Audio

Payment Reform Needed: The Policy & Practice Podcast


 

The Institute of Medicine released a new report last week calling the U.S. health care system overly complex, inefficient, and wasteful. But there’s hope for a turn­around, it said, because of advances in computer technology and in the science of organizational management.

There won’t be improvement, howev­er, without a change in financial incen­tives for physicians and other providers, according to the IOM panel. It recom­mended that payers move away from the current system of paying for volume of services and instead reimburse physi­cians based on quality improvement, outcomes, and value.

Image Courtesy Sean Locke/istockphoto.com

The September issue of Health Affairs delves into the details of some of the payment reform proposals currently be­ing tested, including accountable care or­ganizations, bundled payments, and oth­er value-based payment models. At a briefing in Washington, D.C., experts agreed that the key to success with these models will be giving physicians flexibil­ity to tailor them to their own practices.

For more on that, and a rundown on the Democratic and Republican party platforms on health care, listen to this week’s Policy & Practice Podcast.

Mary Ellen Schneider

Recommended Reading

Malpractice Costs Continue to Drop
MDedge Neurology
Health Reform on the Campaign Trail: The Policy & Practice Podcast
MDedge Neurology
Docs See Slight Raise; Revenues Fall for Groups
MDedge Neurology
Stage 2 Meaningful Use Rule Delays Implementation
MDedge Neurology
Care Coordination Pilot Begins: The Policy & Practice Podcast
MDedge Neurology
It's Official: ICD-10 Delayed a Year
MDedge Neurology
Survey Finds Support for Health Reform
MDedge Neurology
Neurologists Saw Small Income Bump in 2011
MDedge Neurology
IOM: Technology, Incentives Can Fix Broken System
MDedge Neurology
Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs Still Cumbersome
MDedge Neurology