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managed-care-web-final.pdf

Alan Maynard and Karen Bloor

Introduction by John Wyn Owen

Nuffield Occasional Papers Health Economics Series: Paper No. 8

Managed Care Panacea or Palliation?

TITLES OF O CCASIONAL PAPERS: HEALTH ECONOMICS SERIES

1. Mergers in the NHS: Made in Heaven or Marriages of Convenience? Maria Goddard and Brian Ferguson

2. Devolved Purchasing in Health Care: A Review of the Issues. Peter Smith

3. Going for Gold: The Redistributive Agenda Behind Market-Based Health Care Reform. Robert Evans

4. A Social Contract for 21st Century American Health Care: Three Tier Health Care with Bounty Hunting. Uwe Reinhardt

5. Who Pays for and Who Gets Health Care? Equity in the Finance and Delivery of Health Care in the United Kingdom. Carol Propper

6. Future Hospital Services in the NHS: One Size Fits All? Peter West

7. Economic Evaluation and Health Care. John Cairns

8. Managed Care: Panacea or Palliation? Alan Maynard and Karen Bloor

Managed Care Panacea or Palliation?

Alan Maynard York Health Economics Consortium

Karen Bloor Department of Health Sciences and Clinical Evaluation, University of York

Introduction by John Wyn Owen

Series Editor Professor Alan Maynard

Nuffield Occasional Papers Health Economics Series: Paper No. 8

Published by

The Nuffield Trust

59 New Cavendish Street

London W1M 7RD

ISBN 1-902089-09-X

© Nuffield Trust 1998

Publications Committee

Sir Derek Mitchell KCB, CVO

Professor John Ledingham DM, FRCP

Mr John Wyn Owen CB

2

5 About the Authors

6 Introduction

8 Foreword

10 Abstract

11 Managed Care and the Goals of Health Policy

18 Managed Care: Structure and Process

34 Implications of Managed Care Techniques for the

UK National Health Service

44 Conclusions

46 References

3

CONTENTS

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

4

Alan Maynard is Professor of Health Economics at the University of

York. He was Founding Director of the University of York’s Centre for

Health Economics (1983-1995) and Secretary of the Nuffield

Provincial Hospitals Trust (1995-1996). He is a Visiting Professor at

the University of Manchester, the London School of Economics,

United Medical and Dental Schools (St Thomas’s Campus), and a

Visiting Professorial Fellow at the King’s Fund Institute.

Karen Bloor is a Research Fellow in Health Economics at the

Department of Health Sciences and Clinical Evaluation at the

University of York. Her research interests include the application of

economics to health policy, labour markets in health care and the

regulation of the pharmaceutical industry.

Editor’s Acknowledgements

This series of Occasional Papers was generously supported by the

Nuffield Trust. In addition to the help and support from all the authors

and the referees of their papers the editor would like to acknowledge

the valuable and generous managerial and editorial assistance

provided by Karen Bloor and Frances Sharp of the University of York.

5

AB OUT THE AUTHORS

The government is once again undertaking a comprehensive health

spending review. Sustainable financing of health care with appropriate

mechanisms for individual community and national priority setting

are important public policy objectives which have been under scrutiny

over many years and must now be addressed with some urgency. The

Trust has informed this debate in the past and will continue to do so.

These Occasional Papers offer the economists’ contribution and

should be of interest to policy-makers at the highest level as they strive

to improve the effectiveness of the National Health Service, improve

patient care and create the right incentives to reward efficient

performance within inevitable financial constraints.

Paper 8 – Managed Care: Panacea or Palliation? – by Alan Maynard and

Karen Bloor, defines managed care as the practice of funding agencies

using purchasing power to control prices and the activity of clinicians

and their patients. This exemplifies the transition of purchasers of

health care from being passive price takers who accepted provider rates

and activities to aggressive price and activity makers who determine

rates, volumes and the content of care.

Maynard and Bloor point out that the managed care revolution in the

USA has stabilised the share of national income spent on health care at

around 13.6% of gross domestic product – approximately twice the

amount spent per capita in this country but with much greater

inequality in access to care.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

6

INTRODUCTION

They conclude that simple emulation of US managed care would be

naïve and inappropriate. All health care markets require to be

‘managed’ but this regulation should be based on evidence of effective

or at least palliative politics, rather than rhetoric suggesting a panacea

in health care.

John Wyn Owen

April 1998

7

The application of economic analysis to health and health care

has grown rapidly in recent decades. Alan Williams’ conversion of

Archie Cochrane to the virtues of the economic approach led the latter

to conclude that:

“allocation of funds and facilities are nearly always based on

the opinion of consultants but, more and more, requests for

additional facilities will have to be based on detailed

arguments with ‘hard evidence’ as to the gain to be expected

from the patient’s angle and the cost. Few could possibly

object to this.” *

During most of the subsequent twenty-five years many clinicians have

ignored Cochrane’s arguments whilst economists busily colonised the

minds of those receptive to their arguments. More recently clinicians

and policy makers have come to equate, erroneously of course, health

economics with economic evaluation. Thus the architects of the

Department of Health’s R&D strategy have insisted that all clinical

trials should have economic components and tended to ignore the

broader framework of policy in which economic techniques can be

used to inform policy choices by clinicians, managers and politicians. †

The purpose of this series of Occasional Papers on health economics is

to demonstrate how this broad approach to the use of economic

techniques in policy analysis can inform choices across a wide

spectrum of issues which have challenged decision makers for decades.

The authors do not offer ‘final solutions’ but demonstrate the

complexity of their subjects and how economics can provide useful

insights into the processes by which the performance of the NHS and

other health care systems can be enhanced.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

8

FOREWORD

The papers in this series are stimulating and informative, offering

readers unique insights into many aspects of health care policy which

will continue to challenge decision makers in the next decade

regardless of the form of government or the structure of health care

finance and delivery.

Professor Alan Maynard

University of York

* Cochrane AL. Effectiveness and Efficiency: random reflections on health services. Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust, London, 1972.

† Maynard A and Chalmers I (eds). Non-random Reflections on Health Services Research: on the 25th anniversary of Archie Cochrane’s Effectiveness and Efficiency.

British Medical Journal Publishing, London, 1997.

9

Managed care involves the purchasers of health care transforming

themselves from being price takers, where they passively pay providers

the ‘usual, customary and reasonable’ rate for the task, into price

makers, contracting more aggressively to control prices and the

activities of providers and patients. In the United States, managed care

was a response to cost inflation and to continued observation of

variations in medical practices and other apparent inefficiencies. Cost

inflation in health care limits the profits and international

competitiveness of US industry, and variations in care are of

considerable concern to consumers.

