed grew, and the percentage of physicians reporting that treatment guidelines had a "very large,""large" or "moderate" effect on their practice of medicine increased by more than 10 percentage points to 56.2 percent. The pro-portion of primary care physicians affected by treatment guidelines increased 15 percentage points, to 60.7 percent in 2001, while the percentage of specialists affected by guidelines increased over 7 percentage points, to 53.2 percent over the same period.
Back to TopLoosening the Griphe managed care backlash has altered the relationship between health plans and physicians—not toward less managed care, but, rather, to a kinder, gentler managed care. Managed cares loosened grip on physicians is likely a contributing factor to a return to double-digit health care spending increases in 2001.4 To the extent health plans are introducing new ways to influence physicians clinical decision making today, there are signs that the focus is on quality, i.e., rewarding physicians who meet certain care standards. An example is the Pay for Performance initiative launched recently by six California insurers where physicians receive additional payments for meeting quality measures. Unlike the 1990s, when health plans cost-containment efforts focused on lower provider payments and influencing physician behavior, the emphasis today appears to be on influencing patient behavior through greater cost sharing in the form of deductibles, coinsurance and copayments. Continued cost pressures, the limits of a patient-focused approach and the possibility of a backlash from patients, however, may bring the spotlight back to ways to influence physicians medical decisions. Back to TopData Sourceshis Tracking Report presents findings from the HSC Community Tracking Study Physician Survey, a nationally representative telephone survey of physicians involved in direct patient care in the continental United States conduct-ed in 1996-97, 1998-99 and 2000-01. For discussion and presentation, we refer to a single calendar year of the survey (1997, 1999 and 2001). The sample of physicians was drawn from the American Medical Association and the American Osteopathic Association master files and included active, nonfederal, office- and hospital-based physicians who spent at least 20 hours a week in direct patient care. Residents and fellows were excluded. Each round of the survey contains information on approximately 12,000 physicians, and the response rate ranged from 60 percent to 65 percent. Back to TopNotes
Back to Top TRACKING REPORTS are published by the Center for Studying Health System Change. |
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