Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries

Background Independent treatment centres (ITCs) are a growing phenomenon in many healthcare systems. Focus factory theory predicts that ITCs provide high quality healthcare with low prices, through specialisation, high-volume and routine. This study examines if ITC care outperforms general hospital...

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Main Authors: Anouk Dorine Maria Tulp, Florien Margareth Kruse, Niek Waltherus Stadhouders, Patrick P.T. Jeurissen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kerman University of Medical Sciences 2020-09-01
Series:International Journal of Health Policy and Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ijhpm.com/article_3734_89b2fd5ea47c6723448f889b02f33bb6.pdf
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spelling doaj-df96293a02e74861b85bd293481181992020-11-25T03:53:28ZengKerman University of Medical SciencesInternational Journal of Health Policy and Management2322-59392322-59392020-09-019938038910.15171/ijhpm.2019.1443734Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective SurgeriesAnouk Dorine Maria Tulp0Florien Margareth Kruse1Niek Waltherus Stadhouders2Patrick P.T. Jeurissen3IQ healthcare, Radboud University and Medical Center, Nijmegen, The NetherlandsIQ healthcare, Radboud University and Medical Center, Nijmegen, The NetherlandsIQ healthcare, Radboud University and Medical Center, Nijmegen, The NetherlandsIQ healthcare, Radboud University and Medical Center, Nijmegen, The NetherlandsBackground Independent treatment centres (ITCs) are a growing phenomenon in many healthcare systems. Focus factory theory predicts that ITCs provide high quality healthcare with low prices, through specialisation, high-volume and routine. This study examines if ITC care outperforms general hospital (GH) care within a regulated competition system in the Netherlands, by focusing on differences in healthcare quality and price.   Methods The cross-sectional study combined publicly available quality data, list prices and insurer contracts for 2017. Clinical outcomes of 5 elective surgeries (total hip and knee replacement, anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), cataract and carpal tunnel surgeries) were compared using zero-or-one inflated beta-regressions, corrected for underlying structural factors (ie, volume of care, process and structure indicators, and chain affiliation). Furthermore, price differences between ITCs and GHs were examined using ordinary least squares regressions. Lastly, we analysed quality of care in relation to the number of insurance contracts of the 4 largest Dutch insurance companies using ordered logistic regressions.   Results Quality differences between ITCs and GHs were found to be inconsistent across procedures. No facility type performed better overall. There were no differences exhibited in the list prices between ITCs and GHs. No consistent relationship was found between the underlying factors and quality or price, in different procedures and time. We found no indication for selective contracting based on quality within the ITC sector.   Conclusions This study found no evidence that ITCs outperform GHs on quality or price. This evidence does not support the focus factory theory. The substantial practice variation in quality of care may justify more evidence-based contracting within the market for elective surgeryhttps://www.ijhpm.com/article_3734_89b2fd5ea47c6723448f889b02f33bb6.pdfindependent treatment centresfocus factory theoryambulatory carequality of carethe netherlands
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anouk Dorine Maria Tulp
Florien Margareth Kruse
Niek Waltherus Stadhouders
Patrick P.T. Jeurissen
spellingShingle Anouk Dorine Maria Tulp
Florien Margareth Kruse
Niek Waltherus Stadhouders
Patrick P.T. Jeurissen
Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries
International Journal of Health Policy and Management
independent treatment centres
focus factory theory
ambulatory care
quality of care
the netherlands
author_facet Anouk Dorine Maria Tulp
Florien Margareth Kruse
Niek Waltherus Stadhouders
Patrick P.T. Jeurissen
author_sort Anouk Dorine Maria Tulp
title Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries
title_short Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries
title_full Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries
title_fullStr Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries
title_full_unstemmed Independent Treatment Centres Are Not a Guarantee for High Quality and Low Healthcare Prices in The Netherlands – A Study of 5 Elective Surgeries
title_sort independent treatment centres are not a guarantee for high quality and low healthcare prices in the netherlands – a study of 5 elective surgeries
publisher Kerman University of Medical Sciences
series International Journal of Health Policy and Management
issn 2322-5939
2322-5939
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Background Independent treatment centres (ITCs) are a growing phenomenon in many healthcare systems. Focus factory theory predicts that ITCs provide high quality healthcare with low prices, through specialisation, high-volume and routine. This study examines if ITC care outperforms general hospital (GH) care within a regulated competition system in the Netherlands, by focusing on differences in healthcare quality and price.   Methods The cross-sectional study combined publicly available quality data, list prices and insurer contracts for 2017. Clinical outcomes of 5 elective surgeries (total hip and knee replacement, anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), cataract and carpal tunnel surgeries) were compared using zero-or-one inflated beta-regressions, corrected for underlying structural factors (ie, volume of care, process and structure indicators, and chain affiliation). Furthermore, price differences between ITCs and GHs were examined using ordinary least squares regressions. Lastly, we analysed quality of care in relation to the number of insurance contracts of the 4 largest Dutch insurance companies using ordered logistic regressions.   Results Quality differences between ITCs and GHs were found to be inconsistent across procedures. No facility type performed better overall. There were no differences exhibited in the list prices between ITCs and GHs. No consistent relationship was found between the underlying factors and quality or price, in different procedures and time. We found no indication for selective contracting based on quality within the ITC sector.   Conclusions This study found no evidence that ITCs outperform GHs on quality or price. This evidence does not support the focus factory theory. The substantial practice variation in quality of care may justify more evidence-based contracting within the market for elective surgery
topic independent treatment centres
focus factory theory
ambulatory care
quality of care
the netherlands
url https://www.ijhpm.com/article_3734_89b2fd5ea47c6723448f889b02f33bb6.pdf
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