The managed care revolution in the USA has stabilised the share of

national income spent on health care at around 13.6 per cent of gross

domestic product (GDP). This is still approximately twice the amount

spent per capita in the UK, with much greater inequality in access to

care. The rewards of hospitals, doctors and pharmaceutical companies

have been restricted, with resources switched to increased expenditure

on management, information technology, marketing and profits.

Simple emulation of US managed care in the UK would be naïve and

inappropriate. Many of its policies are however central to current

British health care policies. US and UK health care systems have many

common concerns, many similar policy responses to these concerns,

and similar propensities to avoid evidence based policy formulation.

The US managed care industry has proved a potentially short term

palliative intervention, but is is not a panacea.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

10

ABSTRACT

What is managed care?

Managed care is the practice of funding agencies (usually insurers)

using purchasing power vigorously to control prices and the activity of

clinicians and their patients. This ‘industry’ exemplifies the transition

of purchasers of health care from being passive price takers who

accepted provider rates and activities, to aggressive price and activity

makers who determine rates, volumes and the content of care.

The term ‘managed care’ describes a variety of different models of

health care finance and delivery. It is defined by Iglehart1 as:

...a system that, in varying degrees, integrates the financing and

delivery of medical care through contracts with selected physicians

and hospitals that provide comprehensive health care services to

enrolled members for a predetermined monthly premium. All

forms of managed care represent attempts to control costs by

modifying the behaviour of doctors, although they do so in

different ways.

Managed care consists of a variety of strategies to control both the

utilisation of health services and their costs, and in some ways can

resemble the pre-1989 NHS in terms of integrating finance and

delivery of care.

Goals of health policy

The use of the market mechanism in health care, managed or

unmanaged, is a means of achieving health policy goals. Generally

governments seek macro-economic cost control, efficiency and equity

in health care, with a priority ranking which can be implicit and shift

in an uncertain manner.

11

MANAGED CARE AND THE GOALS OF HEALTH POLICY

There are two schools of thought about the means to control health

care expenditure: those who argue that competition and/or a regulated

market can, by producing greater efficiency, control costs; and those

who believe that markets are often captured by providers, intent on

often inefficient demand generation, and therefore costs can be

controlled only by cash limited prospective budget setting. The market

position is adopted, with varying degrees of regulation, by many US

economists, for example Pauly2 argues for little regulation, and

Enthoven3 and others argue for extensive regulation. The acceptance of

markets in health care is a product of US ideology, with its suspicion

of government intervention, originating from colonial times and

remaining strongly today. Other leading US health economists

(e.g. Hsiao4 and Reinhardt5) reject the market and favour the use of

global cash limited budgets in health care.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

12

MANAGED CARE AND THE GOALS OF HEALTH POLICY

Figure 1: The expenditure – income identity

Source: Reinhardt 19787

Providers

Capitation payments

General taxation

Social ‘insurance’

Private insurance

User charges/ copayments

Fee per item of service

Salaries

Healthcare Budget

Households

The latter’s rejection of markets in health care is supported by most

non-US health economists. They argue that cost control can only be

achieved by the use of cash limited prospective budgets which are tax

financed, and by Government resistance to the self interested advocacy

of provider groups.6,7,8 Households can pay for health care from one or

more of the four funding pipes in Figure 1: tax, social insurance

(disguised taxation), private insurance and user charges (levied by

public or private agencies). Households fund all health care

expenditure from one or more of these sources. Health care purchasers

buy services and goods from health care providers, paying them by

salary, fee per item of service or by capitation. The expenditure of

households creates, and is always equal to, the income of providers.

Provider advocacy of increased expenditure on health care is

essentially a demand by doctors, nurses, drug companies and hospitals

for increased incomes, often on the basis of little or no information

about the cost-effectiveness of the investments they advocate. Such

advocacy has always to be analysed carefully to ensure it is in the public

interest, and not merely in the interest of providers.

Whilst evidence is limited,9 the European-Canadian consensus is that

fragmented funding leads to cost inflation. US expenditure inflation is

therefore not surprising but a product of the lack of control over

funding due to disparate groups independently harnessing family

incomes to finance health care.

The pursuit of efficiency in health care systems was until recently lost

in the ‘noise’ of disputes about cost control. The lack of focus on

efficiency was also the product of a widespread belief by public and

private funders, that providers were, due to professional regulation,

behaving in the interests of the public and therefore ensuring that

scarce resources were used efficiently.

13

Cumulatively over the last two decades concern increased about the

inefficiency of resource allocation. The radical and foresighted doctor

AL Cochrane10 argued over 25 years ago that:

Allocations of funds and facilities are nearly always based on the

opinions of senior consultants, but, more and more, requests for

additional facilities will have to be based on detailed arguments

with ‘hard evidence’ as to the gain to be expected from the

patient’s angle and the cost. Few can possibly object to this.

The discretion of doctors, afforded to them by autonomy which

permitted clinical and cost ineffectiveness, produced both large

variations in practice and also inappropriate care throughout the world:

Our study shows that inappropriate care, even in the face of

waiting lists, is a significant problem in Trent. In particular, by the

standards of the UK panel, one half of coronary angiographs were

performed for equivocal or inappropriate reasons, and two-fifths

of CABGs were performed for similar reasons. Even by the more

liberal US criteria, the ratings were 29% equivocal or

inappropriate for coronary angiography and 33% equivocal or

inappropriate for CABG. 11

In the absence of allocation by the price mechanism in publicly

financed health care systems, resources are allocated on the basis of

need. Need can be defined in terms of demand or supply side

considerations.12 The usual definition of need is patient ability to

benefit. If the budget of, for example, the UK NHS was allocated

efficiently, its £42 billion would produce the maximum overall

improvement possible in health status. At the individual level this

means that resources should be targeted on those patients who can

benefit most per unit of cost. In terms of the ‘rationing debate’, not all

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

14

MANAGED CARE AND THE GOALS OF HEALTH POLICY

patients who can benefit from care will obtain treatment: only cost

effective interventions will be provided.

For public and private health care systems to operate efficiently, it is

essential to have better information about the relative costs and benefits

of competing medical interventions. The existing ignorance of such

information and reluctance to disseminate and adopt what information

is known, combined with the asymmetry of knowledge between

producers and consumers of health care, means that providers may

induce demand for care which is not always in the patient’s interest.

The efficiency goal in public health care policy is linked to equity, and

these goals may at times conflict. Equity is both a finance (who pays?)

and a provision (who gets?) issue in health care. It may also be an issue

about the distribution of ‘health’, a benefit for patients produced by

many factors other than health care, such as education, housing and

the distribution of income.

Societies may be willing to trade off efficiency to achieve greater equity

in health care. For example, Williams has argued that age equity weights

should reflect a ‘fair innings’ approach.13 Resources would be

transferred from the efficient treatment of elderly people who have had

a ‘fair innings’ to the perhaps inefficient treatment of younger people.

