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Journal Article

Citation

Matthews LR, Hanley F, Lewis V, Howe C. Disabil. Rehabil. 2014; 37(6): 548-552.

Affiliation

Faculty of Health Sciences, Ageing, Work and Health Research Unit, The University of Sydney , New South Wales , Australia .

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/09638288.2014.933897

PMID

24975723

Abstract

PURPOSE: With social and economic costs of workplace injury on the increase, efficient payment models that deliver quality rehabilitation outcomes are of increasing interest. This paper provides a perspective on the issue informed by both refereed literature and published research material not available commercially (gray literature).

METHODS: A review of payment models, workers' compensation and compensable injury identified relevant peer-reviewed and gray literature that informed our discussion.

RESULTS: Fee-for-service and performance-based payment models dominate the health and rehabilitation literature, each described as having benefits and challenges to achieving quality outcomes for consumers. There appears to be a movement toward performance-based payments in compensable workplace injury settings as they are perceived to promote time-efficient services and support innovation in rehabilitation practice. However, it appears that the challenges that arise for workplace-based rehabilitation providers and professionals when working under the various payment models, such as staff retention and quality of client-practitioner relationship, are absent from the literature and this could lead to flawed policy decisions.

CONCLUSIONS: Robust evidence of the benefits and costs associated with different payment models - from the perspectives of clients/consumers, funders and service providers - is needed to inform best practice in rehabilitation of compensable workplace injuries. Implications for Rehabilitation Available but limited evidence suggests that payment models providing financial incentives for stakeholder-agreed vocational rehabilitation outcomes tend to improve service effectiveness in workers' compensation settings, although there is little evidence of service quality or client satisfaction. Working in a system that identifies payments for stakeholder-agreed outcomes may be more satisfying for rehabilitation practitioners in workers' compensation settings by allowing more clinical autonomy and innovative practice. Researchers need to work closely with the compensation and rehabilitation sector as well as governments to establish robust evidence of the benefits and costs of payment models, from the perspectives of clients/consumers, funders, service providers and rehabilitation professionals.


Language: en

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