New York City Ties Doctors’ Income to Quality of Care
No patient left behind?
In a bold experiment in performance pay, complaints from patients at New York Citys public hospitals and other measures of their care like how long before they are discharged and how they fare afterward will be reflected in doctors paychecks under a plan being negotiated by the physicians and their hospitals.
The proposal represents a broad national push away from the traditional model of rewarding doctors for the volume of services they order, a system that has been criticized for promoting unnecessary treatment. In the wake of changes laid out in the Affordable Care Act, public and private hospitals are already preparing to have their income tied partly to patient outcomes and cost containment, but the citys plan extends that financial incentive to the front line, the doctors directly responsible for treatment. It also shows how the new law could change longstanding relationships, giving more power to some of the poorest and most vulnerable patients over doctors who run their care.
I would expect that were going to see this become more and more prevalent in compensation arrangements, said Alan Aviles, president of the citys Health and Hospitals Corporation, which runs the citys 11 public hospitals and is the countrys largest public health system, handling more than 1 million emergency room visits a year.
The corporations plan would make doctors raises dependent on their performance on quality measures. The details are being negotiated with the doctors union, but both sides expect to reach an agreement that incorporates the idea.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/nyregion/new-york-city-hospitals-to-tie-doctors-performance-pay-to-quality-measures.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0