Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Health Economics Review 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research

Pay for performance and contractual choice: the case of general practitioners in England

Authors: Eleonora Fichera, Mario Pezzino

Published in: Health Economics Review | Issue 1/2017

Login to get access

Abstract

The Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) is a Pay-for-Performance scheme introduced in England in 2004 to reward primary care providers. This incentive scheme provides financial incentives that reward the overall performance of a practice, not individual effort. Consequently, an important question is how the QOF may affect contractual choices, quality provision and doctor mobility in the primary healthcare labour market. The paper provides a simple theoretical model that shows that the introduction and further strengthening of the scheme may have induced practices to compete for the best doctors and modified their choices in terms of contractual agreements with practitioners. We test the implications of this model using a linkage between Doctors Census data and practices’ characteristics from 2003 to 2007. We use linear multilevel models with random intercept and we account for sample selection. We find that after the introduction of the QOF efficient doctors are more likely to become partners and mobility among doctors has increased. The strengthening of the scheme in 2005 is associated with an increase in the quality of primary care and a reduction in access to the market for new doctors.
Literature
1.
go back to reference Bénabou R, Tirole J. Incentives and Prosocial Behavior. Am Econ Rev. 2006; 96(5):1652–78.CrossRef Bénabou R, Tirole J. Incentives and Prosocial Behavior. Am Econ Rev. 2006; 96(5):1652–78.CrossRef
2.
go back to reference Brekke K, Nuscheler R, Straume OR. Gatekeeping in health care. J Health Econ. 2007; 26(1):149–70.CrossRefPubMed Brekke K, Nuscheler R, Straume OR. Gatekeeping in health care. J Health Econ. 2007; 26(1):149–70.CrossRefPubMed
3.
go back to reference Brekke K, Sørgard L. Public VS private health care in a natioanl health service. Health Econ. 2007; 16:579–601.CrossRefPubMed Brekke K, Sørgard L. Public VS private health care in a natioanl health service. Health Econ. 2007; 16:579–601.CrossRefPubMed
4.
go back to reference Dohmen T, Falk A.Performance pay and multidimensional sorting: productivity, preferences, and gender. Am Econ Rev. 2011; 101:556–90.CrossRef Dohmen T, Falk A.Performance pay and multidimensional sorting: productivity, preferences, and gender. Am Econ Rev. 2011; 101:556–90.CrossRef
5.
go back to reference Doran T, Kontopantelis E, Valderas JM, Campbell S, Roland M, Salisbury C, Reeves D. Effect of financial incentives on incentivised and non-incentivised clinical activities: longitudinal analysis of data from the UK Quality and Outcomes Framework. BMJ. 2011; 342:d3590. Available at http://www.bmj.com/content/342/bmj.d3590. Doran T, Kontopantelis E, Valderas JM, Campbell S, Roland M, Salisbury C, Reeves D. Effect of financial incentives on incentivised and non-incentivised clinical activities: longitudinal analysis of data from the UK Quality and Outcomes Framework. BMJ. 2011; 342:d3590. Available at http://​www.​bmj.​com/​content/​342/​bmj.​d3590.
6.
go back to reference Gielen AC, Kerkhofs MJM, van Ours JC. How performance related pay affects productivity and employment. J Popul Econ. 2009; 23:291–301.CrossRef Gielen AC, Kerkhofs MJM, van Ours JC. How performance related pay affects productivity and employment. J Popul Econ. 2009; 23:291–301.CrossRef
7.
go back to reference Glazer A. Motivating devoted workers. Int J Ind Organ. 2004; 22(3):427–40.CrossRef Glazer A. Motivating devoted workers. Int J Ind Organ. 2004; 22(3):427–40.CrossRef
8.
go back to reference Gravelle H, Sutton M, Ma A. Doctor behaviour under a pay for performance contract: treating, cheating and case finding?Econ J. 2010; 120:F129—56.CrossRef Gravelle H, Sutton M, Ma A. Doctor behaviour under a pay for performance contract: treating, cheating and case finding?Econ J. 2010; 120:F129—56.CrossRef
9.
go back to reference Lazear EP. Output-based pay: incentives, retention or sorting? In: Solomon WP, editor. Accounting for Worker Well-Being (Research in Labor Economics, Volume 23). Emerald Group Publishing Limited: 2004. p. 1–25. Lazear EP. Output-based pay: incentives, retention or sorting? In: Solomon WP, editor. Accounting for Worker Well-Being (Research in Labor Economics, Volume 23). Emerald Group Publishing Limited: 2004. p. 1–25.
10.
go back to reference Lazear E. Performance Pay and Productivity. Am Econ Rev. 2000; 90(5):1346–61.CrossRef Lazear E. Performance Pay and Productivity. Am Econ Rev. 2000; 90(5):1346–61.CrossRef
13.
go back to reference Prendergast C. The provision of incentives in firms. J Econ Lit. 1999; 37(1):7–63.CrossRef Prendergast C. The provision of incentives in firms. J Econ Lit. 1999; 37(1):7–63.CrossRef
14.
go back to reference Roland M. Linking physician pay to quality of care: a major experiment in the UK. N Engl J Med. 2004; 351:1448–54.CrossRefPubMed Roland M. Linking physician pay to quality of care: a major experiment in the UK. N Engl J Med. 2004; 351:1448–54.CrossRefPubMed
15.
go back to reference Ross S. The economic theory of agency: the principal’s problem. Am Econ Rev. 1973; 63:134–9. Ross S. The economic theory of agency: the principal’s problem. Am Econ Rev. 1973; 63:134–9.
17.
go back to reference Vincenty T. Direct and inverse solutions of geodesics on the ellipsoid with application of nested equations. Survey Review. 1975; 23(176):88–93.CrossRef Vincenty T. Direct and inverse solutions of geodesics on the ellipsoid with application of nested equations. Survey Review. 1975; 23(176):88–93.CrossRef
18.
go back to reference Zweifel P, Breyer F, Kifmann M. Health Economics, Second Edition. Heidelberg: Springer; 2009. Zweifel P, Breyer F, Kifmann M. Health Economics, Second Edition. Heidelberg: Springer; 2009.
Metadata
Title
Pay for performance and contractual choice: the case of general practitioners in England
Authors
Eleonora Fichera
Mario Pezzino
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Health Economics Review / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 2191-1991
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13561-017-0142-x

Other articles of this Issue 1/2017

Health Economics Review 1/2017 Go to the issue