Title: VA Health Economics Course Presentation
1VA Health Economics Course Presentation
3Costing Methods
2Costing Methods
- Mark W. Smith, PhD
- Associate Director
- VA Health Economics Resource Center
3Focusing Question
- What is the cost of a health care intervention?
- Example
- CSP 519 compares separate PTSD and smoking
cessation therapy to combined therapy.
4Cost of Health Care
- Outside of health, most items that we purchase
daily have a readily observable cost - Not true with health care
- Insurance buffers patient from true cost
- Charges, payments may not equal cost
5Cost Estimation Approaches
- Two general approaches to costing
- Microcosting
- Average costing (gross costing)
6Estimating Costs Micro-costing
- Determine each input, find its price, then sum
(quantityprice) across all inputs - DSS uses this approach
- Researchers use this approach in some
circumstances - Gold standard but resource intensive
7Estimating Costs Average Costing
- Over a long period, divide total cost by total
units of care provided -
- Less precise than micro-costing
8Costing Spectrum
micro
average
Pseudo-bill
Cost regression
Reduced list costing
Direct measurement
Average cost per day
Estimate Medicare payment
9Microcost method 1
10Direct Measurement
- Used to the find the cost of
- interventions
- care unique to VA (e.g., CSP 519)
- Method
- Measure staff activity
- Find labor cost
- Find cost of supplies, capital, overhead
11Finding Unit Cost
- Average cost
- Total program cost/number of units
- Assumes homogeneous products
- Relative Values needed for heterogeneous products
- Find Relative Value of each product
- Find cost per relative value unit (RVU)
- Use this to find cost of each product
12Staff Activity Analysis
Direct Measurement
- Methods of finding staff activities
- Track staff activity in a log
- Estimate activity
- Need not be comprehensive can sample activity
- Estimate labor cost
13Characterizing Staff Activities
Direct Measurement
- Cost of patient care may include non-patient care
time - Activities that produce several products may need
to be included, depending on perspective - e.g., time spent on clinical research may be
regarded as a research cost, or a patient care
cost, depending on analytical goal
14Exclude and Include
Direct Measurement
- Exclude development cost
- Exclude research-related costs
- Should measure when program fully implemented
- Should measure at constant returns to scale
15Direct vs. Indirect vs. Overhead
- Direct costs costs that are tied to a
particular encounter (e.g., staff time,
medications) - Overhead costs that cannot be tied to
particular procedures (e.g., VA police,
maintenance, food service)
16Direct vs. Indirect vs. Overhead
- Indirect
- sometimes means overhead
- sometimes means non-salary benefits
- (e.g., health care, annual leave)
- sometimes means secondary impact of treatment on
other health care use Example patient
receives better depression care - at VA and later has fewer visits for other
causes
17Discussion
- Which of these should be included in the cost of
an intervention? - Non-salary benefits
- Secondary impact on other health care services
- Overhead costs
18Other Costs
Direct Measurement
- Survey or actual measure of supply costs
- Alternatives for overhead
- Cost report data
- Standard rates
- Alternatives for capital
- Cost report
- Rental rates
19Microcost method 2
20Pseudo-bill
- Itemize all services utilized/provided
- Use schedule of cost/reimbursement for each
service - Example HERC outpatient costs
- Itemized all CPT codes
- Used relative value weights to assign costs to
procedures
21Microcost method 3
22Reduced List Costing
- Some utilization items in pseudo-bill explain
most of variation in cost - e.g., surgical procedures
- Costing major items may be sufficient
- Schedule of cost/reimbursement must be adjusted
- e.g., new rate for surgical procedures that
includes cost of laboratory services
23Microcost method 4
24Cost Regression
- Dependent variable is charges or cost-adjusted
charge from non-VA data - Independent variables
- Clinical information
- Diagnosis Related Group
- Diagnosis
- Procedures
- Vital status at discharge
- Length of stay
- Days of ICU care
Anything that predicts cost and is in both
datasets.
25Transformation of Dependent Variable
- Cost data are frequently skewed
- Skewed errors violates assumptions of Ordinary
Least Squares - Error terms not normally distributed with
identical means and variance - Transformation
- Typical method log of cost
- Can make OLS assumptions more tenable
26References - I
- Duan, N. (1983) Smearing estimate a
nonparametric retransformation method, Journal of
the American Statistical Association, 78,
605-610. - Manning WG, Mullahy J. Estimating log models to
transform or not to transform? J Health Econ 2001
Jul20(4)461-94.
27References - II
- Basu A, Manning WG, Mullahy J. Comparing
alternative models log vs Cox proportional
hazard? Health Economics 2004 Aug13(8)749-65.
