Publication | Open Access
Organizational Fragmentation and Care Quality in the U.S. Healthcare System
185
Citations
51
References
2008
Year
Health AdministrationCare CoordinationHealth Care ManagementCare QualityIndustrial OrganizationPrimary CareManagementPublic HealthInsuranceHealth Services ResearchCare DeliveryOrganizational StructuresHealth PolicyHealth InsuranceHealth Care DeliveryNursingHealthcare QualityHealth SystemsHealth EconomicsClose CoordinationBusinessHealth Services CompetitionHealth Care CostMedicine
Many goods and services can be readily provided through a series of unconnected transactions, but in health care, close coordination over time and within care episodes improves both health outcomes and efficiency. Close coordination is problematic in the U.S. healthcare system because the financing and delivery of care is distributed across a variety of distinct and often competing entities, each with its own objectives, obligations, and capabilities. These fragmented organizational structures lead to disrupted relationships, poor information flows, and misaligned incentives that combine to degrade care quality and increase costs. We illustrate our argument with examples taken from the insurance and hospital industries, and discuss possible responses to the problems resulting from organizational fragmentation.
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