The Military Health System
How Might It Be Reorganized?
Since the end of World War II, the issue of whether to create a
unified military health system has arisen repeatedly. Some observers
have suggested that a joint organization could potentially lead to
reduced costs, better integrated health care delivery, a more
efficient administrative process, and improved readiness.
A recent RAND study done for the Under Secretary of Defense
(Personnel and Readiness) developed organizational alternatives for
the military health system and outlined trade-offs inherent in
choosing among them. This analysisas reported in Reorganizing
the Military Health System: Should There Be a Joint Command? by
Susan D. Hosek and Gary Cecchineconcluded that careful
consideration should be given to reorganizing TRICARE, the military's
health care program for active and retired military members and their
families, but that the additional benefits of a joint command are
more difficult to assess.
THE DoD'S DUAL MEDICAL MISSIONS
The Department of Defense (DoD) operates one of the largest and most
complex health care organizations in the nation. Including their
overseas facilities, the Army, Navy, and Air Force operated about 450
military treatment facilities (MTFs) in 1999, including 91 hospitals
and 374 clinics. The MTFs serve just over 8 million active-duty
personnel, retirees, and dependents. This care is provided through
TRICARE, which offers both managed-care and fee-for-service options.
TRICARE managed-care providers include the MTFs and a network of
civilian providers administered through regional contracts with
civilian managed-care organizations. The fee-for-service option also
covers care provided by civilian providers that have not joined the
network.
On the surface, the military health system resembles a fairly typical
U.S. managed-care organization. However, as a military health
system, it has unique responsibilities arising from dual missions:
- Readiness: To provide, and to maintain readiness to
provide, medical services and support to the armed forces during
military operations.
- Benefits: To provide medical services and support
to members of the armed forces, their dependents, and others entitled
to DoD medical care.
The readiness mission involves deploying medical personnel and
equipment as needed to support military forces throughout the world
in wartime, in peacekeeping and humanitarian operations, and in
military training. Activities that ensure the readiness of medical
and other military personnel to deploy also contribute to the medical
readiness mission. The benefits mission is designed to provide a
health benefit to military personnel and their family members, during
active service and after retirement. Historically, MTFs have supplied
about two-thirds of the health care used by TRICARE beneficiaries
overall (as measured by the number of visits) and almost all of the
health care used by active-duty personnel. Civilian providers have
supplied the rest of the care.
The two missions are linked in two ways. First, the health care
provided under TRICARE also contributes to readiness; it keeps
active-duty personnel at the peak health needed for military
effectiveness and ensures that their families are taken care of while
they are away from home. Second, the same medical personnel are used
for both missions.
CURRENT ORGANIZATION
The organizational structure that implements
TRICARE today is shown in Figure 1. It involves four hierarchies: the
Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) and the three military
services with medical departments. Each oversees a set of providers
that deliver health care to
TRICARE beneficiaries (the darker-shaded boxes in the figure).
Responsibility for the TRICARE contracts resides
in OSD's Health Affairs office (the lighter-shaded boxes).
Health-care resources and management authority are
fragmented because they flow through all branches of the system.

Figure 1Current TRICARE Organization
The RAND study team compared the structure illustrated in Figure 1
with organizational approaches described in the health management
literature and used by four large private-sector managed-care
companies: Kaiser Permanente, UnitedHealthcare, Sutter Health System,
and Tenet Healthcare. The study team also reviewed prior
military-health studies and conducted interviews with key government
personnel to better understand the particular needs that derive from
the military system's readiness mission.
FOUR ALTERNATIVE ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURES
The analysis pointed to the critical need for reorganization of
TRICARE management. To address this need, the Reorganizing the
Military Health System report presents four alternative
organizational structures, outlined in the table, for the DoD to
consider. One alternative would be a modification of the current
structure. Three others would rely on a joint command, which, as
defined by Title 10, is a unified combatant command having broad,
continuing missions and involving forces from two or more military
departments. All four management structures consolidate authority
over TRICARE resources and establish clear accountability for
outcomes.
Alternative 1 would retain much of the current organizational
structure but would call for several changes designed to clarify
management responsibilities for
TRICARE and facilitate resource management and integration of health
services. TRICARE would administer the health plan, supported by
local market managers.
Four Alternative Military Health System Organizational Structures
| Alternative Number | Structure | Components
|
| 1 | Modification of current
organization | Same as today
TRICARE would administer the health
plan, supported by local market
managers in each region |
| 2 | Joint Medical Command | Army Component Command
Navy Component Command
Air Force Component Command |
| 3 | Joint Medical Command | Army Component Command
Navy Component Command
Air Force Component Command
TRICARE Component Command |
| 4 | Joint Medical Command | Medical Readiness Component
Command
TRICARE Component Command |
The three joint medical command alternatives illustrate important
organizational differences. Alternative 2 would organize all medical
activities in service component commands. MTF commanders would also
serve as local TRICARE managers, a dual operational structure that
has not worked well in the private sector. Alternative 3, while
similar to Alternative 2, would follow the more common private-sector
practice of separating responsibility for health-plan management from
provider management by adding a TRICARE component. Alternative 4,
depicted in Figure 2, involves more-radical change: It would
structure medical activities functionally under a readiness component
(organized by service) and a TRICARE component (organized
geographically).
A joint command is unlikely to succeed without more fundamental
reorganization of the system. TRICARE is now testing in its Pacific
Northwest facilities whether strengthening TRICARE regional
management, a version of Alternative 1, would improve authority and
accountability for TRICARE. If the test succeeds, the DoD should
consider implementing the more comprehensive changes envisioned in
Alternative 1. If the test does not substantially improve authority
and accountability, the study suggests that the DoD should consider a
joint command and reorganization along the lines of Alternatives 3 or
4.

Figure 2Joint Command with Readiness and TRICARE
Components
RB-7551-OSD (2002)
RAND research briefs summarize research that has been more fully
documented elsewhere. This research brief describes work done for the
National Defense Research
Institute; it is documented in Reorganizing the Military
Health System: Should There Be a Joint Command? by Susan D. Hosek
and Gary Cecchine, MR-1350-OSD, 2001, 111 pp.,
$15.00, ISBN: 0-8330-3013-2, available from RAND Distribution
Services (Telephone: 310-451-7002; toll free 877-584-8642; FAX:
310-451-6915; or email: order@rand.org).
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