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The main types of health care system. Market systems (e.g. US): private finance and provision dominateBeveridge systems (e.g. UK): tax funding with mainly public provision, and integration of funding and provisionBismarckian systems (e.g. Germany): social insurance funding with mixed public/privat
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1. Commissioning in the English NHS: will it deliver? Chris Ham
University of Birmingham
2. The main types of health care system Market systems (e.g. US): private finance and provision dominate
Beveridge systems (e.g. UK): tax funding with mainly public provision, and integration of funding and provision
Bismarckian systems (e.g. Germany): social insurance funding with mixed public/private provision, and contracts between insurers and providers
3. Experience of commissioning In market based systems, health insurers are the equivalent of commissioners
In Bismarckian systems, sickness funds take on this role
In Beveridge systems like the NHS and NZ, the purchaser/provider split meant moving away from an integrated approach to the establishment of a commissioning role
4. Experience of commissioning (2) US health insurers and European sickness funds are often competing for members
They are therefore oriented towards understanding the demands of members and responding to these
Traditionally, they have been passive payers of providers, and not active intelligent commissioners of care
5. NHS experience The NHS has experience of commissioning going back to 1991
Various models have been used: DHAs, fundholders, locality commissioning, multifunds, total purchasing pilots, PCGs, PCTs, practice based commissioning
Commissioning is often described as the ‘weak link’ in the NHS reforms
6. A tiered approach NHS experience strongly suggests the need for a tiered approach
Practice based commissioners can contribute alongside PCTs and PCT consortia e.g. for specialised services
Private sector expertise may also be able to contribute e.g. in relation to data analysis
7. The NHS today Enthusiastic uptake of PBC is limited
PCTs are still putting in place the skills and expertise they need to negotiate on equal terms
Private sector involvement is at an early stage
World class commissioning is an ambitious aim
8. International experience There is no country where commissioning is done consistently well
In Europe, the sickness funds are starting from behind us
In Beveridge systems like NZ and some of the Nordic countries, experience confirms the evidence from the NHS
In the US, value based purchasing is a work in progress
9. Some theory Transaction costs economics explains why health care commissioning is so difficult
Where the product is complex, there are strong arguments to ‘make’ rather than ‘buy’
The costs of a commissioner/provider system are often high, and need to be justified by the benefits
Williamson and others argue that in these circumstances integration may be preferable
10. Integration In the US, integrated systems have demonstrated high levels of performance
Examples include Kaiser Permanente, the Veterans Health Administration, and the Alaska Health Service
Through integration, these systems minimise the use of hospitals, provide more care closer to home, and achieve good patient outcomes
11. Kaiser Permanente KP integrates (1) the full range of services, (2) GPs and specialists, and (3) funding and provision
KP uses one third of the bed days as the NHS for people aged 65 and over
There is a strong focus on chronic disease management, in the appropriate setting
KP is an integrated system in a competitive market
12. The VA The VA was in deep crisis in the 1990s
It has been transformed over the last decade to become an exemplar in the US
The VA has changed from a hospital based system to an integrated system
Like KP, it focuses on chronic disease management
Bed day use has been reduced by 50%
13. Lessons from KP and the VA In neither organisation is improvement driven by commissioning as we understand it
KP and the VA are both vertically integrated systems that ‘internalise’ contracting
KP and the VA give priority to clinical leadership and the alignment of incentives and objectives
14. What are the implications? Doing commissioning well has been a challenge both in the NHS and other countries
Many of the lessons on commissioning have arisen from NHS experience, or from US managed care
The experience of integrated systems raises questions about whether we are going in the right direction
15. Risks for the NHS Patient choice, surplus hospital capacity and PbR will suck more resources into hospitals
The incentives, time, management support and information will not be available to support effective commissioning
The reforms will be imbalanced and will not deliver the vision in Our Health, Our Care, Our Say
16. Following up c.j.ham@bham.ac.uk
Thank you