Lyles A, Weiner J, Shore A, Christianson J, Solberg L, and Drury P
Health Affairs--January 2002
This paper presents the first empirical analysis of a 1997 initiative
of the Buyers Health Care Action Group (BHCAG) known as Choice Plus. This
initiative entailed direct contracts with provider-controlled delivery systems;
annual care system bidding; public reports of consumer satisfaction and quality;
uniform benefits; and risk-adjusted payment. After case-mix adjustment, hospital
costs decreased, ambulatory care costs rose modestly, and pharmacy costs
increased substantially. Process-oriented quality indicators were stable or
improved. The BHCAG employer-to-provider direct contracting and consumer choice
model appeared to perform reasonably well in containing costs, without
measurable adverse effects on quality.