| Idee | Pilotprojekt | Strategiepapier | Gesetzgebung | Umsetzung | Evaluation | Veränderung/Richtungswechsel | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Implemented in this survey? |
The process of selective contracting was initiated to develop a transparent process for limited public health care resources use. Today it has become also the main tool for the EHIF to promote health care service provision in less attractive areas. Unexpected side-effect of the tender process is the fragmentation of service-provision as some narrow specialists sprawl out of hospitals into small private practices without public control providing only well-paid small-scale services.
The Estonian Health Insurance Fund (EHIF) started the process of selective contracting as an initiative to develop clear contracting rules and a transparent process for the use of
limited public resources for health care. It was first piloted for dental care in 2000, but after the introduction of a new Health Insurance Law in 2002, it became mandatory for EHIF to
purchase services on a competitive basis.
Thus, the idea was seen as driver for service quality improvement and tool to introduce mild market competition into health care provision.
Additionally, and this is now seen as the major role of the initiative, selective contracting has enabled to buy services in areas that are less attractive for providers.
The tool is used only for outpatient services and to the extent of annual budget that remains after first round 5-year agreements with providers of the National Hospital Master Plan. Secondly,
competition is only among providers that do not belong to the list of Master Plan qualify for the selective contracting.
Objectives of the EHIF selective contracting are mainly:
The main incentive for providers is the opportunity for a 3-year contract for services paid by Health Insurance Fund. Interested providers are competing for the contract with EHIF on the preset volume of health care services in a certain geographical region or area. Quality and administrative criteria primarily and then price are used for assessment in the decision-making process by EHIF. These criteria are:
Providers (hospitals, ambulatory service providers), Individual physicians
| Innovationsgrad | traditionell |
|
innovativ |
| Kontroversität | unumstritten |
|
kontrovers |
| Strukturelle Wirkung | marginal |
|
fundamental |
| Medienpräsenz | sehr gering |
|
sehr hoch |
| Übertragbarkeit | sehr systemabhängig |
|
systemneutral |
Selective contracting has been used by many countries to buy health care services from private providers. In the case of Estonia, the principle was used systematically and widely - 20% of all ambulatory cases are paid through a selective contracting process. In some cases all or certain types of services were bought using tendering (dental care), or services in underserved area. Structural impact is rather marginal though some effect on service provision networks in less attractive areas and efficiency improvement is plausible. Quality improvement is rather modest. Public visibility was high only in the beginning when a few providers tried to sink the initiative; it is rather low in the wide implementation phase. In our opinion the policy is transferable to most systems where overall contracting capacity by purchasers is available.
By the end of 1990s the number of private health care providers had grown to the extent that not all of them could be contracted for full or even half time by the EHIF. At the same time there were
no political decisions upon the limits that the solidarity insurance should cover. However, since 2002 the new Health Insurance Law explicitly enables EHIF to use selective purchasing as an
option, that was implemented as response to the increased supply of health care services.
As selective contracting is only supported by an optional contracting principle in the law, it is not accepted universally, not even in the managing board of EHIF. This is mainly due to lack of
solid indicators (or measurement capability) of quality and performance criteria for decision making.
| Idee | Pilotprojekt | Strategiepapier | Gesetzgebung | Umsetzung | Evaluation | Veränderung/Richtungswechsel | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Implemented in this survey? |
The process of provider competition for the Estonian Health Insurance Fund (EHIF) contracts was initiated by EHIF in an attempt to develop clear contracting rules and process. By the end of
the 1990s, the supply of services by private health care providers had grown to the extent that not all of them could be contracted for full or half time by the EHIF.
This forced the EHIF to start s a elective contracting process. In 2000 a first experience was gained with selective contracting in dental care. Criteria were discussed and agreed upon with the
Estonian professional society of dentists. The criteria included qualifications of the provider, level of equipment and lower visit-fee charged to patients.
Based on that rather successful experience, in 2002, after respective amendments in the Health Insurance Law, the EHIF opened a tender for outpatient specialist care services in selected
specialties in two regions. Specialities were chosen (a) based upon either high concentration of providers in a regional setting, or (b) if there was lack of providers in certain locations,
the tender was opened with the condition that an outside provider would offer services in the area. The objective was to contract quality health services, with lower level of co-payments for the
patient, and closer to patients' residence.(2)
In 2003-2005 the EHIF has continued with tendering for specialist service contracts, however not expanding them in volume. Hospitals that are included in the Government-approved Hospital Master Plan
are not subject to the competitive process but get their contract on priority basis.
The tender is held mostly for out-patient services - the competition is for a defined number of expected cases to be treated in a certain area. The main evaluation criteria include data on
qualifications, earlier provider behaviour, and proposed co-payment level for the patient (with lower co-payment preferred) and average cost per case. Family physicians are included in the evaluation
panels to evaluate the quality of the specialists.
By 2005 the selective contracting has become a routine practice for EHIF. However, as the majority of service contracts are assigned on a priority basis to providers belonging to the national
Hospital Master Plan, the main purpose of the idea now is improve access to and coverage with health care services in under-served areas.(2) It is also an important tool motivating the
"outside" providers to follow EHIF standards of care and keep provider reserve for additional services readily available.(1)
The approach of the idea is described as:
renewed: Refinement of internationally recognised practice for private providers into universal principle
Main stakeholders are the providers and EHIF as the purchaser. Providers in Estonia are divided by either belonging or not to national Hospital Master Plan - a list of privileged providers that
the Government has commited itself for long-term support (in Estonia all hospitals are legally private entities).
