Health Plan Payment Methods -- Introduction (2024)

How Do Health Plans Pay Physicians?

There are seven basic terms you need to know to understand how health plans pay physicians. Four payment methods(fee-for-service, discounted fee-for-service,capitation, and salary)and three payment adjustments (withholds, bonuses,and retrospective utilization targets) are the basis for nearlyall contracts between health plans and your physicians, and they are described below. These payment methods andadjustments for primary care physicians are particularly important, because physicians act as gatekeepersby managing patient access to specialist referrals and hospital care. The four payment methods are designed toaffect treatment patterns, while the payment adjustments are designed to affect both treatment and referralpatterns. Since most physicians practice medicine in groups or clinics, they share the financial responsibilityfor their patients with all physicians in their group or clinic. All words in italics are defined in a glossaryat the end of this document.

Four Payment Methods

The four payment methods that health plans use to pay physicians are:

  • Fee-for-service - physicians are paid for every service and test that they provide based on theusual and customary charges of physicians in the local area.
  • Discounted fee-for-service - physicians are paid for every service and test they provide basedon a fee schedule or pre-determined discount of the usual and customary price charged by physicians in the localarea.
  • Capitation - physicians are paid a fixed amount per enrollee, not per service, on a monthly basis.
  • Salary - physicians are paid a fixed weekly or monthly amount, and pay is not tied to enrolleesor services rendered.


The example below illustrates how fee-for-service (FFS), discounted fee-for-service (FFS), and capitation work.Suppose that a health plan has 200 enrollees. 100 of these enrollees make a total of 200 office visits to primarycare physicians over one year and each visit costs the physician $75. The total cost for all of these office visitsis $15,000. The physician charges $100 per visit to pay for staff salaries, medicine, tests, and overhead. Thehealth plan that pays according to discounted fee-for-service has a 20% discount on all physician charges, so paysonly 80% of all physician charges. The health plan that pays according to capitation pays the primary care physician$80 per enrollee for all care, whether or not the enrollee sees the physician or how many times the physician seesthe patient. Physicians who work for a clinic and are paid a salary receive a fixed annual income that is not tiedto the number of patients that choose them or the number of office visits that patients make.

Example of Different Payment Methods
Fee-for-ServiceDiscounted FFSCapitation
Total Physician Charge

$20,000
($100 x 200 visits)

$20,000

$20,000

Total Health Plan Payments

$20,000
($100 x 200 visits)

$16,000
($80 x 200 visits)

$16,000
($80 x 200 enrollees)

Note: This is an example and not based on actual health plan payments.


In this example, physicians reimbursed on a fee-for-service basis receive the highest health plan payments, becausethey are paid the full price for each office visit. Physicians reimbursed on a discounted fee-for-service basisreceive the next highest total payments, due to lower (discounted) payment that the health plan was able to negotiatewith this physician. Physicians under capitation receive health plan payments based upon the number of enrolleesnot the number of office visits or physician charges. These physicians under capitation cannot increase their reimbursem*ntfrom the health plan by having more office visits or higher charges for each office visit, the way they can ifpaid by FFS or discounted FFS.

Capitation: Physicians paid by capitation have incentives to contain costs and financial riskbecause of the fixed budget that the health plan gives these physicians to allocate for the care of 200 enrollees.If no health plan enrollees seek care, physicians under capitation face no financial risk. They simply receivethe monthly payment for each enrollee. If all health plan enrollees seek care and their actual costs are greaterthan the monthly payments (which are based on estimated costs), then the physician must cover the cost of carethat exceeds the monthly payment. Physicians cannot ask the health plan for extra payments to cover the additionalcosts of care, and face financial risk in this situation. Many physicians reduce their financial risk by purchasinginsurance policies that will cover significant expenses if they occur in a group of patients. In reality, someenrollees never seek care, some seek basic care, and other enrollees need extensive care and access to specialists.

To ensure that health plan payments cover their expenses, physicians under capitation have an incentive to manageand provide appropriate care to their patients. They have an incentive to provide more preventive care that catchesillnesses early (e.g., mammograms). Preventive and primary care intends to keep patients healthy so they need fewertests and procedures when they do see the physician. Physicians under capitation also have an incentive to containcosts by providing more preventive care that limits the number of additional office visits that patients need.

Fee-for-Service: Physicians reimbursed on a FFS basis have the opposite incentives and face muchless financial risk than physicians paid by capitation. These physicians have an incentive to increase the numberof services they provide during each visit, as well as the number of visits. The health plan will pay these physiciansfor every test and procedure that they provide without regard to total costs to the health plan. These physicianshave no incentive to avoid more costly tests and procedures, unlike physicians paid under capitation, because theydo not have a budget that introduces financial risk. Physicians that are paid on a fee-for-service (FFS) basishave no financial risk for the care they provide or the patients that they see, so patients with chronic illnessesor needs for specialist care or special services should have little problem getting the care they require.

Discounted Fee-for-Service: Discounted FFS works in a similar way to FFS except that physiciansare reimbursed a specific dollar amount or percentage of their total charge. Under discounted fee-for-service,physicians are only at risk if the cost of their care is greater than the payment the health plan will give them.There is little chance that physicians will receive payments that are consistently lower than the cost, but physiciansmay be slightly more conservative in treating patients. Discounted fee-for-service provides a slight incentivefor physicians to balance the effectiveness of treatment with its cost, instead of treating patients without considerationof cost. They also have no incentive to change their referral patterns to specialists, unless their payment haswithholds, bonuses, or retrospective utilization targets (see page 7). All Minnesota health plans have moved awayfrom FFS to discounted FFS and capitation to contain costs and to encourage physicians to practice cost-effectivemedicine.

