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International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics

https://read.qxmd.com/read/24122364/between-two-beds-inappropriately-delayed-discharges-from-hospitals
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tor Helge Holmås, Mohammad Kamrul Islam, Egil Kjerstad
Acknowledging the necessity of a division of labour between hospitals and social care services regarding treatment and care of patients with chronic and complex conditions, is to acknowledge the potential conflict of interests between health care providers. A potentially important conflict is that hospitals prefer comparatively short length of stay (LOS) at hospital, while social care services prefer longer LOS all else equal. Furthermore, inappropriately delayed discharges from hospital, i.e. bed blocking, is costly for society...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24085335/sleeping-money-investigating-the-huge-surpluses-of-social-health-insurance-in-china
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
JunQiang Liu, Tao Chen
The spreading of social health insurance (SHI) worldwide poses challenges for fledging public administrators. Inefficiency, misuse and even corruption threaten the stewardship of those newly established health funds. This article examines a tricky situation faced by China's largest SHI program: the basic health insurance (BHI) scheme for urban employees. BHI accumulated a 406 billion yuan surplus by 2009, although the reimbursement level was still low. Using a provincial level panel database, we find that the huge BHI surpluses are related to the (temporarily) decreasing dependency ratio, the steady growth of average wages, the extension of BHI coverage, and progress in social insurance agency building...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24068470/regulated-medical-fee-schedule-of-the-japanese-health-care-system
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Makoto Kakinaka, Ryuta Ray Kato
This study presents a theoretical framework for examining the effect of the Japanese government-regulated medical price schedule, 'Shinryo-Houshu-Seido,' on the behavior of medical providers. In particular, we discuss the optimal rule of this price schedule for the regulator, taking into account information asymmetry between the regulator and providers. Our simple model predicts that heterogeneous providers either under-provide or over-provide medical inputs in comparison with the socially optimal outcome. Moreover, our results show that when the allocated budget is reduced to a certain level, even the second-best outcome becomes unachievable, no matter how the price schedule is regulated...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24057942/who-funds-their-health-savings-account-and-why
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Song Chen, Anthony T Lo Sasso, Aneesh Nandam
Health savings account (HSA) enrollment has increased markedly in the last several years, but little is known about the factors affecting account funding decisions. We use a unique data set containing from a bank that exclusively services HSA funds linked to health status, benefit design, plan coverage, and enrollee characteristics from a very large national health insurance company to examine the factors associated with HSA contribution. We found that even small employer contributions had an apparently large effect on the decision to open an account: the account-opening rate was 50 % higher when employers contributed to the account...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24037490/does-healthcare-financing-converge-evidence-from-eight-oecd-countries
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wen-Yi Chen
This study investigated the convergence of healthcare financing across eight OECD countries during 1960-2009 for the first time. The panel stationary test incorporating both shapes of multiple structural breaks (i.e., sharp drifts and smooth transition shifts) and cross-sectional dependence was used to provide reliable evidence of convergence in healthcare financing. Our results suggested that the public share of total healthcare financing in eight OECD countries has exhibited signs of convergence towards that of the US...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24037442/health-expenses-and-economic-growth-convergence-dynamics-across-the-indian-states
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas Apergis, Puja Padhi
In this paper we explore convergence of real per capita output and health expenses across the Indian States. The new panel convergence methodology, developed by Phillips and Sul (Econometrica 75:1771-1855, 2007), is employed. The empirical findings suggest that these States form distinct convergent clubs, exhibiting considerable heterogeneity in the underlying growth and health expenses factors. These findings should help policy makers in designing appropriate growth-oriented and/or health sector programs and setting priorities in their implementation...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23996130/willingness-to-pay-to-prevent-alzheimer-s-disease-a-contingent-valuation-approach
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rashmita Basu
As the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) increases, the need to develop effective and well-tolerated pharmacotherapies for the prevention of AD is becoming increasingly important. Understanding determinants and magnitudes of individuals' preferences for AD prevention programs is important while estimating the benefits of any new pharmacological intervention that targets the prevention of the disease. This paper applied contingent valuation, a method frequently used for economic valuation of goods or services not transacted in the markets, to estimate the willingness-to-pay (WTP) to prevent AD based on the nationally representative Health and Retirement Survey data...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23754318/awareness-and-utilization-of-preventive-care-services-among-the-elderly-under-national-health-insurance
