Prepared for Alaska Office of Management and BudgetWe use the Health Expenditures by State of Residence data (1991-2014) compiled by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to examine the causal effect of the 80th percentile rule on Alaska's health care expenditures. We find evidence that Alaska's expenditures would have been lower in the absence of rule. The share of the overall increase in expenditures that we attribute to the 80th percentile rule is between 8.61% and 24.65%. It is important to note that using expenditures as a proxy for costs has limitations as it is the product of both quantity of services used and prices
Spending per capita for health care in the United States varies dramatically by State and region. In...
The dual problems of high and rising medical care expenditures and substantial differences in spendi...
Objective: The authors explore state variation in expenditures for Medicaid community-based care ser...
We use the Health Expenditures by State of Residence data (1991-2014) compiled by Centers for Medica...
All Americans spend a lot to get health care—but Alaskans spend the most per resident, face the high...
Health care in Alaska cost an estimated $1.6 billion in fiscal 1991. That’s 50 percent more than it ...
Health-care spending for Alaskans reached about $7.5 billion in 2010. For comparison, that’s close t...
Within the high and rising level of healthcare spending for the US as a whole is substantial variati...
Spending for health care in Alaska topped $5 billion in 2005. Just how big is $5 billion? It is, for...
This research investigates the relationship between per capita tobacco control expenditures, cigaret...
The United States ranks third in 2013 among the nations of the world in per capita health care expen...
This paper investigates the long-run economic relationship between health care expenditure and incom...
Health care spending estimates constitute an important public policy tool, providing a broad look at...
In this dissertation, the impact of program generosity on per enrollee Medicaid spending by state is...
This research note, upon rectifying some inadvertently transposed entries in the observation matrix ...
Spending per capita for health care in the United States varies dramatically by State and region. In...
The dual problems of high and rising medical care expenditures and substantial differences in spendi...
Objective: The authors explore state variation in expenditures for Medicaid community-based care ser...
We use the Health Expenditures by State of Residence data (1991-2014) compiled by Centers for Medica...
All Americans spend a lot to get health care—but Alaskans spend the most per resident, face the high...
Health care in Alaska cost an estimated $1.6 billion in fiscal 1991. That’s 50 percent more than it ...
Health-care spending for Alaskans reached about $7.5 billion in 2010. For comparison, that’s close t...
Within the high and rising level of healthcare spending for the US as a whole is substantial variati...
Spending for health care in Alaska topped $5 billion in 2005. Just how big is $5 billion? It is, for...
This research investigates the relationship between per capita tobacco control expenditures, cigaret...
The United States ranks third in 2013 among the nations of the world in per capita health care expen...
This paper investigates the long-run economic relationship between health care expenditure and incom...
Health care spending estimates constitute an important public policy tool, providing a broad look at...
In this dissertation, the impact of program generosity on per enrollee Medicaid spending by state is...
This research note, upon rectifying some inadvertently transposed entries in the observation matrix ...
Spending per capita for health care in the United States varies dramatically by State and region. In...
The dual problems of high and rising medical care expenditures and substantial differences in spendi...
Objective: The authors explore state variation in expenditures for Medicaid community-based care ser...