Payment Model

A payment model is a structured method by which healthcare providers are reimbursed for delivering medical services. It determines how, when, and how much doctors, hospitals, or clinics are paid.

Model Description
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*Fee-for-Service (FFS)* Providers are paid for each individual service (e.g., test, surgery, consult).
*Capitation* Providers receive a fixed amount per patient, regardless of service volume.
*Bundled Payment* A single payment for all services tied to an episode of care (e.g., surgery + rehab).
*DRG (Diagnosis-Related Group)* Hospitals receive a fixed payment per case, based on diagnosis and expected resource use.
*Value-Based Care* Payment is linked to patient outcomes and quality metrics, not just volume.
β€œChina adopted a DRG-based payment model to control inpatient surgical costs.”

This means hospitals are paid a predefined amount based on diagnosis (e.g., spinal tumor) rather than on each procedure, test, or implant used.

The chosen payment model directly impacts:

  • Clinical decision-making
  • Length of stay
  • Access to complex procedures
  • Financial sustainability of high-risk specialties (like neurosurgery)

A poorly designed payment model can lead to:

  • Overtreatment (in FFS)
  • Undertreatment or early discharge (in DRG)
  • Avoidance of complex patients (in capitation)
  • payment_model.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/18 15:27
  • by administrador