Reconciling practice and theory: challenges in monitoring Medicaid managed-care quality.

Dynamic List Information
Dynamic List Data
Title
Reconciling practice and theory: challenges in monitoring Medicaid managed-care quality.
First Author
Gold, Marsha
Date of Pub
1995 Summer
Pages
85-105
Abstract
The massive shift to managed care in many State Medicaid programs heightens the importance of identifying effective approaches to promote and oversee quality in plans serving Medicaid enrollees. This article reviews operational issues and lessons from the ongoing evaluation of a three-State demonstration of the Health Care Financing Administration's (HCFA) Quality Assurance Reform Initiative (QARI) for Medicaid managed care. The QARI experience to date shows the potential utility of the system while drawing attention to the challenges involved in translating theory to practice. These challenges include data limitations and staffing constraints, diverse levels of sophistication among States and health plans, and the practical limitations of using quality indicators for a population that is often enrolled only on a discontinuous basis. To overcome these challenges, we suggest using realistically long timeframes for system implementation, with intermediate short-term strategies that could treat States and managed-care plans differently depending on their stage of development.
Other Authors
Felt, Suzanne
MeSH
Guidelines : Health Services Research/methods : Managed Care Programs/statistics & numerical data/standards : Medicaid/statistics & numerical data/standards : Pilot Projects : Program Evaluation : Quality Assurance, Health Care/organization & administration : State Health Plans/organization & administration/standards : Support, Non-U.S. Gov't : United States : United States Health Care Financing Administration
Issue
4
NTIS Number
PB99-106445
Volume
16

Downloads