The value of such equity weights would be a social choice of this type

of equity over the desire to maximise the overall level of health.

Another approach to equity in health care is that the weights reflect a

social desire to reduce health inequalities by discriminating in favour

of the poor when allocating health care. Evidence suggests that poor

people seek access to health care less than the rich, when adjusted for

age and health status.14 Once in the care system, the treatment of the

poor is similar to that of the rich.14 To reduce health inequalities

15

resources could be taken from the treatment of the rich to fund

improving access to health care of the poor, and/or treating them

preferentially when they are in the system. The possible implication of

this policy may be that it would reduce the rate of growth of overall

improvement in population health. Thus improvements in population

health would be foregone in order to reduce health inequalities

between social classes.

All too often, equity goals are implicit and thus decision makers and

care providers cannot be held to account by taxpayers. Often policies

are adopted for reasons which are imprecise but have significant effects

on equity. For example user charges may have equity effects which are

not intended by their advocates. In addition, such devices may

frustrate cost control (by fragmenting financial sources away from a

single tax pipe), efficiency and equity, as argued by Stoddart, Barer and

Evans.15,16 They concluded that user charges are:

misguided and cynical attempts to tax the ill and/or drive up the

total cost of health care while shifting some of the burden out of

government budgets.

Any judgement of health care reform, be it managed care in the USA

or the current Labour ‘redisorganisation’ of the UK NHS, has to be

undertaken in relation to policy goals. Has managed care proved a

panacea, in terms of producing greater cost containment, efficiency

and equity in the USA? Are any beneficial effects temporary or

permanent? What impact are similar policies likely to have in the UK

health care system?

Whilst many of the advocates of managed care in the United States

advise caution in the use of this approach overseas, many commercial

and some academic groups are marketing this form of health care

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

16

INTRODUCTION

organisation as a panacea for the common problems faced by health

care systems world-wide. This is unwise. Managed care, just like the

UK National Health Service reforms introduced from 1991 onwards by

the Thatcher government, has strengths and weaknesses in theory and

in practice. The Conservative government in the UK argued that the

internal market was ‘a success’. The present Labour government claims

that it ‘failed’. Neither have adequate evidence to substantiate these

claims.6

In the United States, advocates of managed care point to its intellectual

robustness (e.g. the Jackson Hole Group)3 and its apparent success as

shown in systematic reviews of literature.17,18 However the evidence,

whilst encouraging in part, is incomplete and does not support managed

care as a panacea. Advocates tend to a position whereby they argue that

its failures are a product of incomplete implementation: they argue that,

like Christianity and socialism, it has not failed, but has simply not yet

been tried properly. Thus Enthoven’s recent State Commission on

managed care in California has advocated more extensive regulation to

achieve better cost containment and efficiency objectives.19

So, while the UK NHS reforms have little data to support or refute

their success, US managed care reforms have data illuminating some

successes. Such successes are not the product of ‘free markets’ but the

result of acceptance of the need to regulate comprehensively structures

and processes in health care provision to enhance performance.

The purposes of this paper are firstly to appraise US experience with

managed care, addressing in particular why new forms of organising

care were needed, what managed care involves and how it has worked.

Secondly, the implications of managed care for the UK National

Health Service are examined.

17

There is no agreed and simple definition of managed care: at its

simplest ‘managed’ means controlled, and ‘managed care’ simply

means to control externally the relationship between patients and

health care providers. Traditionally, the market for health care in the

US has been characterised by private insurance, with free choice of

practitioners and fee per item of service reimbursement. In this

environment, care is ‘managed’ by the choices of patients and doctors,

with little control by third party payers (insurers). ‘Managed care’, by

restricting some of these choices, shifts some control to insurers or

other funders. Under managed care insurers contract selectively with

providers (i.e. they are price makers), and give consumers incentives to

use providers preferred by and contracted to insurers.

Whilst this definition of managed care appears quite simple, in reality

it manifests itself in many forms. Furthermore, it is in a continual state

of flux as insurers develop new ways of being aggressive and efficient

purchasers, and providers seek to prosper by ameliorating or

reconstructing the purchaser constraints imposed upon them. Federal

and State governments are also adopting and developing these

techniques for the Medicare and Medicaid programmes for elderly

people and some groups of poor people. With Government facing

escalating health care costs, it is seeking to move to systems whereby a

fixed, limited contribution will guarantee a basic package of care, to

which individual beneficiaries of the programmes can add

supplementary coverage if they have the resources.

The advocates of managed care argue that by careful regulation of the

market, in particular the development of micro-economic controls, it

could be made more efficient. Furthermore they believe that a market

regulated vigorously can, via competition, reduce the rate of growth of

expenditure and give industrialists, concerned about their

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

18

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

international competitiveness, respite from the inexorable increase in

their production costs due to health care cost inflation.

A belief espoused by some US economists is that the market can be

used as a mechanism to deliver services to patients efficiently, and

through promoting efficiency it can control health care costs. Some

believe that this can be done with minimal regulation, and if

regulation is required, it should be implemented on the demand side

of the market.20 Others, in particular Alain Enthoven, have argued that

the market has to be managed by an extensive regulatory framework

on both the demand and supply sides of health care.

The Jackson Hole Group proposed that institutions be created to

regulate most market activities ‘to assure the supply of information

necessary for uniform health outcome accountability and to oversee

the functioning of competitive markets’.3 In the ‘Jackson Hole Group

Initiatives’, a trio of health care standards setting boards were suggested

(see Box 1).

The Group also proposed the abolition of tax exemptions for middle

class insured citizens, redistributing the savings to permit universal

purchase of a basic package of care. Insurers were to compete for

customers in terms of the price and quality of this basic package, and

of additions to these benefits. The complex and sophisticated

regulatory system proposed by the Jackson Hole Group threatened

provider and insurer groups in ways similar to the Clinton health

reform proposals.

The rapid development of managed care in the period since 1992 is a

product of the failure of the Clinton reforms, and the demand by

industry, concerned with its international competitiveness, for greater

control of cost inflation in the US health care system. Essentially,

19

managed care involves more aggressive purchasing behaviour by

insurers which curtails the power of the providers and constrains the

choice of consumers. Although labelled a ‘market reform’, it involves

much greater regulation of price, quantity and quality of health care,

and cannot be regarded as a ‘free market’ development. Following the

rejection of public sector health care reform in the US, managed care

reflects acceptance that for the market to achieve policy goals (cost

Box 1. Jackson Hole Group Initiatives: Health Care Standard Settings Boards

Source: Ellwood et al 19923

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

20

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

◆ an Outcomes Management Standards Board, responsible for

establishing accepted health services accounting practices, including

providing and monitoring standards for the content and format of data

to be used in accounting publicly and internally for the outcomes of

medical care;

◆ a Health Standards Board, involving providers, insurers, consumers,

medical scientists and others to undertake health technology assessment

and benefit plan design. Accumulating clinical epidemiological data

would be used to identify those technologies and treatments that are

sufficiently effective, in relation to their costs and risk, to justify

inclusion in a uniform effective health benefits plan (a basic minimum

package) which would receive favourable tax treatment;

◆ a Health Insurance Standards Board, to establish underwriting practices

with emphasis at the outset on the small group insurance market,

ensuring that competition can take place within a community rating

framework on the basis of health services cost, quality and patient

satisfaction, rather than on risk selection and market segmentation.

control, efficiency and equity), it has to be comprehensively regulated.

