Elsevier

Health Policy

Volume 122, Issue 9, September 2018, Pages 963-969
Health Policy

Towards incentivising integration: A typology of payments for integrated care

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2018.07.003Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Current payments for integrated care are mostly sector- and disease-specific.

  • These are likely to provide questionable impact on multimorbid patients in particular.

  • A typology of payments for integration is presented to improve financial incentives.

  • Bundled payments from US Medicare and two European examples illustrate typology use.

Abstract

Traditional provider payment mechanisms may not create appropriate incentives for integrating care. Alternative payment mechanisms, such as bundled payments, have been introduced without uniform definitions, and existing payment typologies are not suitable for describing them. We use a systematic review combined with example integrated care programmes identified from practice in the Horizon2020 SELFIE project to inform a new typology of payment mechanisms for integrated care. The typology describes payments in terms of the scope of payment (Target population, Time, Sectors), the participation of providers (Provider coverage, Financial pooling/sharing), and the single provider/patient involvement (Income, Multiple disease/needs focus, and Quality measurement). There is a gap between rhetoric on the need for new payment mechanisms and those implemented in practice. Current payments for integrated care are mostly sector- and disease-specific, with questionable impact on those with the most need for integrated care. The typology provides a basis to improve financial incentives supporting more effective and efficient integrated care systems.

Keywords

Integrated care
Provider payments
Payment typology
Health systems reform

Cited by (0)

1

Joint first author.