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chun-Chih Chen, Yen-Ju Lin, Ying-Tzu Lin
This empirical study investigates the factors affecting the awareness and the utilization of preventive care among the elderly in Taiwan. We use data obtained from the 2005 National Health Interview Survey. A recursive bivariate probit model is adopted to analyze the factors affecting the awareness and the utilization of preventive care. The probability of awareness of free preventive care under the National Health Insurance is higher for those who are younger, Mainlanders, have received more education, have a spouse, exercise regularly, have better self-rated health status, and have chronic diseases; the probability of awareness is lower for those who are aborigines and who live in the south and the east...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23749214/evaluating-an-employee-wellness-program
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sankar Mukhopadhyay, Jeanne Wendel
What criteria should be used to evaluate the impact of a new employee wellness program when the initial vendor contract expires? Published academic literature focuses on return-on-investment as the gold standard for wellness program evaluation, and a recent meta-analysis concludes that wellness programs can generate net savings after one or two years. In contrast, surveys indicate that fewer than half of these programs report net savings, and actuarial analysts argue that return-on-investment is an unrealistic metric for evaluating new programs...
December 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23494466/generic-substitution-financial-interests-and-imperfect-agency
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maurus Rischatsch, Maria Trottmann, Peter Zweifel
Policy makers around the world seek to encourage generic substitution. In this paper, the importance of prescribing physicians' imperfect agency is tested using the fact that some Swiss jurisdictions allow physicians to dispense drugs on their own account (physician dispensing, PD) while others disallow it. We estimate a model of physician drug choice with the help of drug claim data, finding a significant positive association between PD and the use of generics. While this points to imperfect agency, generics are prescribed more often to patients with high copayments or low incomes...
June 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23436186/refining-estimates-of-catastrophic-healthcare-expenditure-an-application-in-the-indian-context
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Indrani Gupta, William Joe
Empirics of catastrophic healthcare expenditure, especially in the Indian context, are often based on consumption expenditure data that inadequately informs about the ability to pay. Use of such data can generate a pro-rich bias in the estimation of catastrophic expenditure thereby suggesting greater concentration of such expenditures among richer households. To improve upon the existing approach, this paper suggests a multidimensional approach to comprehend the incidence of catastrophic expenditure. Here, we integrate the information on health expenditure with other social and economic parameters of deprivation...
June 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23417124/measuring-recession-severity-and-its-impact-on-healthcare-expenditure
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Conor Keegan, Steve Thomas, Charles Normand, Conceição Portela
The financial crisis that manifested itself in late 2007 resulted in a Europe-wide economic crisis by 2009. As the economic climate worsened, Governments and households were put under increased strain and more focus was placed on prioritising expenditures. Across European countries and their heterogeneous health care systems, this paper examines the initial responsiveness of health expenditures to the crisis and whether recession severity can be considered a predictor of health expenditure growth. In measuring severity we move away from solely gross domestic product (GDP) as a metric and construct a recession severity index predicated on a number of key macroeconomic indicators...
June 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23389814/responding-to-financial-pressures-the-effect-of-managed-care-on-hospitals-provision-of-charity-care
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Núria Mas
Healthcare financing and insurance is changing everywhere. We want to understand the impact that financial pressures can have for the uninsured in advanced economies. To do so we focus on analyzing the effect of the introduction in the US of managed care and the big rise in financial pressures that it implied. Traditionally, in the US safety net hospitals have financed their provision of unfunded care through a complex system of cross-subsidies. Our hypothesis is that financial pressures undermine the ability of a hospital to cross-subsidize and challenges their survival...
June 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23381233/appraising-financial-protection-in-health-the-case-of-tunisia
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohammad Abu-Zaineh, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Bruno Ventelou, Jean-Paul Moatti, Arfa Chokri
Despite the remarkable progress in expanding the coverage of social protection mechanisms in health, the Tunisian healthcare system is still largely funded through direct out-of-pocket payments. This paper seeks to assess financial protection in health in the particular policy and epidemiological transition of Tunisia using nationally representative survey data on healthcare expenditure, utilization and morbidity. The extent to which the healthcare system protects people against the financial repercussions of ill-health is assessed using the catastrophic and impoverishing payment approaches...
