Hospitals could have saved $1 billion with pay-for-performance measures, study says

Pay-for-performance measures could have saved Medicare hospital costs $1 billion, a new study finds.

Investigators examined data from a three-year demonstration project, which included 260 hospitals in 38 states. The study examined quality of care measures for pneumonia and for heart bypass surgery. Recommended care measures would have resulted in 3,000 fewer deaths and 6,000 fewer medical complications, they found.

Hospital costs for patients receiving the highest level of recommended care for pneumonia were about $8,000, compared with costs of about $10,000 for those that received the lowest number of care measures. The cost difference between the highest and lowest number of care measures was more than $10,000 for heart bypass patients. Projects are also underway to examine the value of pay-for-performance in nursing homes.

More in News

Judge dismisses claims of 'nationwide' Medicare fraud in Omnicare antipsychotics case

Judge dismisses claims of 'nationwide' Medicare fraud in ...

Long-term care pharmacy Omnicare will not face charges that it engaged in "nationwide" Medicare fraud for off-label antipsychotics prescriptions, a federal judge recently ruled. However, the pharmacy still faces more ...

Long-term care providers should follow hospitals in adopting EHRs, government says ...

Healthcare providers have already exceeded the government's 2013 adoption goals for electronic health records, the Department of Health and Human Services announced Wednesday.

Five-day COPD treatment quells flare-ups, reduces side effects, researchers find

Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease flare-ups do better with a shorter round of prednisone, researchers have found.