28HERC Web Site FAQs
- E1. How do I estimate costs with a clinical cost
function? - http//www.herc.research.va.gov/resources/
faq_e02.asp - E2. What is retransformation bias, and how can it
be corrected? - http//www.herc.research.va.gov/resources/
faq_e02.asp
29Limitations
- Relies on similar cost structures of external and
study (internal) data. - Reduces the number of outliers.
- Can create statistical anomalies.
30Microcost method 5
- Estimating Medicare reimbursements
31Medicare Reimbursements
- Part A -- Prospective Payment for Inpatient Stays
- Part B -- Payment for Physician Services to
Inpatients
32Medicare Inpatient Facility Payment
- DRG-based payments adjusted by
- Disproportionate share payments
- Indirect medical education
- Geographic adjustments
- Outlier payments for unusual cases
- Direct medical education
33Medicare Payments
- Medicare pays flat rate per DRG, regardless of
length of stay (except for outliers) - Cost analysis may wish to capture effect of
length of stay on cost
34Medicare Pricer Software
- Computer application for calculating facility
payment - Requires
- 6-digit hospital PPS (identifier)
- DRG
- Admission and discharge dates (LOS)
35Medicare Outpatient Payment
- Payment based on CPT procedure codes
- Provider payment and facility payment (if done in
hospital) - See documentation for HERC Outpatient Average
Cost data www.herc.research.med.va.gov/
methods_data/va_cost_methods_ac.asp
36Outpatient Medicare Payments
- Some CPTs have no APC
- Paid on cost pass-through basis
- Paid through another APC (e.g., anesthesia)
- Paid through a separate cost list
- Multiple CPTs assigned to a single group-APC
- Some surgery procedures are discounted
37Selecting a Method
- Data available?
- Method feasible?
- Assumptions appropriate?
- Method accurate Will it capture the effect of
the intervention on resource use?
38Direct Measurement
- Assumptions
- Activity survey and payroll data are
representative - May assume all utilization uses the same amount
of resources - Advantages
- Useful to determine cost of a program that is
unique to VA - Disadvantages
- Limited to small number of programs
- Cant find indirect costs
- Cant find total health care cost
39Pseudo-bill
- Assumptions
- Schedule of charges reflects relative resource
use - Cost-adjusted charges reflect VA costs
- Advantages
- Captures effect of intervention on pattern of
care within an encounter - Disadvantages
- Expense of obtaining detailed utilization data
40Reduced List Costing
- Assumptions
- Items on reduced list are sufficient to capture
variation in resource use - Cost of items on reduced list is accurate
- Advantages
- Requires less data than pseudo-bill
- Disadvantages
- Needs to find data on cost associated with items
on reduced list
41Cost Regression
- Assumptions
- Cost-adjusted charges accurately reflect resource
use - The relation between cost and utilization is the
same in the current study as in the previous
study - Advantages
- Less effort to obtain reduced list of utilization
measures than to prepare pseudo-bill - Disadvantages
- Must have detailed data
- Data from prior study may have error or bias
42Estimate Medicare payments
- Assumptions
- Medicare payments reflect average cost for a
population your sample is generalizable - RVU captures effect of intervention on resources
used - Advantage easy to understand
- Disadvantages
- Accuracy limited VA may have different cost
structures from average non-VA facilities - Inpatient doesnt reflect variation in resources
beyond DRG (or LOS)
43Combining Methods
- No single method may fill all needs, even within
a single study - Hybrid method may be best
- Direct method or pseudo-bill on utilization most
affected by intervention - Cost regression or Medicare payment for other
utilization
44Discussion
- CSP 519 compares
- Separate PTSD and smoking cessation visits
- Combined PTSD and smoking cessation visits
- What are some costs that you could estimate by
an average-costing approach? -
- Is there anything that might need to be
measured directly?
45Reference
- Barnett PG. Determination of VA health care
costs. Medical Care Research and Review 200360(3
Suppl.)124S-141S. - www.herc.research.med.va.gov/
- publications/supplement_mcrr_2003.asp
46Other Resources
- HERC web site FAQ responses, technical reports
(click on Publications tab) - HERC Help Desk (herc_at_med.va.gov)
47HERC email list
- To join the HERC email list, send a request to
herc_at_va.gov.
48Next session
- Wednesday, 5/16/2006, 2 p.m. ET
- Estimating the Cost of Health Care VA Costs
- Paul Barnett, PhD
- Reading for next session
- M Gold et al. Cost-Effectiveness in Health and
Medicine - pp. 199-210. Available for purchase at
http//www.oup.com/us/ or http//www.amazon.com - PG Barnett. Medical Care Research and Review
60(3), pp. 124S-141S. Download from
http//www.herc.research.med.va.gov/
publications/supplement_mcrr_2003.asp