Among Hospital Master Plan providers the gripe is mainly over the fact that they are left out of the selective contracting process, for they have contracts already on a priority basis. Yet they may
feel that the volume of the contract is not sufficient for them.
Among smaller providers that are not on the Master Plan list, the theoretical support is sometimes turned into dissatisfaction due to unsuccessful participation in the tender. The argument
usually is criticising the appropriateness of the criteria, which are rather formal.
The National Health Insurance Fund as the main purchaser of services on the market has been the driving force behind the initiative. Recently opinions within the managing board have become variable
with some hesitation towards the efficiency of the policy to achieve its goals.
| Leistungserbringer | |||
| Large hospitals (Hospital Master Plan members) | sehr unterstützend | stark dagegen | |
| Small privately owned providers | sehr unterstützend | stark dagegen | |
| Kostenträger | |||
| Health Insurance Fund | sehr unterstützend | stark dagegen | |
The policy of selective contracting was first initiated by EHIF with the support of formal agreement with dentists in 2000. It became possible for medical care only after the amendment in the
Health Insurance Law in 2002.(4) In the latter selective contracting is stated as an option for EHIF to decide upon additional services beyond the capacity of Hospital Master Plan providers.
By today EHIF has found that they have legal obstacles to use specific quality indicators in the process of selective purchasing as all providers with the 5-year licence issued by Health Care Board
are by definition providing services with adequate quality. Thus in order to impose quality criteria for the selection probably legal adjustments are necessary. However, the issue is not prioritised
yet as to start the amendment of legislation.
success
| Leistungserbringer | |||
| Large hospitals (Hospital Master Plan members) | sehr groß | kein | |
| Small privately owned providers | sehr groß | kein | |
| Kostenträger | |||
| Health Insurance Fund | sehr groß | kein | |
First EHIF engaged professional societies and providers' representative organisations into discussions about the principles of the policy. Prior to the implementation all stakeholders were rather
supportive to the whole idea. Anticipating problems with the implementation whenever selection is imposed EHIF knowingly chose specialities where professionals themselves where most supportive, such
as orthopaedics, gynaecology, ophthalmology and dentistry. Also, for piloting less sensitive regions were chosen.
Once providers started to protest against selective preference of providers by EHIF, the latter had to explain the policies to the public through media. During 2002-2004 in several cases
providers sued EHIF for having been left without contract in the process of tendering. The most troublesome specialities were dentistry (before the law was passed) and gynaecology. However, in all
cases EHIF successfully defended itself against the claims for universal right for the contract by all providers in the region without any competition.
The experience from the first limited open tender was the following. In cases where EHIF was looking for a provider to cover an area not having a specialist provider, the competition worked well, and
providers from near regions started consultation hours locally in some days of the week.
In conditions where there was high concentration of providers, the tender was successful in lowering co-payment levels. The most complicated area to evaluate, as expected, was the quality of
services. Although family physicians were included in the evaluation panels to give an opinion based on their experience in cooperating with the specialists, they were not confident in judging upon
the quality of work of their colleagues.
An unexpected side-effect of the tender process was a threat of increasing fragmentation of service-provision. As the Estonian legislation allows medical professionals to work for several employers,
a trend emerged of doctors being employed by public (i.e. publicly owned) hospitals, setting up private practices and participating in the tender for EHIF contracts also through these.
In 2005 the practice is well accepted and no legal disputes on the principle per se are held. Also there is no high public interest in the matter any more as other issues have emerged (e.g.
increasing waiting lists). 20% of all the ambulatory cases are reimbursed to the providers chosen by selective contracting. EHIF is probably not intending to increase this proportion.
No formal monitoring process is in place. During the early implementation until 2004 the balanced scorecard of EHIF contained proportional target for cases paid by selective contracts.(5) As of
2005 the intended level (20% of all ambulatory cases) has been reached and no further target has been set. The latter also reflects the ambiguity within the management board about the role of
selective contracting in the overall purchasing role of EHIF.
The managing board of EHIF is using qualitative analysis of negotiating and contracting process to formulate decisions for the next negotiation phase. EHIF also regularly monitors the satisfaction
level of providers.
As an unanticipated side-effect EHIF noticed that physicians of certain narrow specialities (face-and-neck surgeons, ear-nose-and-throat physicians, neurosurgeons) sprawl out of publicly owned large
hospitals into small private practices to participate in the tender. This is causing worrying fragmentation of service network as in some cases the small group of good specialists has a very
strong position in the negotiating process over price and/or conditions (e.g. selection of services). EHIF has in some cases no good alternative among large Master Plan hospitals, where mitigation
through other services or specialities can be used.
Overall the tender process for EHIF contracts has led to more transparency in the contracting process. It has been most successful in cases where EHIF has looked for service provision in an area
not having provider. This is today probably the strongest argument to continue and refine the policy of selective contracting in Estonia.
It has also had some success in lowering visit fees charged to patients by the providers. In terms of impact for improvement of quality, the competitive process for contracts has less effect than
other methods of quality enhancement. It may however help to discontinue a contract with a provider who is non-responsive to patients' complaints.
| Qualität | kaum Einfluss |
|
starker Einfluss |
| Gerechtigkeit | System weniger gerecht |
|
System gerechter |
| Kosteneffizienz | sehr gering |
|
sehr hoch |
Out of initially planned goals the impact has been most visible on service availability in underserved areas and some reduction in provider prices. Impact on service quality is rather low according to current implementation practice. However, the obstacle is a legal one (the purchaser is not allowed to set its own quality standards for selection) and not stemmed from the policy itself.
Maris Jesse, Ain Aaviksoo, Helvi Tarien