First German-Austrian case-mix comparison with real life data
BMC Health Services Research
Meeting abstract First German-Austrian case-mix comparison with real life data
Michael Wilke
Klemens Haslinger
Mike Schenker
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Introduction
Many countries use a case-mix system for funding
healthcare. So far, comparisons between the systems have been
performed whenever people in a country were thinking
about introducing a case-mix system in their respective
country. Moreover, there are also other reasons. Especially
when countries share borders, it is often the case that
citizens also share healthcare services. Germany is directly
adjacent to Austria and, therefore, we conducted a study
that compares the German G-DRG system with the
Austrian LKF system in order to find out where the systems
differ and where they are similar.
Methods
We analyzed a sample of 2385 patients who were treated
as inpatients in a university hospital in the state of
Salzburg, Austria. The initial challenge was to detect structural
differences in the underlying data. First of all, we had to
perform a matching exercise for the procedure
classification. In Austria, where the LKF financing system was set
up 1997, there is classification called Medizinische
Einzelleistungen (MEL) in place. It contains about 3,500
procedures. In Germany we use the Operations- und
Prozedurenschlssel nach 301 (OPS301) that contains
roughly 30,000 codes. For diagnoses, fortunately both
countries rely on ICD-10. The German version (ICD-10
GM) does not significantly differ. However, some minor
adjustments to the coding had to be performed.
In the next step, we identified other differences in
funding. The most significant difference is that the G-DRG
System always produces one DRG with a fixed cost-weight
that is only affected by outlier adjustments. For payment,
sometimes co-payments (e.g., for dialysis, or expensive
drug or blood products) apply. In Austria, the funding
based on LKF is much more differentiated: every DRG (it
is called LDF-group for conservative and MEL-group for
surgical cases) consists of various elements that affect the
resulting cost-weight.
It consists of the following components:
- Length of stay
- Repeated procedure
- Special procedures
After matching the procedures and adjusting the
diagnoses, we transformed the intensive-care data into the
German corresponding classification, which respects
hours of mechanical ventilation (HMV), and sometimes
the complexity of treatment that is coded via an OPS-code
based on daily TISS and SAPS measuring. Finally, we
transformed the Austrian data format, which is a fixed
format that contains all values in one file, into the German
so-called 21-format, which is a comma separated value
(CSV) format having seven files for case, ICD, OPS,
hospital, department, cost and structural information.
After this preparation, we sent the data through the
GDRG Grouper Version 2008.
Having those initial results, we performed an analysis on
plausibility and selected about 300 cases where the
patient records had to be reviewed directly. We chose
intensive care, same-day, newborns and cardiology cases
to be reviewed in this sample. For assessment of the
payment, we used the regional reimbursement rate in
Salzburg and the base rate of a German university hospital in
Bavaria, since the original data also emerged from a
university hospital in Austria.
Results
Although the final results are not yet ready we will be
happy to show them at the PCSI conference we found
the following, to some extent surprising, results:
- The systems, although they are very different in design
(LKF: ca. 850 DRGs and 3,500 procedures; G-DRG: 1,158
DRGs and 33,000 procedures), and in the mechanisms of
producing the final cost-weight, match astonishingly well
and produce almost consistently close payment rates.
- The biggest differences we found were in the area of
intensive care, same-day patients, cardiology and
newborns; therefore, we draw a representative sample to
further investigate in these cases by peer review which is
currently still going on.
Final results will be ready by the end of June 2008.
Conclusion
It is a bit early to draw final conclusions since we are still
in the phase of reviewing the patient records. The most
surprising results are the good correlation of the payment
rates, although system design is heavily different.
Moreover, one finding yet to be proven is the higher
payment for intensive care (still under investigation) cases.
One structural difference is the higher staff quota on
Austrian intensive-care units compared to German ones.
BMC Health Services Research 2008 , 8 ( Suppl 1 ):A13 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472- 6963 /8/S1/A13 (...truncated)