Free markets, without regulation either by public or private

organisations, do not exist in the provision of health care or of other

goods and services. As Coase argued when describing the stock

exchange:21

It is not without significance that these exchanges, often used by

economists as examples of a perfect market and perfect

competition, are markets in which transactions are highly

regulated (and this quite apart from any government regulation

that there may be). It suggests, I think correctly, that for anything

approaching perfect competition to exist, an intricate system of

rules and regulations would normally be needed.

Forms of managed care

Managed care is not a new concept. Kaiser-Permanante, the best

known not for profit health maintenance organisation, was formed in

California in 1942, and the roots of managed care can be traced to the

funeral and benevolent societies that immigrants set up to cover death

expenses in the 1800s.22 A number of different organisational forms of

managed care exist in the US, including health maintenance

organisations (HMO), preferred provider organisations (PPO),

independent practice associations (IPA) and point of service plans

(POS). Table 123 gives definitions of six US organisational forms of

health care delivery, listed by intensity of management from least

managed (traditional fee for service indemnity insurance plans) to

most managed (HMO).

In 1996, 70 per cent of people covered by employer-sponsored health

plans24 and 60 per cent of the population25 in the US were enrolled in

managed care plans. Approximately 33 per cent of enrolees in private

21

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

22

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

Table 1: Definitions of six representative organisational forms of health care delivery listed by intensity of management

* Not shown are hybrid arrangements such as open-ended and point-of-service arrangements whereby patients

in a preferred provider organisation, independent practice association, or staff/group health maintenance

organisations may have some insurance coverage for care outside the providers approved by the insurer.

Source: Rivo et al 199523

Organisational form* Definition

Indemnity plan with Complete freedom of choice to patients. Insurer reimburses fee for service physicians on a fee-for-service basis.

Managed indemnity plan Free choice and fee for service, but insurer exercises some degree of utilisation control to manage costs.

Preferred provider Insurer channels patients to ‘preferred’ physicians who are organisation usually paid discounted fee for service. The insurer, not the

physician, usually accepts financial risk for performance.

Independent practice Insurer channels patients to physicians usually solo or in association small groups who have agreed to some financial risk for

performance. Payment may be either capitation or fee for service with financial incentives based on performance.

Network independent Similar to independent practice association but consists of a practice association network of larger group practices. Payment is usually

capitation to each group, which then pays the physicians.

Staff/group health The classic, prepaid, large multi-specialty group practice. maintenance organisation Patients are covered only for care delivered by the health

maintenance organisation. The physicians are usually salaried and work either for the plan (staff-model health maintenance organisation) or for a physician group practice (group-model health maintenance organisation) that has an exclusive contract with the plan.

health plans were with indemnity plans, and 31 per cent with HMOs.24

HMOs require patients to use participating physicians for all medical

care except emergencies, and physicians may be directly employed by

the HMO (staff model HMO) or function in private practices

contracting with the HMO (group model).26 HMOs integrate the

insurance and provision functions in health care delivery, in contrast

to traditional insurers that are responsible only for reimbursing

providers for services that patients have sought on their own. HMOs

provide comprehensive health care for a prepaid premium, and

therefore agree to bear substantial financial risk. No HMO is able to

predict accurately an individual’s future need for health care, and a

small group of individuals who develop conditions which are

expensive to treat can have a significant impact on the organisation’s

budget. This creates the necessary incentives to reduce ‘excessive’

utilisation, and minimise other inefficiencies (e.g. pronounced, long

observed and poorly explained variations in medical practice). It also

creates incentives to provide preventive care when it is cost-effective

(such as advice to stop smoking). HMOs and other managed care

organisations also use a system of ‘pre-certification’ whereby any non-

emergency hospitalisation requires prior authorisation by other

doctors to verify the treating physician’s recommendation.

Preferred provider organisations (PPO) cover around 30 per cent of

private health plan enrolees.24 A PPO is an arrangement by which

patients are given financial incentives to receive care from a limited

number of doctors and hospitals, with which the payer has contracted.

Networks of individual doctors, medical groups and hospitals contract

with a plan for a discounted rate of payment. In return, plans deliver

large volumes of services by giving patients a list of preferred

providers. Patients can consult non-participating physicians, but pay

23

higher out of pocket costs when they do so. Independent practice

associations (IPA) consist of solo, small groups or larger networks of

practitioners who agree to some financial risk of performance, and

insurers channel patients to them. Payment is generally based on

capitation but with some financial incentives based on performance.

Finally, point of service plans, the newest form of managed care which

cover around 6 per cent of private health plan enrolees,24 represent a

hybrid between more restrictive HMOs and less restrictive PPOs. POS

plans rely on a patient selecting a physician gatekeeper, who is

responsible for co-ordinating all medical care. Again, for an additional

fee, patients can consult non-participating doctors.

Managed care in the US therefore consists of aggressive micro

management of resources by linking finance and delivery of health care,

usually by detailed and closely monitored contracts. These

arrangements curtail the freedoms of doctors and hospitals by

establishing and implementing strict protocols and guidelines (not

always evidence based) which restrict the choice of patients and

providers. There is more emphasis on primary care and patients

increasingly tend to access secondary care via primary care gatekeepers,

who may be networks of nurse practitioners and primary care

physicians. Access to specialists is restricted by these gatekeepers, in

order to reduce the demands for specialist physicians and hospital care.

