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Inciting maintenance: Tiered institutional work during value-based payment reform in oncology.

Authors :
Reindersma, Thomas
Fabbricotti, Isabelle
Ahaus, Kees
Bangma, Chris
Sülz, Sandra
Source :
Social Science & Medicine. Apr2024, Vol. 347, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Value-based payment aims to shift the focus from traditional volume-driven arrangements to a system that rewards providers for the quality and value of care delivered. Previous research has shown that it is difficult for providers to change their medical and organizational practices to adopt value-based payment, but the role of actors in these reforms has remained underexposed. This paper unravels the motives of non-clinical and clinical professionals to maintain institutionalized payment practices when faced with value-based payment. To illuminate these motives, a case study was conducted in a Dutch hospital alliance that aimed to implement value-based payment to incentivize the transition to novel interventions in a prostate cancer care pathway. Data collection consisted of observations and interviews with actors on multiple levels in the hospital (sales departments, medical specialist enterprises (MSEs) and physicians). On each actor level, motives for maintaining currently prevailing institutional practices were present. Regulative maintenance motives were more common for sales managers whereas cultural-cognitive and normative motives seemed to play an important role for physicians. An overarching motive was that desired transitions to novel interventions proved possible under the currently prevailing institutional logic, dismissing an urgent need for payment reform. Our analysis further revealed that actors engage in diverse institutional maintenance work, and that some actor groups' institutional work carries more weight than others because of the dependency relationships that exist between hospitals, MSEs and physicians. Physicians depend on MSEs and sales departments, who act as gatekeepers and buffers, to decide whether the value-based payment reform is either adopted or abandoned. • Physicians depend on other hospital actors for pursuing value-based payment reform. • Payment reform prompts actors to assess flaws of current payment practices. • Current payment practices persist due to perceived lack of payment reform necessity. • It is important to look beyond the insurer–provider nexus during payment reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02779536
Volume :
347
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Social Science & Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176632353
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116798