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Hosp Community Psychiatry 36:760-763, July 1985
© 1985 American Psychiatric Association
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Beyond Gamesmanship: Strategies for Coping With Prospective Payment

Barry S. Fogel M.D.1 and Andrew E. Slaby M.D.,Ph.D.,M.P.H.2

1 Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, Rhode Island Hospital
2 Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, Rhode Island Hospital and Women and Infants Hospital in Providence

Jane Brown 5, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island 02902

Prospective payment represents a major economic challenge to inpatient psychiatric units. For a unit to survive, increased efficiency of treatment will be crucial but will probably not be enough. Most units will need to alter the percentages of high-cost and low-cost patients they treat (case mix) and set less ambitious treatment goals. When altering case mix, ethical and political concerns must be considered first, followed by careful evaluation of which patients will benefit most from high-cost treatment. The authors recommend several measures for improving efficiency of treatment, including decreasing time to make dispositions, using electroconvulsive therapy when indicated, and strengthening aftercare services. They also recommend negotiating with hospital administrators to redeploy conserved resources within the psychiatry department rather than elsewhere.







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