Most of the managed care market covers employees, and recently there

has been some extension of these techniques to government Medicare

and Medicaid schemes. The employers offer their staff health

insurance coverage, but many employees may have no choice and have

to join the plan chosen by their employer. Employee contributions can

be offset against tax: a considerable Federal subsidy to generally

affluent workers.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

24

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

Finance of health care under a managed care plan is usually capitation

based, with a prepaid premium, contrasting with traditional fee for

service remuneration. This reduces incentives for over-treatment and

supplier induced interventions. There are considerable pressures on

provider organisations to reduce costs, and health plans make more

profit when physicians provide less care, a reversal of the previous

system of incentives. Capitation rates are set aggressively by managed

care organisations. There are concerns within the American medical

profession that such incentives are dangerously restricting, and

threaten the quality of patient care, particularly as increasing numbers

of health plans are commercial enterprises rather than not-for profit

organisations.27

Managed care organisations work energetically to reduce variations in

practice, which are increasingly viewed as unacceptable by US

clinicians. In the US and world-wide, many clinical choices are ill-

informed and made under great uncertainty and, as a consequence,

there are large variations in how clinicians treat patients of similar

age, sex and other characteristics.28 For example a study of 30 hospital

markets in Maine, USA, demonstrated up to eight fold variations in

surgical and medical practice.29 Medical practice variations also exist

between countries. McPherson and others compared the incidence of

seven common surgical procedures in England, Norway and the USA,

and found that English and Norwegian rates were lower than the USA

for all procedures except appendectomy. Hysterectomy and

tonsillectomy were four times as common in the USA as in Norway,

prostatectomy was twice as common in the USA as in England.30

Attempts to reduce variations in practice centre around development

and dissemination of protocols and guidelines. Federally funded

organisations such as the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research

25

have developed a number of detailed evidence-based guidelines,31

which are used by managed care organisations. The American Medical

Association now has over 1,800 practice guidelines available, and in

1998 these will be accessible via the Internet. Clinicians in managed

care organisations have much less discretion about the use of

guidelines than other US (and UK) clinicians. Adherence to guidelines

is required by payers who can refuse to reimburse and drop clinicians

from their plans if guidelines are ignored.

Performance of managed care systems

A range of potential advantages and disadvantages of health

maintenance organisations and other managed care systems in

comparison to traditional US indemnity insurance systems have been

identified:26

◆ managed care organisations may reduce the quantity and

intensity of care. This is a major potential cost advantage of

HMOs. With fixed fee reimbursement there is an incentive

to minimise utilisation and reduce length of stay in hospital

and length of treatment period, rather than to provide

unnecessary or marginal care. This may however introduce

incentives to ‘under-provide’ care, particularly by

commercial for-profit organisations and where physicians’

remuneration may be tied to reducing prescriptions,

hospital admissions and other costs. This may be

ameliorated by the competition that exists between HMOs

and also by the professional ethos of medical care, but the

‘morality of the marketplace’27 continues to create much

concern within the American medical profession.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

26

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

◆ managed care organisations may substitute lower cost care for

higher cost care. In particular, HMOs have incentives to use

outpatient care whenever possible. A report by Kaiser

Permanante showed how HMOs try to balance cost control

and patient care, for example by considering outpatient

(day care) alternatives for procedures such as gallbladder

surgeries, appendectomies and mastectomies.32 HMOs are

also more likely to, for example, use generic drugs rather

than branded alternatives, like hospitals in the UK which

often explicitly enforce generic substitution.

◆ managed care organisations may enjoy economies in the

purchase or use of inputs. HMOs may be better able to make

efficient use of facilities and equipment, and may be able to

exploit economies of scale. Scale benefits much lauded in

the US may however be illusory or limited, as illustrated in

a systematic review of economies of scale and scope.33

However, they do have a strong incentive to improve

productivity and make better use of physician and non-

physician inputs, such as nurse practitioners. Managed care

organisations employ fewer physicians, particularly

specialists and may further change skill mix by using other

practitioners. Weiner (1994)34 forecasted the effects of

increases in the use of managed care on the requirement for

physician workforce, estimating that if 40-65 per cent of

Americans receive care from integrated managed care

networks in the near future, there could be a surplus of up

to 163,000 patient care physicians in the US by the year

2000, with specialists accounting for at least 85 per cent of

this surplus. This has far-reaching implications for US

27

health care provision. Costs may be reduced, but there are

concerns that this will be achieved at the expense of reduced

quality of care. In particular, doctors’ incentives to remain

employed may threaten their professional role as a patient

advocate. If the number of physicians can be reduced

without reductions in care (by, for example, changing skill

mix and reducing utilisation) there may be scope for some

emulation in the UK.35

◆ managed care organisations may be quicker to develop

effective utilisation review. HMOs have incentives to

measure performance and develop controls to monitor

physicians. The number of guidelines and protocols for care

in existence in the US continues to increase rapidly, and

HMOs have more incentive to implement and monitor such

guidelines than the traditional fee-for-service (FFS) sector,

which has incentives to increase revenues by over-treating.

◆ managed care organisations may use or adopt new technology

more efficiently. In particular, HMOs may be more likely to

require evidence of efficiency before using new

technologies. This may slow the proliferation of new and

expensive technologies which has been one of the major

reasons for expenditure inflation in the US and elsewhere.

◆ managed care organisations may encourage the use of cost-

effective preventive care, as this reduces subsequent use of

potentially more expensive curative care. Typically, these

organisations encourage physical exercise and ‘healthy

living’, but the benefits of behaviour change only accrue to

investing managed care organisations if enrolees stay as

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

28

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

members for long enough for the plan to benefit.

◆ managed care organisations may enjoy administrative

economies, by reducing paperwork and collection costs as

billing procedures are simplified due to integrated finance

and delivery systems. However, these savings may be ‘one

off ’. The development of systems such as utilisation review

and the costs of competition in terms of marketing,

contracting and profit distribution to shareholders may

reduce the cost savings produced by vigorous management.

In the end, the results of managed care in the USA may be

merely to redistribute expenditure, i.e. to reduce payments

to hospitals, doctors and pharmaceutical equipment

manufacturers and transfer them to administration

(marketing, contracting and information technology) and

profits.

In addition to these aspects of managed care, the issues addressed in

systematic reviews are ‘do these mechanisms control costs?’ and ‘is this

achieved without reduction in quality of care?’ Studies attempting to

answer these questions has been reviewed by Luft (1981),36 Miller and

Luft (1994)17 and Steiner and Robinson (1997).18

In the 1981 study of data from the second half of the 1970s, Luft found

moderate to large HMO plan differences in hospital admissions, no

consistent differences in hospital length of stay and similar ambulatory

physician visit use. Thus costs were moderated and there was no

evidence of reduced quality.

The Rand Health Insurance Experiment37 randomly assigned patients

to different plans in a controlled experiment to minimise potential

selection bias (healthier patients joining managed care plans). HMO

29

and fee-for-service (FFS) patients were compared in groups with

different co-insurance rates. Total expenditures per person were $439

for the experimental group and $609 in the free care FFS group. The

reduced spending was due largely to a much lower admission rate and

around 40 per cent fewer hospital days per person. Again no adverse

quality effects were detected, although there was some evidence that

effective and ineffective therapies were affected by the model of care:

members of HMOs received less interventions with demonstrable

effectiveness as well as ineffective care.

