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27 Health Care Financing Review 1 (2005-2006)

handle is hein.usfed/hhcrefngrv0027 and id is 1 raw text is: 




U.S.   and German Case Studies in Chronic Care
               Management: An Overview

                            Stuart Guterman


  In  December 2004, the Bertelsmann
Stiftung, The  Commonwealth Fund, and
AcademyHealth   jointly sponsored a confer-
ence in Berlin, Germany on Case Studies in
Chronic  Care  Management. This confer-
ence assembled representatives from the U.S.
and  German   Governments,  several organi-
zations  that had  developed  chronic care
management   initiatives in the two countries,
and  other health care and policy experts to
discuss clinical, organizational, and financ-
ing issues. The case studies discussed at the
conference are presented in this issue of the
Review;  this article describes some relevant
considerations that are common  to the U.S.
and  German  health systems.

OVERVIEW

   The differences between  the U.S. health
care system  and  those of other industrial-
ized  countries are  well established, but
attention  primarily has  focused  on  the
higher  level of spending  in the U.S., the
reasons  that the U.S. spends more, and the
absence   of better quality of care  corre-
sponding   to the high  level of  spending
(Anderson   et al., 2005). These are all sig-
nificant issues, but an important aspect of
international comparisons is to identify
common problems in different countries
and how  each of these countries deals with
these  problems.   Several  recent studies
have  focused  on  these similar problems
across  countries, which open  the door  to
The author is with The Commonwealth Fund. The statements
expressed in this article are those of the author and do not nec-
essarily reflect the views or policies of The Commonwealth
Fund, AcademyHealth, or the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CM S).


developing common approaches to improv-
ing the quality of health care (Hussey et al.,
2004; Schoen  et al., 2004).
  The  Berlin conference  on Chronic  Care
Management brought together a group of
officials representing policymaking organi-
zations1 in the U.S. and Germany  and indi-
viduals who  participated in the  planning
and  implementation  of chronic care  man-
agement   initiatives in the two countries.
The   conference   participants discussed
those initiatives and their experiences, and
were  able to identify common features and
dimensions  along which  the two countries
differ and the lessons  that can be drawn
from  them, and  discuss their implications
for policies to improve health care in both
countries.
  This  overview   provides a  context  for
those articles, by describing some relevant
considerations that are common  to the U.S.
and  German  health systems,  and how  the
two  countries can learn  from the  experi-
ences  related in  the case  studies. This
overview  concludes by describing how  the
issues raised by the German   case studies,
which  included  initiatives developed  by
both public and  private organizations, and
the  U.S.   case  studies,  all of  which
described  initiatives in the private sector,
can be  applied to the context of the U.S.
Medicare  Program.

1 The Bertelsmann Stiftung aims to identify social problems in a
broad range of areas and use and generate knowledge and
expertise to develop and implement model solutions; the
Commonwealth Fund has a mandate to promote a high per-
forming health system by supporting independent research on
health care issues and makes grants to improve health care
practice and policy; and AcademyHealth supports health ser-
vices research promoting its use in public and private decision-
making.


HEALTH CARE FINANCING REVIEW/ Fall 2005/ Volume 27, Number1


1

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