PATTERNS OF AMBULATORY HEALTH-CARE IN 5 DIFFERENT DELIVERY SYSTEMS

被引:55
|
作者
DUTTON, DB
机构
[1] Health Services Research Division, Department of Family, Community and Preventive Medicine, Stanford University, School of Medicine, Stanford, CA
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00005650-197903000-00001
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Few empirical investigations permit systematic comparison of the impact of widely-varying delivery systems within a single population sample. This study provides such a comparison, describing patterns of ambulatory care among patients using five different systems in Washington, D.C. As a regular source of health care: Solo practice, fee-for-service group practice, prepaid group practice, public clinics, and hospital outpatient departments or emergency rooms. Comparisons are adjusted statistically to account for major patient group variations, and the results reveal substantial differences among the five systems. Sources used primarily by the poor-hospital outpatient departments, emergency rooms, and public clinics-contained important structural and financial barriers, and had the lowest rates of patient-initiated use. The prepaid system, in contrast, maximized patients’ access to both preventive care and symptomatic care, and did not seem to inhibit physician-controlled follow-up care. The results suggest some perverse effects of fee-for-service payment: patients, especially poor patients, appeared to be deterred from seeking preventive and symptomatic care, while physicians were encouraged to expand follow-up services. Moreover, services in fee-for-service systems were distributed less equitably relative to both income and medical need than in the prepaid system. These findings have direct implications for policy decisions concerning organizational and financial arrangements for the delivery of ambulatory care. © J. B. Lippincott Co.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 243
页数:23
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