Changes in patient care through flexible and integrated treatment programs in German psychiatric hospitals: meta-analyses based on a series of controlled claims-based cohort studies

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Contributors

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Global treatment budgets, i.e. predefined budgets for patients treated in hospital independent of the setting within the hospital, together with flexible and integrated treatment (FIT) have been introduced in some German psychiatric hospitals since 2013. We investigated pooled changes in inpatient, day-care, outpatient treatment, and continuity of care for patients with mental disorders in 12 FIT-hospitals.

METHODS: We conducted a series of 12 controlled cohort studies regarding FIT hospitals using anonymized patient claims data from more than 70 German statutory health insurance funds. Each study compared one FIT-hospital to matched patients from equivalent non-FIT-hospitals (routine care). We included only those patients without treatment in the respective hospital within two years prior to first hospital treatment (either FIT or routine care). We contrasted results between the year prior to with the first and second year after patient's first treatment (treatment continuity: only group comparison) using multivariate multi-level models. To approximate the difference-in-difference effect in the meta-analysis, we used the interaction terms group (FIT hospital vs. routine care) x time (year before vs. first or second patient year after study inclusion) in the Poisson models.

RESULTS: The 12 studies included 36,069 patients with 2,358 patients from a Department of child and adolescent psychiatry. The pooled effect revealed a 5.1 days lower increase in inpatient treatment in FIT-hospitals during the first patient year compared to routine care. Results were statistically significant for adult care FIT-hospitals but not for child and adolescent FIT-hospitals. Utilization of day-care treatment increased more in most FIT-hospitals during the first year, while outpatient contacts increased in some and decreased in others. The odds of treatment continuity increased by 1.4 in FIT-hospitals compared to non-FIT-hospitals.

CONCLUSIONS: Global treatment budgets lead to the intended changes in mental health care in the majority of FIT-hospitals compared to routine care in this large real-world evidence study from Germany. For child and adolescent psychiatry, more evidence is needed to draw firm conclusions.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was registered in the database "Health Services Research Germany" (trial number: VVfD_EVA64_15_003713).

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number74
Pages (from-to)74
JournalBMC psychiatry
Volume24
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 26 Jan 2024
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMedCentral PMC10811876
Scopus 85183129856
ORCID /0000-0002-3415-5583/work/152544737

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Adult, Adolescent, Child, Humans, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Cohort Studies, Hospitalization, Mental Disorders/therapy, Ambulatory Care, Germany