Elsevier

Value in Health

Volume 19, Issue 4, June 2016, Pages 323-325
Value in Health

DECISION-MAKER COMMENTARY
Developing a Measure of Value in Health Care

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2014.12.009Get rights and content
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Abstract

There is broad support to pay for value, rather than volume, for health care in the United States. Despite the support, practical approaches for measuring value remain elusive. Value is commonly defined as quality divided by costs, where quality reflects patient outcomes and costs are the total costs for providing care, whether these be costs related to an episode, a diagnosis, or per capita. Academicians have proposed a conceptual approach to measure value, in which we measure outcomes important to patients and costs using time-driven activity-based costing. This approach is conceptually sound, but has significant practical challenges. In our commentary, we describe how health care can use existing quality measures and cost accounting data to measure value. Although not perfect, we believe this approach is practical, valid, and scalable and can establish the foundation for future work in this area.

Keywords

costs
measurement
quality
value

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Conflict of interest: Dr. Pronovost reports receiving grant or contract support from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (research related to patient safety and quality of care), the National Institutes of Health (acute lung injury research), and the American Medical Association, Inc. (improve blood pressure control); honoraria from various health care organizations for speaking on patient safety and quality (the Leigh Bureau manages these engagements); book royalties from the Penguin Group for his book Safe Patients, Smart Hospitals; fees to be a strategic advisor to the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; and stock and fees to serve as a director for Cantel Medical. Dr. Pronovost is a founder of Patient Doctor Technologies, a startup company that seeks to enhance the partnership between patients and clinicians with an application called Doctella. Dr. Austin discloses grant or contract support from The Leapfrog Group, the Cautious Patient Foundation, and AHRQ (all related to research on hospital performance measurement). Dr. Lee has no conflicts of interest with regard to the content of this article.