1 / 13

International Applications of The Johns Hopkins Adjusted Clinical Group (ACG) Case-Mix System

International Applications of The Johns Hopkins Adjusted Clinical Group (ACG) Case-Mix System. Dr. Karen Kinder Siemens Director, ACG International Operations Johns Hopkins University. Goals of Presentation. To share how ACGs are being used outside of North America

efia
Download Presentation

International Applications of The Johns Hopkins Adjusted Clinical Group (ACG) Case-Mix System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International Applications of The Johns Hopkins Adjusted Clinical Group (ACG) Case-Mix System Dr. Karen Kinder Siemens Director, ACG International Operations Johns Hopkins University

  2. Goals of Presentation • To share how ACGs are being used outside of North America • To highlight common problems as well as common goals

  3. Multiple countries • Germany • Spain • Sweden • England • Lithuania • Taiwan • Malaysia

  4. Robustness • Sweden • Malaysia • Spain • Taiwan Despite differences in health care systems, ACGs are adaptable to portrait the morbidity patterns within a population

  5. Explaining Ambulatory Visit Rates in Spain

  6. ACG Relative Weights for Ambulatory Costs, US v Taiwan, ACGs 0100-1600 (2000) US: National Sample of 3M persons Taiwan: National Sample of 170K persons Administrative Only Psychosocial

  7. ACG Relative Weights for Ambulatory Costs, US v Taiwan, ACGs 1711-3700 (2000) Pregnancy/Delivery US: National Sample of 3M persons Taiwan: National Sample of 170K persons

  8. ACG Relative Weights for Ambulatory Costs, US v Taiwan, ACGs 3800-5240 (2000) Highest Disease Burden Infants US: National Sample of 3M persons Taiwan: National Sample of 170K persons Non-User

  9. Similar Goals • Equitable resource allocation • Explain resource use • Profiling of clinic and providers • Morbidity based capitation • Improved Case management

  10. Common challenges • Language & cultural differences • Differing coding systems and versions • Data Quality

  11. Codification quality:

  12. Lessons Learned • Training is essential • Go slow • Local weights should be developed • Profiling before payment • Communication • Look at entire system • System needs regular recalibration

  13. Conclusions Despite differences - • Different systems • Different applications • Different available data ACGs prove to be a robust and valid tool for assessing the health needs of a population

More Related