More recent studies, reviewed by Miller and Luft,17 showed that HMO

plans continued to have lower admission rates, 1-20 per cent shorter

hospital lengths of stay, the same or more physician office visits, less

use of expensive procedures and tests, and greater use of preventive

services. HMO and indemnity (fee for service) plans provided enrolees

with comparable quality of care, according to process or outcome

measures. 14 of 17 observations from 16 studies showed either better

or equivalent quality of care for HMO enrolees compared with FFS

enrolees for a wide range of conditions, diseases and interventions.

There was no evidence to support the hypothesis that prepaid group

practice or staff model HMOs are more effective than IPA or network

model HMOs.17 The development of HMOs and managed care has

been evaluated in a relatively small number of well-conducted studies.

A systematic review of the performance of managed care organisations

by UK researchers Robinson and Steiner18 reaches conclusions similar

to those of US reviews. Once again it can be seen that managed care

organisations perform no worse and sometimes better than their fee

for service (FFS) rivals. For example Table 2 illustrates the conclusion

that managed care organisations appeared to show little or no

difference in the levels of hospital admissions. Thus managed care has

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

30

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

31

Table 2: Summary of US evidence on managed care

MCO = managed care organisation

Source: Robinson and Steiner 199818

‘Verdict’

Performance MCO* No MCO* Not No. of No. of dimension ‘less’ difference ‘more’ conclusive studies observations

Utilisation 42 101

Hospital admission rate ◆ ◆

Hospital length of stay ◆ ◆

Hospital days per enrolee ◆

Doctor visits per enrolee ◆

Discretionary service ◆

Prescription drug use ◆

Charges and expenditures 14 47

Hospital charges per stay ◆

Hospital expenditures per enrolee ◆

Doctor charges per enrolee ◆

Total expenditure per enrolee ◆

Preventive screening and health promotion ◆ 9 30

Quality of care 23 37

Structure ◆ ◆

Process ◆

Outcome ◆

Enrolee satisfaction ◆ 4 37

Equity of care 20 147

Children ◆ ◆

Low income women ◆ ◆

Elderly ◆

had some successes: with fewer resource inputs, many expected the

performance to be worse than traditional fee-for-service insurers.

Whilst evidence was inconclusive in seven of the areas identified (35

per cent), some benefits are evident from this review of the limited but

significant evaluation of managed care.

It is to be emphasised that these findings tend to be for very specific

populations (employees and their families) who are relatively good

risks. Furthermore the results have been achieved in a market place

where, because of fee for service payment, there was excessive supply of

care and extensive poor management of resources. Managed care

converted funders from being passive ‘price takers’ feeding the

appetites of providers, to active ‘price makers’ with an incentive to limit

resource use and redistribute resources away from traditional

providers.

The coverage of managed care since the early 1990s has increased

rapidly as employers seeking cost control have chosen these plans

rather than indemnity insurers. The shift from fee for service

indemnity insurance to managed care plans has attracted purchasers

interested in lower premiums and out of pocket costs.25 Insurers

negotiated price discounts from providers, and providers changed

their patterns of service provision to contain costs.25 Often it is the

employer who selects the plan, and only around half of employees have

a choice. The rise of managed care has been associated with the

stabilisation of US health care expenditure as a share of the gross

domestic product during the period 1992 to 1997, at around 13.6 per

cent.25 As GDP has increased over this period, absolute health care

expenditure has continued to increase, but at a more moderate level.

However there are signs that the impact of managed care in containing

costs may be short term.

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

32

MANAGED CARE: STRUCTURE AND PRO CESS

It seems that managed care in an expensive (if not bloated) US health

care system has stabilised expenditure growth with apparently no

adverse effects on quality. For example, implementation of managed

care has encouraged generic prescribing and stabilised the cost of

prescribing, but the relatively unregulated US pharmaceutical market

still creates very high drug costs. Caveats around this conclusion will

be discussed in the next section. However, the important question that

remains is whether this effect is short term or continuous. There are

signs that expenditure controls are being eroded. In California, the

leader in managed care, premium inflation has re-emerged and a

commission, chaired by Enthoven, has reported in January 1998

proposing increased regulatory control for the State. Premiums in

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, are rising by a range from 2-3 per cent for

large firms, to 20-30 per cent for small firms, and it has been suggested

that many HMOs underpriced policies to obtain market share, and are

now making substantial losses and increasing premiums

considerably.38

33

Background

Since the creation of the National Health Service, health care in the UK

has been ‘managed’. The UK health care system, both public and private

sectors, already contains many of the components of US-style managed

care. Financing and delivery of health care are integrated in that the

public sector funds and provides most health care. Hospital specialists

are paid by the NHS on a salary basis, and this reduces the incentives to

over-treat which were present in the US system of indemnity insurance

and fee-for-service reimbursement. General Practitioners are paid

largely by capitation, like HMO primary care physicians, although with

some fee-for-service elements. There has always been an emphasis on

primary care, and GPs treat 95 per cent of all contacts with the health

care system, and act as gatekeepers to secondary care. Patients have

restricted choice of hospital specialists and, realistically, of GPs –

patients are limited by choice of GPs in their area, and in most practices

patients see whichever doctor is taking a surgery, including at times

locums and trainees. Patients can, by paying directly or taking out

health insurance, expand their choice of providers. However, as in the

traditional indemnity and fee for service US system, before 1991 the

funders of health care (generally government in the UK) lacked

management control: resource allocation decisions were concentrated

in the hands of providers. Therefore the 1991 NHS reforms added to

some of the parallels between the organisation of UK and US style

managed care systems. In particular, whereas the internal market

explicitly separates purchasing and provision rather than integrating

the two, both internal markets and managed care attempt to create

more aggressive, price making purchasers of health care, ‘managing’ the

process of health care and encouraging provider competition by price

as well as quality (all too often, in both countries, measured in terms of

activity levels rather than patient outcomes).

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

34

IMPLICATIONS OF MANAGED CARE TECHNIQUES FOR THE UK NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE

The development of managed care in the United States has been part of

a world-wide response both to cost inflation and extensive evidence of

variations in medical practice and the unproven nature of most health

care technologies. Reform elsewhere in the world, for example in The

Netherlands, Sweden, New Zealand and the UK has been similar in

intent. However, as the US has a very different starting point from other

Western health care systems, the practice of reform has been opposite:

US managed care organisations have integrated the finance and delivery

of health care, whilst UK and other health care reforms have separated

these two functions, creating more explicit markets. In both US

managed care and UK and other health care reforms, the primary aim

has been to create more aggressive, price making health care purchasers,

who managed resources with more explicit contracting on behalf of

patients. This challenges, in both countries, the dominance of providers

(particularly doctors) in the resource allocation process.

The structure of US health care is becoming more comparable with

what is under way in the rest of the world, and many policy issues are

also similar. In particular, there is world-wide interest in US responses

to various health care problems:

◆ the role of government

◆ equity (sometimes referred to in the US as ‘uncompensated

care’)

◆ management costs

◆ utilisation review and outcome measurement

◆ clinical governance

◆ choice.

