Creating accountable care organizations: the extended hospital medical staff.

Many current policies and approaches to performance measurement and payment reform focus on individual providers; they risk reinforcing the fragmented care and lack of coordination experienced by patients with serious illness. In this paper we show that Medicare beneficiaries receive most of their care from relatively coherent local delivery systems comprising physicians and the hospitals where they work or admit their patients. Efforts to create accountable care organizations at this level--the extended hospital medical staff--deserve consideration as a potential means of improving the quality and lowering the cost of care.

[1]  Paul B Ginsburg,et al.  Hospital-physicians relations: cooperation, competition, or separation? , 2006, Health affairs.

[2]  L. Casalino The Federal Trade Commission, clinical integration, and the organization of physician practice. , 2006, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[3]  E. Fisher,et al.  Evaluating the efficiency of california providers in caring for patients with chronic illnesses. , 2005, Health affairs.

[4]  Francis J Crosson,et al.  The delivery system matters. , 2005, Health affairs.

[5]  E. Fisher,et al.  Variation in the tendency of primary care physicians to intervene. , 2005, Archives of internal medicine.

[6]  Sung-joon Min,et al.  Posthospital medication discrepancies: prevalence and contributing factors. , 2005, Archives of internal medicine.

[7]  Elliott S Fisher,et al.  Variations in the longitudinal efficiency of academic medical centers. , 2004, Health affairs.

[8]  B. Starfield,et al.  The medical home, access to care, and insurance: a review of evidence. , 2004, Pediatrics.

[9]  L. Casalino,et al.  Benefits of and barriers to large medical group practice in the United States. , 2003, Archives of internal medicine.

[10]  David Wennberg,et al.  The Implications of Regional Variations in Medicare Spending. Part 2: Health Outcomes and Satisfaction with Care , 2003, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[11]  Elliott S Fisher,et al.  Geography and the debate over Medicare reform. , 2002, Health affairs.

[12]  A M Zaslavsky,et al.  National Quality Monitoring of Medicare Health Plans: The Relationship Between Enrollees’ Reports and the Quality of Clinical Care , 2001, Medical care.

[13]  W. Manning,et al.  The Unreliability of Individual Physician “Report Cards” for Assessing the Costs and Quality of Care of a Chronic Disease , 2000 .

[14]  W. Knaus,et al.  Influence of Patient Preferences and Local Health System Characteristics on the Place of Death , 1998, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[15]  M. Miller,et al.  Proposals to control high-cost hospital medical staffs. , 1994, Health affairs.

[16]  N. Roos Linking Patients to Hospital: Defining Urban Hospital Service Populations , 1993, Medical care.

[17]  W. Welch Prospective payment to medical staffs: a proposal. , 1989, Health affairs.