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The Effects of Competition and Bundled Payment on Patient Reported Outcome Measures After Hip Replacement Surgery

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Health Services
Date 2021 Apr 27
PMID 33902580
Citations 3
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Abstract

Background: Competition-promoting reforms and economic incentives are increasingly being introduced worldwide to improve the performance of healthcare delivery. This study considers such a reform which was initiated in 2009 for elective hip replacement surgery in Stockholm, Sweden. The reform involved patient choice of provider, free establishment of new providers and a bundled payment model. The study aimed to examine its effects on hip replacement surgery quality as captured by patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) of health gain (as indicated by the EQ-5D index and a visual analogue scale (VAS)), pain reduction (VAS) and patient satisfaction (VAS) one and six years after the surgery.

Methods: Using patient-level data collected from multiple national registers, we applied a quasi-experimental research design. Data were collected for elective primary total hip replacements that were carried out between 2008 and 2012, and contain information on patient demography, the surgery and PROMs at baseline and at one- and six-years follow-up. In total, 36,627 observations were included in the analysis. First, entropy balancing was applied in order to reduce differences in observable characteristics between treatment groups. Second, difference-in-difference analyses were conducted to eliminate unobserved time-invariant differences between treatment groups and to estimate the causal treatment effects.

Results: The entropy balancing was successful in creating balance in all covariates between treatment groups. No significant effects of the reform were found on any of the included PROMs at one- and six-years follow-up. The sensitivity analyses showed that the results were robust.

Conclusions: Competition and bundled payment had no effects on the quality of hip replacement surgery as captured by post-surgery PROMs of health gain, pain reduction and patient satisfaction. The study provides important insights to the limited knowledge on the effects of competition and economic incentives on PROMs.

Citing Articles

The Impact of Hospital Competition on the Quality of Care in Europe: A Systematic Review.

Timofeyev Y, Goldenova V, Mantaeva E, Jakovljevic M Healthcare (Basel). 2024; 12(22).

PMID: 39595417 PMC: 11593865. DOI: 10.3390/healthcare12222218.


Comparative analysis of the quality of life regarding patients who underwent hip replacement in public versus private hospitals in Hungary.

Kajos L, Molics B, Than P, Gobel G, Elmer D, Ponusz-Kovacs D Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):10031.

PMID: 38693216 PMC: 11063203. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-60720-4.


Effects of competition and bundled payment on the performance of hip replacement surgery in Stockholm, Sweden: results from a quasi-experimental study.

Goude F, Garellick G, Kittelsen S, Malchau H, Peltola M, Rehnberg C BMJ Open. 2022; 12(7):e061077.

PMID: 35835527 PMC: 9289036. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061077.

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