Managed care is a synonym for PPO, HMO, MCO, and POS.
Managed care is a concept in U.S. health care which rose to dominance during the presidency of Ronald Reagan as a means to control Medicare payouts. As a major Medicare claims administrator, the Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance firm was a major architect of managed care. It spread fairly quickly to the health insurance industry in the private sector.
Managed care is based on an effort to control escalating health care costs by the health insurance industry, which supposedly defines a reasonable maximum fee which health care providers may charge for any given service. Providers are ostensibly bound to accept these maximum fees if they wish to be listed in directories of specific insurance companies, which are provided to their policy holders as referral directories of "approved" physicians.
The rise of managed care was credited by the health insurance industry for the lessened rate of medical inflation seen in much of the 1990s in the U.S., which in some years of that decade the rate of increase in price of medical goods and services was little more than the overall rate of general inflation. However, this effect now seems to largely have ended, and U.S. medical inflation is once again two or three times the rate of overall inflation, as it was during much of the 1980s.
In practice, an HMO is an insurance plan under which an insurance company controls all aspects of the health care of the insured. In the design of the plan, each member is assigned a "gatekeeper", a primary care physician (PCP) who is responsible for the overall care of members assigned to him/her. Specialty services require a specific referral from the PCP to the specialist. Non-emergency hospital admissions also required specific pre-authorization by the PCP. Typically, services are not covered if performed by a provider not an employee of or specifically approved by the HMO, unless it is an emergency situation as defined by the HMO. Financial sanctions for use of emergency facilities in non-emergent situations were once an issue; however, prudent layperson language now applies to all emergency-service utilization and penalties are rare. A leading example is the Kaiser Permanente Plan.
Since the 1980s, HMOs have been protected by Federal law from malpractice litigation on the grounds that the decisions regarding patient care are administrative rather than medical in nature.
While not employees of the insuror, PPO healthcare providers do hold contracts with each insurance company, or a Third Party Adjusting company, for which they are designated as "preferred", under which they agree to accept the reimbursement that was negotiated at rates agreed upon between themselves and the insuror or the Third Party Adjusting company, at the time of execution of the contract. In the beginning, the insurance companies used actuarial tables to determine a "reasonable and customary fee" for each service and the provider, if he/she generally charged more, was obligated to write off the difference. The insuror would then pay a percentage of the balance to the provider, and the rest would become the responsibility of the insured. But during the 1990s, many providers engaged the services of medical office management services to handle these contracting arrangements on their behalf, with the result that full fees, writeoffs, and percentages due from insuror and insured are jointly agreed-to amounts between the insuror and the provider on a plan-by-plan, provider-by-provider basis, which amounts are protected as corporate secrets and are not available to consumers who wish to compare benefits offered against premiums charged on a dollar basis. Furthermore, in the event the insuror defaults on payment by claiming a service provided was "not necessary" under the plan, the provider is free to charge any amount he/she deems desirable to the patient, instead of any generalized, capitated "reasonable and customary fee" determined by the insuror.
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