This study examines risk selection among nine health plans competing for 16,182 employees of one large firm in 1989: one conventional fee-for-service plan, one group-model health maintenance organization (HMO), and seven network and independent practice model HMOs. We develop and compare measures of risk using weights based on HMO and fee-for-service expenditure data, respectively. We use a multiequation statistical model to develop two sets of utilization and expenditure weights for enrollees in each plan. One set of weights, based on discharge abstracts and outpatient records from the large group-model HMO, measures how much each of the nine groups of employees and dependents would have spent, had they been enrolled in a stringently manag...
This dissertation addresses the issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market. The lite...
We set-up a two-sided market framework to model competition be-tween a Prefered Provider Organizatio...
Health insurers increasingly compete based on their networks of covered medical providers. Using dat...
This study examines risk selection among nine health plans competing for 16,182 employees of one lar...
Using the Diagnostic Cost Group (DCG) model developed from a national sample, we examine biased sele...
This paper quantifies risk selection among competing Medicare managed care plans, using beneficiary ...
This article examines a model of competition between two types of health insurer: Health Maintenance...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71878/1/j.1430-9134.1997.00129.x.pd
Health plans paid by capitation have an incentive to distort the quality of services they offer to a...
To investigate the extent of favorable health maintenance organization (HMO) selection for a longitu...
The transfer of financial risk from health maintenance organizations (HMOs) to providers is controve...
This study examines the effect of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) on the use of health care ...
We set-up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organization...
"We set up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organizatio...
We set up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organization...
This dissertation addresses the issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market. The lite...
We set-up a two-sided market framework to model competition be-tween a Prefered Provider Organizatio...
Health insurers increasingly compete based on their networks of covered medical providers. Using dat...
This study examines risk selection among nine health plans competing for 16,182 employees of one lar...
Using the Diagnostic Cost Group (DCG) model developed from a national sample, we examine biased sele...
This paper quantifies risk selection among competing Medicare managed care plans, using beneficiary ...
This article examines a model of competition between two types of health insurer: Health Maintenance...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71878/1/j.1430-9134.1997.00129.x.pd
Health plans paid by capitation have an incentive to distort the quality of services they offer to a...
To investigate the extent of favorable health maintenance organization (HMO) selection for a longitu...
The transfer of financial risk from health maintenance organizations (HMOs) to providers is controve...
This study examines the effect of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) on the use of health care ...
We set-up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organization...
"We set up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organizatio...
We set up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organization...
This dissertation addresses the issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market. The lite...
We set-up a two-sided market framework to model competition be-tween a Prefered Provider Organizatio...
Health insurers increasingly compete based on their networks of covered medical providers. Using dat...