Prior to the emergence of managed care, the popular consensus and the majority of research supported the idea that hospitals competed for doctor affiliations and, through them, for patients by offering specialized, high-tech services. This phenomenon was known as the Medical Arms Race (MAR) and was facilitated by the reimbursement practices of health insurance that were common at the time. With the introduction of managed care and the Medicare Prospective Payment System, however, hospitals were no longer able simply to pass on inflated costs to their patients and began to concentrate on reducing costs. This paper examines whether the MAR exists in the current managed care environment. I investigate empirically whether the level of competiti...
Money should follow patients and they need information and choice, write Nicholas Bloom and John Van...
The U.S. has the most expensive per capita health care system in the world. As such, one of the main...
This study assesses the ability of managed care to contain hospital costs since the managed care bac...
Prior to the emergence of managed care, the popular consensus and the majority of research supported...
As health care costs increase, cost-control mechanisms become more widespread and it is crucial to u...
Competition among hospitals is commonly regarded as inefficient due to the medical arms race phenome...
Competition among hospitals is commonly regarded as inefficient due to the medical arms race phenome...
Many consumers and employers are becoming increasingly concerned about the cost, quality, and approp...
The incentive contracts that managed care organizations write with physicians have generated conside...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
By 1993, over 70% of all Americans with health insurance were enrolled in some form of managed care ...
133 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.This empirical research uses ...
The diffusion of health care technology is influenced by both the total market share of managed care...
This study assesses the ability of managed care to contain hospital costs since the managed care bac...
California is losing ground in the battle against rising hospital costs. Once a successful model fo...
Money should follow patients and they need information and choice, write Nicholas Bloom and John Van...
The U.S. has the most expensive per capita health care system in the world. As such, one of the main...
This study assesses the ability of managed care to contain hospital costs since the managed care bac...
Prior to the emergence of managed care, the popular consensus and the majority of research supported...
As health care costs increase, cost-control mechanisms become more widespread and it is crucial to u...
Competition among hospitals is commonly regarded as inefficient due to the medical arms race phenome...
Competition among hospitals is commonly regarded as inefficient due to the medical arms race phenome...
Many consumers and employers are becoming increasingly concerned about the cost, quality, and approp...
The incentive contracts that managed care organizations write with physicians have generated conside...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
By 1993, over 70% of all Americans with health insurance were enrolled in some form of managed care ...
133 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.This empirical research uses ...
The diffusion of health care technology is influenced by both the total market share of managed care...
This study assesses the ability of managed care to contain hospital costs since the managed care bac...
California is losing ground in the battle against rising hospital costs. Once a successful model fo...
Money should follow patients and they need information and choice, write Nicholas Bloom and John Van...
The U.S. has the most expensive per capita health care system in the world. As such, one of the main...
This study assesses the ability of managed care to contain hospital costs since the managed care bac...