Clear purpose

 

First and foremost, an effective payment system needs a clear primary purpose. Whether this is equitably allocating resources, improving care pathways, driving efficiency, improving population health – or something else – this purpose must be clearly defined and understood by all parts of the system.

The current situation

The current payment system lacks a clear overarching purpose, so the rationale behind changes can be difficult to interpret. In 2013, NHS England suggested the payment system should support sustainably delivered continuous quality improvement, and the appropriate allocation and management of risk. This should be done by pursuing four objectives.

  • Reimburse providers for delivering specified outcomes for patients, rather than treatments or inputs.
  • Promote the long term, sustainable wellbeing of the whole person.
  • Allow for different payment approaches where people’s care needs differ, with room for local flexibility bounded by a clear structure of rules.
  • Signal clearly to commissioners and providers the choices available to them that will promote sustainably better outcomes for patients.

However, many providers perceived the existing payment system to have a multitude of objectives – many of which were unclear – and this may be contributing to a loss of focus during commissioner–provider negotiations. This is supported by a paper that attributed 12 policy objectives to the current NHS payment system, which contrasts against the three to five objectives pursued in other comparable European health systems.

For example, it is often unclear whether innovations in a payment system are intended to control expenditure, increase transparency, improve quality, or a combination of the above (or, indeed, achieve other objectives). The reality is that no single optimal payment system would be able to improve all of these objectives.

A system that prioritises expenditure control will therefore be different from one that intends to increase activity (Table 1). While each objective may be worthy in and of itself, expecting any payment system to achieve multiple objectives can lead to complexity and opacity, leaving rules and guidance open to conflicting interpretations. This is not to say that the payment system cannot have a role in multiple objectives, and many systems are able to meet more than one goal. But a primary objective should be agreed, rather than giving all objectives equal weighting. Otherwise the risk is that no objective is fully achieved.

Table 1: Hospital payment systems and their theoretical advantages and disadvantages (Busse et al, 2011)


Note: + represents an advantage, - represents a disadvantage and 0 represents neither.

 

 

Activity

Expenditure control

Technical efficiency

Quality

Administrative capacity

Transparency

Number of cases

Number of services per case

Fee-for-service/cost reimbursement

+

+

-

0

0

-

0

Diagnosis-resource group-based payment

+

-

0

+

0

-

+

Global budget

-

-

+

0

0

+

-

This report’s research participants emphasised how difficult it can be to make decisions regarding the payment system – from developing implementation strategies to negotiating local prices – without a clearly defined purpose. They desired an NHS-wide purpose – one that would clarify what the payment system expects of them at a strategic level.

Whatever this primary objective is, it must be clearly stated and prioritised. There may be secondary objectives in support of other priorities, but there must be clear agreement on the primary purpose. Changes or additions for any secondary purpose can then only occur if they do not hinder the primary purpose.

Evolution

When the primary objective changes, which is to be expected as the NHS encounters new challenges, the new objective must be clearly defined before any part of the payment system is redesigned. This will make sure that changes to the payment system harmonise with the vision of the wider health care system. It will also avoid confusion resulting from multiple interpretations of what the payment system should deliver.

The current tariff system was designed during a period of major investment in the NHS aimed at reducing waiting times. In an era of austerity, with the focus on improving efficiency, the primary objective for the payment system has arguably changed – yet the payment system itself has not. While stability is an important feature of a payment system (see principle 8), priorities can and do change over time. When that happens, it becomes necessary to re-examine and reformulate the payment system’s underlying purpose.

Conclusion

Many of those spoken to for this research understood clearly that the principle objective of PbR, when it was introduced in the early 2000s, had been the reduction of waiting times. The stated reason when PbR initially introduced was ‘to incentivise expansion of elective surgery so that waiting times fall’. This outcome was easily measurable and understood across commissioners and providers. The system – together with complementary measures and increased funding – was effective in achieving its aim.

This is not to say that PbR was only designed to meet this one purpose. The complexity of the design meant that other objectives could be supported, such as driving efficiency through yardstick competition, incentivising quality by ensuring providers did not compete on price, and facilitating patient choice with money following the patient. The system evolved over time as the purpose developed, and PbR was expanded to cover non-elective and A&E care by 2006/07.

However, the continued expansion of the payment system’s priorities in later years – evident from the literature and perspectives gathered through research – has muddied the waters. Many participants in the research said there is no longer a clear purpose for the current payment system. Trade-offs occur when a large number of objectives are pursued. Any change or reform must have a clear, strongly signalled purpose that can be easily interpreted and implemented. This enables organisations to more easily translate the payment system into local action.

Such clarity of purpose underpins the other seven principles outlined in this report: without it, reform will be undermined.


These objectives were: increase efficiency; expand activity; enhance patient choice; increase patient satisfaction; reduce waiting lists; improve quality; control costs; ensure the fair allocation of resources (or funding) across geographical areas, and across and within health care sectors; shift patterns of service provision away from historical patterns; encourage the development of new, cost-effective treatment pathways; improve transparency of hospital funding, activity and management; and encourage providers to be responsible to patients and purchasers. For more information see: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22221929

** For more information see the appendix, for a brief history of the NHS payment system: www.health.org.uk/effective-payment-system-eight-principles

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