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Commentary by physician organizations[edit]

In the United States, most professional medical societies have been nominally supportive of incentive programs to increase the quality of health care. However, these organizations also express concern over the choice and validity of measurements of improvement. The American Medical Association (AMA) has published principles for pay-for performance programs, with emphasis on voluntary participation, data accuracy, positive incentives and fostering the doctor-patient relationship,[1] and detailed guidelines for designing and implementing these programs.[2] Positions by other physician organizations reflect skepticism on the validity of performance measures, and promote accomodation for an individual physician's clinical judgement, protection for a patient's preferences, autonomy and privacy, and reversing the trend of health care cost reductions to accomodate the increased administrative costs required by participation in such programs.

  • American Academy of Family Physicians: "there are a multitude of organizational, technical, legal and ethical challenges to designing and implementing pay for performance programs"[3]
  • American College of Physicians: "adoption of appropriate quality improvement strategies, if done right, will result in higher quality patient care leading to increased physician and patient satisfaction. But the College is also concerned that these changes could lead to more paperwork, more expense, and less revenue; detract from the time that internists spend with patients, and have unintended adverse consequences for sicker and non-compliant patients."[4]
  • American Geriatrics Society: "quality measures (must) target not only care for specific diseases, but also care that addresses multiple, concurrent illnesses and (are) tested among vulnerable older adults. Using indicators that have been developed for a commercially insured population...may not be relevant"[5]
  • American Academy of Neurology (AAN): "An unintended consequence is that current relative payments are distorted and represent a misaligned incentive system, encouraging diagnostic tests over thoughtful and skilled patient care. The AAN recommends addressing these underlying inequities before a P4P program ia adopted.[6]
  • The Endocrine Society: "it is difficult to develop standardized measure across medical specialties...variations must be allowed to meet the unique needs of the individual patient...P4P programs should not place financial or administrative burdens on practices that care for underserved patient populations"[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ American Medical Association: Principles for Pay-For-Performance Programs (Retrieved 2007-04-15)
  2. ^ American Medical Association: Guidelines for Pay-For-Performance Programs (Retrieved 2007-04-15)
  3. ^ American Academy of Family Physicians: Pay-For-Performance (Retrieved 2007-04-15)
  4. ^ American College of Physicians: Quality Improvement, Pay-for- Performance and Practice Redesign (Retrieved 2007-04-15)
  5. ^ American Geriatrics Society: What, exactly, is AGS' position on P4P? (Retrieved 2007-04-15)
  6. ^ American Academy of Neurology, Federal Legislation Position Statements: Pay-For-Performance (Retrieved 2007-04-15)
  7. ^ The Endocrine Society position paper (July 19, 2006): Pay-For-Performance (Retrieved 2007-04-15)