i think some issues are missing in this article:
1. the capacity of the healthcare providers is not enough considering the aging population.
2. a clear trend exists such that physicians are looking for employment. this is partly due to the financial pressure of EMR on the self-employed physicians. however, not every hospital runs like Mayo Clinic which provides efficient management and highly integrated IT support to its staff physicians. to me, physicians tend to practice standalone rather than contracting with a hospital is that they are really scared by the low-efficiency in the hospital. of course, this is not a big issue in China.
3. quality is not what the hospitals want to do under their current financial situation. CMS and some insurance companies have been working on so-called pay-for-performance solutions which try to relate the reimbursement to the quality of care. however, the incentive of such program is not that big enough yet. more likely, hospitals are measuring and reporting their clinical data to CMS (such as "core measures") or Joint Commission as a compliance requirement. considering the underdevelopped IT system to support the data collection and reporting, hospitals are suffering from the compliance they gotta meet. |