학술논문

Population Turnover and Leakage in Commercial ACOs.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Managed Care. Apr2023, Vol. 29 Issue 4, pe104-e110. 15p.
Subject
*INSURANCE companies
*FEE for service (Medical fees)
*HEALTH maintenance organizations
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL care costs
*MEDICAL care
*CONTRACTS
*ACCOUNTABLE care organizations
*HEALTH insurance
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*PREFERRED provider organizations (Medical care)
*INSURANCE
Language
ISSN
1088-0224
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Commercial accountable care organization (ACO) contracts attempt to mitigate spending growth, but past evaluations have been limited to continuously enrolled ACO members in health maintenance organization (HMO) plans, excluding many members. The objective of this study was to examine the magnitude of turnover and leakage within a commercial ACO. STUDY DESIGN: A historical cohort study using detailed information from multiple commercial ACO contracts within a large health care system between 2015 and 2019. METHODS: Individuals insured through 1 of the 3 largest commercial ACO contracts during the study period, 2015-2019, were included. We examined patterns of entry and exit and the characteristics that predicted remaining in the ACO compared with leaving the ACO. We also examined predictors of the amount of care delivered in the ACO compared with outside the ACO. RESULTS: Among the 453,573 commercially insured individuals in the ACO, approximately half left the ACO within the initial 24 months after entry. Approximately one-third of spending was for care occurring outside the ACO. Patients who remained in the ACO differed from those who left earlier, including being older, having a non-HMO plan, having lower predicted spending at entry, and having more medical spending for care performed within the ACO during the initial quarter of membership. CONCLUSIONS: Both turnover and leakage hamper the ability of ACOs to manage spending. Modifications that address potentially intrinsic vs avoidable sources of population turnover and increase patient incentives for care within vs outside of ACOs could help address medical spending growth within commercial ACO programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]