Salary: Salaried physicians have no financial incentive to change their treatment patterns, eitherin terms of what is done during each visit or the number of visits. Physicians paid by salary face no financialrisk, unlike physicians under capitation, unless their contracts include withholds, bonuses, or retrospective utilizationtargets or performance goals linked to future salary increases.

The overall impacts of each these four payment methods on patient care and referrals are illustrated in thetable below.

Impacts of Payment Methods on Patient Care and Referrals
Fee-for-ServiceDiscounted FFSCapitationSalary
Financial Risk for Physician

None

Low

Moderate

None

Incentives for Patient Care

Aggressive

Moderate

More moderate

Moderate

Potential Access and Referral Problems to Specialists / Services

Low

Low

Moderate

Low

Note: The effects of each payment method are based upon a review of the medical literature and conversationswith physician and health plan representatives.


In summary, the incentives of these payment methods may have different effects on a physician's treatment style,and these methods can be combined with adjustments to the physician's payment (discussed below) which affect bothtreatment and referral patterns. FFS, discounted FFS, capitation, and salary will have its greatest effect on treatment,while payment adjustments will have effects on both treatment and referral patterns. It should be noted that thesame physician may see patients from many different health plans, and their style of care will be influenced asmuch by their own education and experience as it is by payment methods used by a particular patient's health plan.If you have questions about your care, talk with your primary care physician and he/she should be able to addressany questions that you have.

Payment Adjustments

The three adjustments that health plans can make to the three basic methods of paying physicians discussed aboveare:

  • Withhold - percentage of the capitation or fee-for-service payment from each service that isretained by the health plan to finance potential deficits if health plan premiums from enrollees are less thanhealth plan payments to physicians. Withhold funds may be returned to physicians at the end of the year as bonuses.
  • Retrospective utilization target - a pre-determined number or level of services that an insuredgroup of patients is predicted by the health plan to need over a one-year period. This baseline prediction is comparedwith actual utilization by patients over the year to determine a bonus payment.
  • Bonuses - physicians can be paid extra payments at the end of the year for keeping the healthplan's payments, particularly to specialists and hospitals, below a pre-determined budget or utilization target.Bonuses may also be determined from measures of patient satisfaction, access and outcomes of care. In some bonussystems, physicians may have to return payments to the health plan if utilization is above a target.


These three payment adjustments are designed to have effects on physician treatment and referral patterns.

Withholds: Withholds are generally used by health plans to give financial risk to primary carephysicians who are paid by fee-for-service, discounted fee-for-service, or capitation. Many times, withholds willalso be included in contracts with specialists. Health plans withhold a certain percentage (e.g., 20%) of everyphysician payment to cover a deficit if health plan premiums from enrollees are lower than health plan paymentsto physicians. If primary care physicians' referrals to specialists and hospitals use up the withhold funds, thenthey receive no bonus. If these physicians restrain utilization in general, and referrals and hospitalization inparticular, then unspent withhold funds are shared with the physicians in the form of bonuses. The use of withholdsand bonuses create incentives for primary care physicians to restrict access to specialists and hospital services,because more service use decreases the chance that the health plan will give bonuses. Since withholds are commonlyapplied to all services, withholds support the incentives that already exist in capitation or discounted fee-for-servicefor physicians to be conservative in treating patients.

Retrospective utilization targets: Retrospective utilization targets are the financial benchmarkused by a health plan to determine physician bonuses. If a physician meets the predetermined baseline or targetof medical service use, the physician receives a bonus. These targets are incentives to manage a patient's carecost-effectively. Utilization targets for specialty care and hospital care are important benchmarks that healthplans work with physicians to achieve. Many times, health plans base a utilization target on the experience ofa group of physicians (or risk pool), not just one physician. By being in a risk pool, a specific physician isless constrained to provide fewer tests and procedures for a specific patient than if a utilization target wasbased on him/her alone. Utilization targets create incentives for physicians to treat patients appropriately andcost-effectively, particularly for specialty and hospital care. Individuals with chronic conditions or need forspecialty care may have to work with their primary care physicians to ensure that they can access preferred physiciansand/or services.

Bonuses: Bonuses are provided from unspent withhold funds if and when the utilization of medicalservices by a physician's patients is lower than an estimated utilization target. A physician's bonus may alsobe based on measures of patient satisfaction, access, and outcomes of care. A bonus rewards physicians for providingmore primary and preventive care, and also for doing fewer tests and procedures. Primary care physicians may alsoreceive bonuses tied to managing access to specialists and hospitals. In some bonus arrangements, individual physiciansor groups of physicians who greatly exceed the utilization target may have to make payments to the health planat the end of the year. This constraint puts primary care physicians at even greater financial risk than arrangementswith only simple bonuses, because physicians with simple bonuses don't have to worry about returning payments tothe health plans. Physicians who may have to return funds to the health plan have an even greater incentive tomanage access through referrals to specialists and hospitals. A provider's bonus may also be based on measuresof patient satisfaction, access, and outcomes of care.

Next Section: Payment Methods Used by YourHealth Plan

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Health Plan Payment Methods -- Introduction (2024)
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