Unintended Consequences: Getting the Most While Avoiding the Worst (Pay FOR PERFORMANCE) Unintended Consequences: Getting the Most While Avoiding the Worst (Pay FOR PERFORMANCE)

Unintended Consequences: Getting the Most While Avoiding the Worst (Pay FOR PERFORMANCE‪)‬

Journal of Healthcare Management 2006, Nov-Dec, 51, 6

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Publisher Description

This year we examined a variety of issues that complicate a seemingly straightforward and intuitive premise: pay should somehow be tied to performance. The pay-for-performance experience, both in the United States and abroad, has identified a number of unintended consequences that should be considered by those advocating specific pay-for-performance approaches. One study reviewed (through PubMed) 3,256 articles published over the last 15 years that address the relationship between financial incentives and high-quality healthcare; the review yielded only 17 studies that provide empiric results allowing a reasonable comparison of financial incentives to no incentives (Peterson et al. 2006). Four of those studies showed unintended consequences.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2006
1 November
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
8
Pages
PUBLISHER
American College of Healthcare Executives
PROVIDER INFO
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
259.4
KB
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