35

Each of these issues is explored below and it is emphasised that

although language and terms may be different, some US health care

innovations are very similar to those contemplated in the UK and

elsewhere in the world, despite very different starting points.

The role of government

Managed care has developed within a minimalist regulatory

framework with most regulation being the product of private

contracting rather than public legislation. This is a product of US

suspicion of their government’s intent and practices, and despite

advocacy by Enthoven and others for 20 years, seen most significantly

in the Jackson Hole Group proposals,3 that managed care would fail

without an appropriate and onerous regulatory framework.

One specific element of managed care requiring particular regulatory

intervention is risk adjustment. The existing population endowment

of health and income is uneven, and therefore distribution of risks is

also uneven. The advocates of managed care recommend community

rating of premiums to reduce the possibility of ‘cream skimming’,

where good risk (healthy, young) patients are attracted into low cost

schemes whilst poor risks can only use high cost schemes or remain

uninsured. To avoid cream skimming, even with community rating, a

mechanism to equalise funding across insurers to compensate for

uneven risk burdens is required. This has been much discussed in the

literature39 but there has been no regulatory system to facilitate

movement from principles to practice.

Another policy advocated by the Jackson Hole Group was the abolition

of tax exemptions which subsidise employee purchase of managed care

insurance. Rather than subsidise the relatively affluent and encourage

them to over-insure (and hence over-consume), the Jackson Hole

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

36

IMPLICATIONS OF MANAGED CARE TECHNIQUES FOR THE UK NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE

Group authors wished to redirect this substantial resource to funding

the uninsured so that they could purchase some basic package of

health care. However, again well intentioned advocacy has had no

impact on policy.

Indeed, middle class ‘horror’ at the effects of managed care have led to

some surprising interventions by the Federal Government in response

to some insurers’ innovations. Some managed care insurers have not

only introduced ‘queues’ (time costs) as a method of reducing demand,

but have also used utilisation review to reduce length of inpatient stay.

This led in some areas of care, particularly maternity care, to

complaints of too rapid discharge. As a consequence, Federal

government legislated that all expectant mothers have the right to at

least 48 hours in hospital after the birth.40 The evidence base for this

and other Federal government interventions is absent but it indicates

the power of the consumer lobby in the USA to sway vote-anxious

Congress representatives. There is clearly a need for Federal

intervention, and willingness to intervene on some issues. Such

interventions should be evidence based, with appropriate regulatory

devices to ensure this. Similarly the States are intervening: nearly three

dozen of them have now changed legislation to improve the regulatory

environment in which managed care operates locally.

Government regulation is an essential element of managed care.

Without it these devices are unlikely to achieve policy targets beyond

the short term. This has been demonstrated in the US: without the

prior development of a regulatory framework, industrial interests have

opposed regulatory improvement and, in so doing, undermined the

efficiency of innovative policies.

37

Uncompensated care

A tradition of the US health care system has been the existence of price

discrimination by providers, whereby they generated profits from fee

for service insurance claims and used these surpluses to subsidise care

for the uninsured poor.41 This cross-subsidisation between beneficiary

groups has been eroded by the introduction of prospective payment by

diagnostic related groups (DRGs), which controls prices. This erosion

has been worsened by managed care, which has led to providers

discounting prices, leaving little finance for providers to subsidise care

of the uninsured poor. Some estimates show that the supply of this

‘uncompensated care’ has declined by as much as 36 per cent in the

early 1990s, where there was vigorous price competition in provision

of health care.42

Whilst the supply of uncompensated care has been declining, the

demand for it has risen because, even in prosperous recent years, the

number of insured individuals under age 65 has fallen, from 75 per

cent in 1989 to 71 per cent in 1993 (with the fall in insurance coverage

over this period being particularly marked, falling from 73 to 66 per

cent). This problem has been worsened by reductions in the coverage

of State Medicaid programmes.

This reduction in private insurance is not intuitive: if managed care

was effective, control of costs and premiums should result in increased

coverage, rather than the opposite which is observed. One explanation

of this is that premium costs may have been stable, but deductibles and

co-insurance rates may have increased for marginal groups, although

this is not evident at the macro level.24,25 Thus a failure of managed care

appears to be reduced insurance coverage, adding to the estimated 40

million people who are already forced to use the often poor public

health care facilities. This impact is predictable but has generally been

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

38

IMPLICATIONS OF MANAGED CARE TECHNIQUES FOR THE UK NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE

ignored by policy makers, resulting in reduced supply of

uncompensated care while simultaneously increasing the need for

such assistance. The need to address this equity problem is another

reason for greater regulatory control.41

Management costs

Politicians in the UK, both Conservative and Labour, find

management costs a target for derision as they demand ‘grey suits’ to

be replaced by ‘white coats’. Such rhetoric is potentially damaging. As

Sir Roy Griffiths argued, the NHS needs good managers and good

information, and radical reforms such as the internal market are no

substitute for this.43

The paranoia in the UK about management costs contrasts starkly to

the debate in the US about non-care costs. The development of

managed care, with its more rigorous and data hungry control

mechanisms, has led to major investments in information

technology, some of this as poor as the waste in NHS investments in

IT in the last decade. Competition also results in increased

advertising, which is costly. In addition, increasingly insurers and

providers have been transformed from not for profit to profit making

organisations, where shareholders expect a return on their

investments. The consequence of IT investments, advertising and

profit taking is that at least 20 per cent and sometimes as much as 30

per cent of US health care expenditure is used not to provide patient

care but on administrative and management costs. Thus, an effect of

managed care has been to reduce the incomes of doctors, hospitals

and pharmaceutical manufacturers, and transfer these resources into

income for managers and investors. The latter can be very significant,

for example in 1996 the founder of US Health Care (a managed care

39

company in Pennsylvania) received over $900 million when he sold

his company to the insurer Aetna.

The drive for profits has led to significant take-overs as companies

integrate to exploit, hopefully, economies of scale in management and

provision. Often these economies are not well documented and British

research suggests that they may be illusory, for example in the hospital

sector where size exceeds 600 beds: there appear to be no cost, quality

or access benefits.33 However, without distractions from such

considerations, the industry, both insurers and providers, are merging

at rates which lead to predictions that the market will be dominated by

6-8 key players by the end of the century.25 If this forecast is correct,

there will be increased need for anti-trust regulation.

Utilisation review

Under systems of managed care, there is continuous pressure where

competition survives to improve the use of resources. Managed care

companies have invested heavily in the generation and application of

practice guidelines in ways which have eroded clinical autonomy to a

degree which would cause great distress to UK clinicians. Practice

guidelines can be useful if determined by the evidence base.

Unfortunately, evidence is often poor, and guidelines determined in

the absence of cost-effectiveness information.

