Creating greater efficiency in ambulatory surgery
1995; Elsevier BV; Volume: 7; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/0952-8180(95)00136-0
ISSN1873-4529
Autores Tópico(s)Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes
ResumoAmbulatory surgery emerged as a new modality in health care 25 years ago, and it has continued to grow substantially since that time. Several thousand facilities and programs have been established, developed, and expanded, while hundreds of millions of dollars were expended and committed to react to industry demands. Ambulatory surgery growth between 1970 and 1980 (Figure 1) was primarily fueled by patient, physician, and cost considerations. Surgical facilities and programs were initially faced with establishing credibility and legitimacy by demonstrating safety and quality in the outpatient setting. Thus began the competition for the ambulatory surgery patient in the United States. Ambulatory surgery became synonymous with efficiency in that there was a reduction in overnight stays, lowering the cost for the ambulatory surgery patient and providing hospital beds for those who required them. In addition, ambulatory surgery centers' fees were initially considerably less than hospital ambulatory surgery fees. Between 1980 and 1990 (Figure 2), the principal influences in ambulatory surgery expanded from surgeons and patients to include insurance companies and government reimbursement programs, including Medicare and Medicaid. A substantial growth in technology occurred, the investment community discovered ambulatory surgery, and an increase in reimbursement was a result of those marketplace dynamics. From 1990 (Figure 3) to the present, principal influences expanded from surgeons, patients, insurance, and government, to include managed care, creative alliances, affiliations, and employers. The health care industry is now dominated by cost control, competition, exclusionary contracts, changing referral patterns, fragmentation, self-referral legislation, continuing governmental regulations, consumerism, accountability and measurability, over-capacity, capital limitations, and technological advances. Health care clinicians and analysts comfortably project that, by the year 2000, 75% of all surgery will be performed on an ambulatory basis./4+ key/(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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