March 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23355253/hospital-cost-and-quality-performance-in-relation-to-market-forces-an-examination-of-u-s-community-hospitals-in-the-post-managed-care-era
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
H Joanna Jiang, Bernard Friedman, Shenyi Jiang
Managed care substantially transformed the U.S. healthcare sector in the last two decades of the twentieth century, injecting price competition among hospitals for the first time in history. However, total HMO enrollment has declined since 2000. This study addresses whether managed care and hospital competition continued to show positive effects on hospital cost and quality performance in the "post-managed care era." Using data for 1,521 urban hospitals drawn from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, we examined hospital cost per stay and mortality rate in relation to HMO penetration and hospital competition between 2001 and 2005, controlling for patient, hospital, and other market characteristics...
March 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23266896/health-expenditures-health-outcomes-and-the-role-of-good-governance
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marwa Farag, A K Nandakumar, Stanley Wallack, Dominic Hodgkin, Gary Gaumer, Can Erbil
This paper examines the relationship between country health spending and selected health outcomes (infant mortality and child mortality), using data from 133 low and middle-income countries for the years 1995, 2000, 2005, and 2006. Health spending has a significant effect on reducing infant and under-5 child mortality with an elasticity of 0.13 to 0.33 for infant mortality and 0.15 to 0.38 for under-5 child mortality in models estimated using fixed effects methods (depending on models employed). Government health spending also has a significant effect on reducing infant and child mortality and the size of the coefficient depends on the level of good governance achieved by the country, indicating that good governance increases the effectiveness of health spending...
March 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23239018/health-care-utilization-by-immigrants-in-italy
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giuliana De Luca, Michela Ponzo, Antonio Rodríguez Andrés
Healthcare utilization studies show how well documented disparities between migrants and non-migrants. Reducing such disparities is a major goal in European countries. However, healthcare utilization among Italian immigrants is under-studied. The objective of this study is to explore differences in healthcare use between immigrant and native Italians. Cross-sectional study using the latest available (2004/2005) Italian Health Conditions Survey. We estimated separate hurdle binomial negative regression models for GP, specialist, and telephone consultations and a logit model for emergency room (ER) use...
March 2013: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23224233/competitive-bidding-for-health-insurance-contracts-lessons-from-the-online-hmo-auctions
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alok Gupta, Stephen T Parente, Pallab Sanyal
Healthcare is an important social and economic component of modern society, and the effective use of information technology in this industry is critical to its success. As health insurance premiums continue to rise, competitive bidding may be useful in generating stronger price competition and lower premium costs for employers and possibly, government agencies. In this paper, we assess an endeavor by several Fortune 500 companies to reduce healthcare procurement costs for their employees by having HMOs compete in open electronic auctions...
December 2012: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23124970/physician-response-to-financial-incentives-when-choosing-drugs-to-treat-breast-cancer
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew J Epstein, Scott J Johnson
This paper considers physician agency in choosing drugs to treat metastatic breast cancer, a clinical setting in which patients have few protections from physicians' rent seeking. Physicians have explicit financial incentives attached to each potential drug treatment, with profit margins ranging more than a hundred fold. SEER-Medicare claims and Medispan pricing data were formed into a panel of 4,503 patients who were diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer and treated with anti-cancer drugs from 1992 to 2002...
December 2012: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22983822/the-employment-costs-of-caregiving-in-norway
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andreas Kotsadam
Informal eldercare is an important pillar of modern welfare states and the ongoing demographic transition increases the demand for it while social trends reduce the supply. Substantial opportunity costs of informal eldercare in terms of forgone labor opportunities have been identified, yet the effects seem to differ substantially across states and there is a controversy on the effects in the Nordic welfare states. In this study, the effects of informal care on the probability of being employed, the number of hours worked, and wages in Norway are analyzed using data from the Life cOurse, Generation, and Gender survey...
December 2012: International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics
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