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Issue 6: Provider Organization Performance Variation

Introduction

networkHPC DataPoints is a series of online briefs that spotlight new research and data findings relevant to the HPC’s mission to improve the affordability of health care. As you read through HPC DataPoints, we encourage you to engage with the interactive graphics by hovering your mouse over different data points to obtain additional information. A printable version of each brief is also available.

Research by the Health Policy Commission has consistently documented significant variation in the cost of health care services for Massachusetts patients. Primary care providers (PCPs) play an important role in this spending variation, as they largely determine where and how their patients get care by recommending diagnostic tests and courses of treatment, managing patients’ chronic illness, and making referrals to specialist physicians or hospitals. PCPs are typically associated with larger provider organizations that include specialists and sometimes, hospitals. In fact, most Massachusetts residents are cared for by PCPs affiliated with one of 14 large provider organizations in the Commonwealth.

The following analyses compare these 14 provider organizations by averaging patient characteristics and spending for commercially insured adult patients (ages 18 and older) whose PCPs are affiliated with each organization. Importantly, spending across all sites of care (e.g., specialist, inpatient, post-acute) for patients is attributed to the PCP and its affiliated provider organization, regardless of whether the care was actually delivered by that provider organization.[1] Only Massachusetts residents covered by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, and Tufts Health Plan, the state’s three largest health plans, are included in the data below. In order to provide reasonable comparisons across provider organizations, all spending outcomes are adjusted for patient risk.

Attributed patient characteristics

Geography

Patients served by each provider organization vary across demographic characteristics. The first set of graphs shows the number of attributed commercial adult patients in each provider organization. Clicking on a provider organization will adjust the map to show where in the state these patients live.

The second set of visualizations displays which provider organizations serve patients in each region of the Commonwealth. For example, Steward serves 43 percent of the attributed adult patients in Metro South, while Partners, Atrius, and many other provider organizations also have considerable numbers of patients living in that region.[2]

Income

Select a provider organization in the top bar graph to display the distribution of their patients by zip code decile, from least wealthy (decile 1, from $16K to $42K average income) to the wealthiest (decile 10, $110K to $200K). For example, patients of Southcoast Health, who are typically from the New Bedford/Fall River region, live in zip codes with the lowest average household income ($61,679), similar to those in the Baystate and BMC systems. Those attributed to Mount Auburn Community Independent Practice Association (MACIPA), on the other hand, are from the highest-income areas among all provider groups ($89,359 average income).

Age and risk scores

To compare patient age distribution and health risk score across provider organizations, click on risk score in the bar graph below. For example, commercially insured adult patients attributed to Southcoast Health system have 9 percent greater health risk than patients of other systems on average, while those attributed to Boston Medical Center (BMC) physicians have 18 percent lower health risk likely because BMC’s commercially insured patients are considerably younger.

Chronic conditions

The number of patients with chronic illnesses also varies by provider organization. The bottom graph shows the share of each provider organization’s attributed patient population with the chronic illness selected in the top graph. Note that individual patients may have multiple chronic conditions.

Insurance type and payer mix

These graphs display the percentage of patients with Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) or Point of Service (POS) plans (as opposed to Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) plans or Exclusive Provider Organization (EPO) plans), and the percentage of patients with each of the three insurers analyzed.

Variation in spending

Total spending

Average risk-adjusted spending per member per year varies substantially across provider organizations. The highest-cost organization spends 32 percent more per patient than the lowest-cost organization ($6,601 and $5,015, respectively). This difference in spending, more than $1,500 per patient per year, is substantial. The spending differences likely reflect a combination of factors including prices per service, intensity of services provided for a given condition, rates of utilization, practice patterns and culture, and patient factors not accounted for in risk adjustment.

Categories of spending

Spending also varies by category of service. The greatest variation across provider groups occurs in the hospital outpatient spending category, where the highest-cost provider organization for hospital outpatient spending, Partners ($1,963), is twice as expensive as the lowest-cost provider organization, Reliant ($974). This category accounts for most of the variation in total spending.

Patient cost sharing

Amounts of patient cost sharing, which includes copays, coinsurance, and deductible spending, follow a similar trend as total spending across provider organizations.

Lab and radiology

Variation is also found in lab and radiology spending across provider organizations, which are subcategories of hospital inpatient and outpatient spending. The patterns generally follow those observed in the total spending figures.

Notes

Please note: Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding. Values representing fewer than 11 patients have been suppressed and are noted with "NA."

[1] For more information on the attribution methodology, see Chapter 4: Provider Organization Practice Variation in the forthcoming 2017 Cost Trends Report. Briefly, patients are attributed to provider organizations by one of two ways: by assignments reported by their insurer or, lacking such assignments, by analyzing where they receive most of their primary care services. Of the roughly 1.9 million adult patients with records in the 2015 Massachusetts All-Payer Claims Database, roughly 18% were not able to be attributed to a provider organization by either method. For some others, their identified primary care providers were not affiliated with a large provider organization captured in the Registration of Provider Organizations and others had missing data, leaving 1.36 million patients in the final dataset.

[2] The “other” provider organization category in the second set of Tableau exhibits are providers identified as a patient’s primary care provider who are not in our provider databases, or in some cases, provider organizations with fewer than 18,000 attributed commercial patients.

Sources: HPC analysis of the Massachusetts All-Payer Claims Database, 2015; Registration of Provider Organizations, 2016; SK&A Office and Hospital Based Physicians Databases, 2015; U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey; University of Wisconsin-Madison HIPxChange, 2017

Additional Resources

Open file, HPC FINDS LARGE GAP IN PER PATIENT SPENDING BETWEEN HIGHEST AND LOWEST COST PROVIDERS    

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