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Centre for Market and Public Organisation. Health Care Reform: Evidence and Issues Carol Propper Public Service Reform Seminar March 2009. Recent NHS reforms. Late 1990s and early 2000s: targets. Drive to increase quality and efficiency by extensive use of targets Examples
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Centre for Market and Public Organisation Health Care Reform: Evidence and Issues Carol Propper Public Service Reform Seminar March 2009
Late 1990s and early 2000s: targets • Drive to increase quality and efficiency by extensive use of targets • Examples • waiting times targets for inpatient care (from an initial 18 months!) • 4 hour targets for A and E waits • MRSA and hospital cleanliness • National Service frameworks • Coronary Heart Disease National Service Framework - information strategy including information needs of patients, carers and the public; health professionals to deliver care; and clinical governance, performance management, service planning and public health.
2004 onwards: Competition • Promotion of competition and choice • Components • Gradual increase in choice of hospitals by patients • Use of private sector to provide care • PbR tariff mechanism • Accompanying changes in roles • PCTs as commissioners of services, SHAs as strategic market managers • The Panel on Cooperation and Competition - “The NHS’s own version of the CC … will provide independent, expert advice on issues arising from this new competition policy” (Bradshaw Sept. 2008)
Targets: the evidence • Academic and popular literature stresses negative aspects of targets: “meeting the target and missing the point” • Lots of anecdotal evidence of gaming • But … looking at waiting lists, the whole picture and exploiting comparison with Scotland
Scotland vs England waiting times Fig 1: Published and unpublished census data
Some evidence of ‘managing the lists’ but no evidence of health effects • Similar results for studies of A and E 4 hour waits • Why did such targets appear to work? • Features of waiting times • High visibility politically • Of concern to clinical staff and patients • Targets may act as ‘missions’ around which employees can focus effort
Competition: the evidence • Not much sign so far that competition has changed outcomes e.g. Aberdeen report • Fall in LOS, no impact on quality • Behaviour has been slow to change in response to PbR • Lack of good costing systems • But… • Is there scope for competition? How competitive are markets?
Competition: the evidence • US Department of Justice guidelines on competition • Market concentration is a function of the number of firms in a market and their respective market shares. • “HHI” index of market concentration. • Divides market concentration into three regions • unconcentrated (HHI below 1000) • moderately concentrated (HHI between 1000 and 1800) • highly concentrated (HHI above 1800) • In concentrated markets an increase of 100 points may be presumed to create/enhance market power
Competition: the evidence • How concentrated are English health care markets? • Different products • maternity + emergency (people want to be treated close to home) • Hips and knees (waiting times important, lots of providers) • CABG (few providers, people have to travel) • Define self contained markets (E-H) and the extent of concentration within these
Competition: the evidence • English health care markets are concentrated • Concentration is not a function of lack of number of providers • Less competition in maternity and elective where there are lots of markets and in each a few suppliers are dominant • markets that might be thought to be more competitive because there are more suppliers (hips + knees) are less competitive than CABG • Extent of concentration reflects patients’ willingness to travel, which in turn reflects their need and the existing number of suppliers • Implications – mergers could lead to more abuse of market power in maternity (where there are many suppliers) than in CABG (where there are few)
Concentration in English health care markets is high • If hospitals seek to merge to avoid competition this will increase concentration in already concentrated markets • Lack of competition is not a function of lack of suppliers • Patient behaviour will have to change to reduce competition or supply will have to increase considerably • Are patients willing to travel more? • Do the PbR tariffs make this profitable? • Lots of issues for the Carter Commission!