General & Epidemiological Trends & Socioeconomics: Value of Care: Cost and Outcomes Measures IIMP32-08 ACCOUNTABLE CARE ORGANIZATIONS AND THE USE OF PROSTATE CANCER SCREENING
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INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) were established under the Affordable Care Act as a new payment model intended to impose greater responsibility on all stakeholders for cost control and quality improvement. Preventive services are an ideal target to monitor the effectiveness of new health care delivery models. We sought to examine and compare the prevalence of breast cancer screening (BCa-S), and prostate cancer screening (PCa-S) between ACO and traditional Medicare beneficiaries. We
METHODS
Using a random 20% sample of Medicare beneficiaries, we assessed BCa-S in those aged <75, (evidence-based cancer screening), and PCa-S in those <75 (non-recommended cancer screening) between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2013 with appropriate exclusion criteria. ACO coverage was ascertained from the quarterly assignment in the Shared Savings Program ACO Beneficiary-level file.
RESULTS
Following propensity-score weighting, our final cohorts of ACO and traditional Medicare beneficiaries included, 52,987/526,063 women for BCa-S, and 86,936/814,221 men for PCa-S, respectively. The prevalence of screening in ACO vs. traditional Medicare were 35.0% vs. 25.2% for BCa-S, and 54.6% vs. 41.7% for PCa-S (all p<.001).
CONCLUSIONS
The ACO model appears to have a salutary effect on preventive service utilization. Our findings vis-a-vis PCa-S among ACOs are likely a reflection of improved health care access rather than vetted screening practices. There is hope that such nonrecommended screening will decrease if more ACOs are required to move towards a “two-sided” risk shared savings and loss model.
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