1.Determinants of Private Clinics' Productivity: a Comparison of City and County Clinics in Korea.
Seung Hm YU ; Sang A KIM ; Woong Sub PARK
Yonsei Medical Journal 2005;46(6):769-778
This study was designed to assess determinants of private clinics' productivity, and to compare city and county clinics in South Korea. We analyzed the revenue and patient data from all 9, 212 private clinics in South Korea. This data was obtained from the Korean National Health Insurance Corporation, during the period between 1996 and 1999. We used a mixed model for repeatedly measured data. The following listed variables were used in our analysis: sex and age of physician, number of beds of clinics, competitiveness of medical institution, inhabitants' incomes, the proportion of elderly in the administrative unit, and time effects. Age, sex, number of beds, and specialty were found to be the most relevant determinants for the productivity of private clinics in both urban and rural settings, and number of clinics and beds per 100, 000 and income of the administrative unit were found to be significant determinants, but only in city environments.
Urban Health
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Rural Health
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Private Practice/*organization & administration
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Korea
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Geography
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Efficiency, Organizational/*statistics & numerical data
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Cities
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Ambulatory Care Facilities/economics/*organization & administration/statistics & numerical data
2.Participation Determinants in the DRG Payment System of Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics in South Korea.
Jung Kook SONG ; Chang yup KIM
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2010;43(2):117-124
OBJECTIVES: The Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) payment system, which has been implemented in Korea since 1997, is based on voluntary participation. Hence, the positive impact of this system depends on the participation of physicians. This study examined the factors determining participation of Korean obstetrics & gynecology (OBGYN) clinics in the DRG-based payment system. METHODS: The demographic information, practice-related variables of OBGYN clinics and participation information in the DRG-based payment system were acquired from the nationwide data from 2002 to 2007 produced by the National Health Insurance Corporation and the Health Insurance Review & Assessment Service. The subjects were 336 OBGYN clinics consisting of 43 DRG clinics that had maintained their participation in 2003-2007 and 293 no-DRG (fee-for-service) clinics that had never been a DRG clinic during the same period. Logistic regression analysis was carried out to determine the factors associated with the participation of OBGYN clinics in the DRG-based payment system. RESULTS: The factors affecting participation of OBGYN clinics in the DRG-based payment system were as follows (p<0.05): (1) a larger number of caesarian section (c/sec) claims, (2) higher cost of a c/sec, (3) less variation in the price of a c/sec, (4) fewer days of admission for a c/sec, and (5) younger pregnant women undergoing a c/sec. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that OBGYN clinics with an economic practice pattern under a fee-for-service system are more likely to participate in the DRG-based payment system. Therefore, to ensure adequate participation of physicians, a payment system with a stronger financial incentive might be more suitable in Korea.
Adult
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Age Factors
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Ambulatory Care Facilities/economics/*statistics & numerical data
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Cesarean Section/statistics & numerical data
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Costs and Cost Analysis/statistics & numerical data
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Demography
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Diagnosis-Related Groups/economics/*statistics & numerical data
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Fee-for-Service Plans/statistics & numerical data
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Female
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Gynecology
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Humans
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Length of Stay/statistics & numerical data
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Logistic Models
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Obstetrics
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Pregnancy
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*Prospective Payment System
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Republic of Korea
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State Medicine/economics/*statistics & numerical data