Managed care organisations have ‘invented’ general practitioners and

nurse practitioners to act as gatekeepers to secondary care. They have

invested in second and even third opinions for some non-emergency

hospital care decisions. In so doing they have increased providers’

transactions costs in part in the hope that rather than follow

procedures and follow claims routines, they will decline to give

treatment!

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

40

IMPLICATIONS OF MANAGED CARE TECHNIQUES FOR THE UK NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE

There has been aggressive management to reduce length of stay and

the hospital bed stock. Enthoven44 continues to argue for continued

closures of beds and hospitals in California. Reinhardt45 is less

optimistic. Whilst such comparisons are difficult it seems that UK

length of stay and stock of beds could be reduced moderately if the

optimistic managed care exponents are to be believed. However, such

a policy will require investment in social and health care in the

community, sectors which have grown considerably with managed

care for those Americans who can afford it.

Such management techniques in all health care systems are often

driven by cost, and quality of care may be threatened. There seems to

be a general recognition in the USA that managed care has relatively

neglected quality and outcome considerations. Thus Brook46 argues

strongly that in the 21st century cost and quality must be equal

partners, and it must be recognised that the link between the two is not

direct but complex and variable. At present ‘quality’ in managed care

focuses primarily on process and activity rather than outcome. An

example of this is the Health Plan and Employer Data and Information

Set (HEDIS).47 HEDIS, like UK parallel performance measures such as

the efficiency index and more recent NHS developments,48 may be a

start, but still of limited value in identifying quality and efficiency.

In both the US and UK, the reluctance of purchasers to demand and

providers to supply mortality and quality of life data is remarkable. If

patients are to make choices they should be informed about outcomes.

There are validated instruments to measure changes in physical, social

and psychological function over treatment episodes,49,50 but they are

used infrequently.

41

Clinical governance

Managed care has challenged the US medical profession and instead of

pressing it to reform itself, as is (too!) gently suggested in Britain, sharp

financial and managerial constraints have been used to control medical

practice. US physicians who practice outside guidelines do not get

paid. The pressure to ‘corral’ doctors has been driven in part by a desire

to increase ‘efficiency’ (usually measured in terms of process and

activity rather than outcome), and in part by a desire to reduce costs.

During the 1990s increasing numbers of insurers and providers have

changed from not for profit to profit making status, creating some

ethical debates: if US doctors are also owners of profit making

organisations, incentives may be introduced to generate unnecessary

care to enhance their income.

The defensive posture of US and British medicine is a product of

its leaders’ failure to remedy the deficiencies of clinical practice which

have been documented over decades. The lesson to be drawn from US

experience is that if the British Medical Association and the Royal

Colleges continue to be slow in ‘healing themselves’, they

will inevitably be targets for aggressive, well intentioned but

sometimes ill informed managers and legislators. Doctors are

necessarily often uncertain in diagnosis and in treatment, and this

uncertainty may need to be managed with some degree of clinical

discretion, provided practitioners are accountable for their practices to

their peers, to other managers and to the patients and taxpayers who

fund care.

The new White Paper on the UK NHS51 develops ideas of clinical

governance, by the introduction of the National Institute on Clinical

Excellence (NICE) and a Commission for Health Improvement

(CHI). The roles of these institutes are not yet clear, but it is intended

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

42

IMPLICATIONS OF MANAGED CARE TECHNIQUES FOR THE UK NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE

for NICE to produce nationally agreed and implemented guidelines,

and within CHI there may be ‘hit squads’ to investigate recalcitrant

clinical teams.

43

Managed care is not a panacea, and in the US may have palliated some

aspects of the health care system whilst worsening others. It is

marketed as novel and radical, whereas in fact much of its practice

exists in other health care systems. Because of the gross inflation of

health care expenditure in the US, managed care can have more

immediate impact than the use of such techniques is likely to have in

other more sensibly funded systems, such as the UK NHS.

The rhetoric of managed care can divert attention from equity issues

which appear to be tolerated in the US, but which would be

unacceptable in other developed country health care systems. Over 40

million uninsured US citizens, together with the ‘victims’ of welfare

reform in the Medicare and Medicaid programmes, have been joined

by many individuals losing coverage under managed care in the face of

high user charges. This forms a group with very different access to

health care than that faced by the employees of middle America and

their families.

Market mechanisms and managed care are means to an end in health

care, not ends in themselves. Whilst many US policy makers may find

such systems ideologically unacceptable, evidence suggests that cash

limited, tax financed health care systems facilitate better cost control

and equity than market based systems. US health policy makers and

those around the world share a common desire to improve the

efficiency of resource allocation, but market mechanisms in health care

‘work in mysterious ways’ and should be used cautiously to pursue this

social objective. When making choices about health care reform it is

important to define clearly policy objectives and exploit thoroughly

the limited, expanding and useful evidence base. It is a paradox that the

increased use of market mechanisms in health care, far from

facilitating deregulation, considerably increases the requirement for

Managed Care Panacea orPalliation?

44

CONCLUSIONS

regulatory activity. Marketing of managed care techniques outside the

USA has not taken account of local social values and the independent

development of improved management in health care. All health care

markets require care to be ‘managed’, and this regulation should be

based on evidence of effective or at least palliative policies, rather than

rhetoric suggesting a panacea in health care.

45

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The new Labour Government has decided to discard the few market elements left in the Thatcher reforms of the NHS and move towards a command and control system of management. This new structure will use some of the methods of US managed care to enhance efficiency in resource allocation.

Managed care is concerned with the systematic control of providers and consumers by using purchasing power to determine prices, volumes and quality in the health care market. In the USA this has led to stabilisation of the share of GDP spent on health care (13.6 per cent) for five years and the extraction of resources from a generously funded system of patient care to finance advertising, information technology, administration and profits. The Americans have demonstrated that managing a health care system can consume 20 to 25 per cent of expenditure!

The American health care revolution has demonstrated also that clinical autonomy can be highly circumscribed in medical practice reduced by the harsh application of treatment protocols and significant changes in skill mix can be achieved. All these policies are inherent in the new Labour reforms but will require great political resolution if they are to be developed and applied usefully in a NHS which is funded parsimoniously.

One of the significant lessons of US managed care is that vigorous management, often not evidence based, can produce change. However, providers react and seek to weaken managerial control, requiring continuing reform of regulations. Thus purchasers have to indulge in continuous revolution to constrain the self interest of providers.

The US experience of managed care has similarities with the NHS, for instance the failure to measure and manage health status outcome performance, but also major differences, for instance managed care was provided, until recently, for largely healthy, employed populations, not for the whole population. Simplistic adoption of US management techniques may be dangerous and undermine performance in terms of efficiency, equity and cost control. Selective emulation may help Labour reform the NHS.