The Prometheus Payment Model offers a potential solution to the failings of the current fee-for-service system and various
forms of capitation. At the core of the Prometheus model are evidence-informed case rates (ECRs), which include a bundle of
typical services that are informed by evidence and/or expert opinion as well as empirical data analysis, payment based on
the severity of patients, and allowances for potentially avoidable complications (PACs) and other provider-specific variations
in payer costs. We outline the methods and findings of the hip and knee arthroplasty ECRs with an emphasis on PACs. Of the
2076 commercially insured patients undergoing hip arthroplasty in our study, PAC costs totaled
$7.8 million (14% of total
costs; n = 699 index PAC stays). Similarly, PAC costs were $7.8 million (14% of total
costs; n = 699 index PAC stays). Similarly, PAC costs were 12.7 million (14% of total costs; n = 897 index PAC stays) for
3403 patients undergoing knee arthroplasty. By holding the providers clinically and financially responsible for PACs, and
by segmenting and quantifying the type of PACs generated during and after the procedure, the Prometheus model creates an opportunity
for providers to focus on the reduction of PACs, including readmissions, making the data actionable and turn the waste related
to PAC costs into potential savings.
Bridges to Excellence is funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.