Implications of DRG Payments for Medical Intensive Care

Patients in the most prevalent DRGs in a Medical Intensive Care Unit (MICU) were compared with their counterparts who received only routine hospital care on adjusted total hospital costs and length of stay. Costs for both groups were compared with estimated DRG payments under an allpayer system. For patients in three DRGs, measures of severity of illness were examined as predictors of costs. Significant differences between MICU and routine care patients were found in 10 of 13 DRGs studied; intensive care costs were substantially above overall payment rates. The severity of illness measures varied widely in their correlation with costs, depending on DRG and whether the patients were MICU or routine care. These apparent differences in accounting costs may result in hospital decisions to restrict the number of MICU beds. Severity of illness adjustments to DRGs might produce more equitable payments. The most useful measure of severity may differ, however, depending on DRG.

[1]  J. Pettengill,et al.  Reliability and Validity in Hospital Case-Mix Measurement , 1982, Health care financing review.

[2]  W. Knaus,et al.  Statistical validation of a severity of illness measure. , 1983, American journal of public health.

[3]  S. Finkler The distinction between cost and charges. , 1982, Annals of internal medicine.

[4]  B. McNeil,et al.  Critical issues in medical technology , 1982 .

[5]  S. Horn,et al.  Measuring Severity of Illness: Homogeneous Case Mix Groups , 1983, Medical care.

[6]  Douglas P. Wagner,et al.  Acute physiology and chronic health evaluation (APACHE II) and Medicare reimbursement , 1984, Health care financing review.

[7]  B. S. Eisenberg Diagnosis-related groups, severity of illness, and equitable reimbursement under Medicare. , 1984, JAMA.

[8]  V. Fuchs,et al.  Case Mix, Costs, and Outcomes: Differences Between Faculty and Community Services in a University Hospital , 1984 .

[9]  S. Horn Facilities , 1983, American journal of public health.

[10]  D. McClish,et al.  Profile of medical ICU vs. ward patients in an acute care hospital , 1985, Critical care medicine.

[11]  W. Knaus,et al.  The Hidden Costs of Treating Severely 111 Patients: Charges and Resource Consumption in an Intensive Care Unit , 1983, Health care financing review.

[12]  D. E. Lawrence,et al.  APACHE—acute physiology and chronic health evaluation: a physiologically based classification system , 1981, Critical care medicine.

[13]  W. Knaus,et al.  The use of intensive care: new research initiatives and their implications for national health policy. , 1983, The Milbank Memorial Fund quarterly. Health and society.

[14]  K. Manton,et al.  The Use of Grade of Membership Analysis to Evaluate and Modify Diagnosis-related Groups , 1984, Medical care.

[15]  S. Lemeshow,et al.  Hospital charges and long‐term survival of ICU versus non‐ICU patients , 1982, Critical care medicine.