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Improving Value in Musculoskeletal Care Delivery

Improving value in musculoskeletal health care has emerged as an important objective in both the United States and Canada. In order to achieve this objective, providers need to have a clear definition of value and an infrastructure for measuring outcomes of interest to patients and costs over the ep...

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Published in:Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume 2015, Vol.97 (9), p.769-774
Main Authors: Wei, David H., MD, MS, Hawker, Gillian A., MD, MSc, Jevsevar, David S., MD, MBA, Bozic, Kevin J., MD, MBA
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Language:English
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 769
container_title Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
container_volume 97
creator Wei, David H., MD, MS
Hawker, Gillian A., MD, MSc
Jevsevar, David S., MD, MBA
Bozic, Kevin J., MD, MBA
description Improving value in musculoskeletal health care has emerged as an important objective in both the United States and Canada. In order to achieve this objective, providers need to have a clear definition of value and an infrastructure for measuring outcomes of interest to patients and costs over the episode of care. Although national patient registries have been established in the United States and Canada, they nevertheless lag behind other registries worldwide in terms of collecting patient-reported outcomes and capturing data from a wide cross-section of hospitals and physicians. With the help of professional medical societies and the creation of national initiatives, patient-reported outcomes data collection on a large scale may be possible, but many challenges remain regarding implementation. Alternatives to the fee-for-service payment model, including pay-for-reporting and pay-for-performance, may help incentivize physicians and health-care providers to obtain and improve on patient-reported outcomes data collection. Other payment reforms, such as bundled payments, have been piloted in certain regions, but their sustainability and long-term success are unclear at this time. Novel health-care delivery strategies aimed at improving quality, coordinating multispecialty care, and enhancing patient participation in shared decision-making have shown promise in improving patient-centered outcomes, but delivery models continue to vary greatly throughout the United States and Canada. The current status of musculoskeletal health-care delivery requires substantial change before the goal of improving patient outcomes and lowering health-care costs can be achieved.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0021-9355(15)30106-5
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subjects Orthopedics
title Improving Value in Musculoskeletal Care Delivery
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