Efficiency and quality of care in nursing homes: an Italian case study

被引:0
|
作者
Giulia Garavaglia
Emanuele Lettieri
Tommaso Agasisti
Silvano Lopez
机构
[1] Politecnico di Milano,Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering
[2] ASL Milano 1,undefined
来源
关键词
Efficiency; Quality; Data envelopment analysis; Nursing homes;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study investigates efficiency and quality of care in nursing homes. By means of Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), the efficiency of 40 nursing homes that deliver their services in the north-western area of the Lombardy Region was assessed over a 3-year period (2005–2007). Lombardy is a very peculiar setting, since it is the only Region in Italy where the healthcare industry is organised as a quasi-market, in which the public authority buys health and nursing services from independent providers—establishing a reimbursement system for this purpose. The analysis is conducted by generating bootstrapped DEA efficiency scores for each nursing home (stage one), then regressing those scores on explanatory variables (stage two). Our DEA model employed two input (i.e. costs for health and nursing services and costs for residential services) and three output variables (case mix, extra nursing hours and residential charges). In the second-stage analysis, Tobit regressions and the Kruskall–Wallis tests of hypothesis to the efficiency scores were applied to define what are the factors that affect efficiency: (a) the ownership (private nursing houses outperform their public counterparts); and (b) the capability to implement strategies for labour cost and nursing costs containment, since the efficiency heavily depends upon the alignment of the costs to the public reimbursement system. Lastly, even though the public institutions are less efficient than the private ones, the results suggest that public nursing homes are moving towards their private counterparts, and thus competition is benefiting efficiency.
引用
收藏
页码:22 / 35
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] FROM CASE STUDY TO INTERVENTION: IMPROVING QUALITY IN NURSING HOMES
    Anderson, R. A.
    Colon-Emeric, C.
    Corazzini, K.
    Bailey, D.
    Toles, M.
    Ammarell, N.
    Resnick, B.
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2008, 48 : 111 - 112
  • [12] Quality of Care and Negligence Litigation in Nursing Homes
    Hebert, Philip C.
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2011, 365 (01): : 92 - 93
  • [13] Administrator turnover and quality of care in nursing homes
    Castle, NG
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2001, 41 (06): : 757 - 767
  • [14] Infections in nursing homes: Assessing quality of care
    Warshaw, G
    Mehdizadeh, S
    Applebaum, RA
    [J]. JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY SERIES A-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2001, 56 (02): : M120 - M123
  • [15] STAFFING AND QUALITY OF CARE IN NORWEGIAN NURSING HOMES
    Havig, A. K.
    Skogstad, A.
    Romoren, T.
    Kjekshus, L.
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2014, 54 : 153 - 153
  • [16] STUDY OF PROCESS CRITERION IN MEASURING QUALITY OF CARE IN NURSING-HOMES
    WOLANIN, MO
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 1975, 15 (05): : 83 - 83
  • [17] Leadership, staffing and quality of care in nursing homes
    Havig, Anders Kvale
    Skogstad, Anders
    Kjekshus, Lars Erik
    Romoren, Tor Inge
    [J]. BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2011, 11
  • [18] The quality of care provided in nursing homes for the elderly
    Pawlak, Aleksandra
    [J]. FAMILY MEDICINE AND PRIMARY CARE REVIEW, 2015, 17 (03): : 197 - 201
  • [19] Staff turnover and quality of care in nursing homes
    Castle, NG
    Engberg, J
    [J]. MEDICAL CARE, 2005, 43 (06) : 616 - 626
  • [20] Leadership, staffing and quality of care in nursing homes
    Anders Kvale Havig
    Anders Skogstad
    Lars Erik Kjekshus
    Tor Inge Romøren
    [J]. BMC Health Services Research, 11