An agent-based simulation model to study accountable care organizations
Authored by Pai Liu, Shinyi Wu
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10729-014-9279-x
Sponsors:
USC Roybal Center for Health Policy Simulation
National Institute on Aging
Leonard D. Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics
Platforms:
AnyLogic
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Creating accountable care organizations (ACOs) has been widely discussed
as a strategy to control rapidly rising healthcare costs and improve
quality of care; however, building an effective ACO is a complex process
involving multiple stakeholders (payers, providers, patients) with their
own interests. Also, implementation of an ACO is costly in terms of time
and money. Immature design could cause safety hazards. Therefore, there
is a need for analytical model-based decision-support tools that can
predict the outcomes of different strategies to facilitate ACO design
and implementation. In this study, an agent-based simulation model was
developed to study ACOs that considers payers, healthcare providers, and
patients as agents under the shared saving payment model of care for
congestive heart failure (CHF), one of the most expensive causes of
sometimes preventable hospitalizations. The agent-based simulation model
has identified the critical determinants for the payment model design
that can motivate provider behavior changes to achieve maximum financial
and quality outcomes of an ACO. The results show nonlinear provider
behavior change patterns corresponding to changes in payment model
designs. The outcomes vary by providers with different quality or
financial priorities, and are most sensitive to the cost-effectiveness
of CHF interventions that an ACO implements. This study demonstrates an
increasingly important method to construct a healthcare system analytics
model that can help inform health policy and healthcare management
decisions. The study also points out that the likely success of an ACO
is interdependent with payment model design, provider characteristics, and cost and effectiveness of healthcare interventions.
Tags
incentives
Discrete-event simulation
Risk
Mortality
cost-effectiveness
Prevalence
Congestive-heart-failure
Quality improvement
Management program
Hospitalization