This paper summarizes a longer paper, written for the American Association of Health Plans. That paper extensively surveys the research on the savings due to managed care and quantifies the costs of eliminating specific managed care practices in terms of both dollars and in terms of increasing the number of uninsured consumers. This issue is of immediate policy interest because managed care has recently come under legislative and legal attack that would eliminate or hinder the various managerial actions and contractual practices that constitute its essence
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
The claim that managed care plans are more efficient than fee-for-service plans has been made so oft...
This paper investigates the impact of Medicare HMO penetration on the medical care expenditures incu...
By 1993, over 70% of all Americans with health insurance were enrolled in some form of managed care ...
The advent of HMO legislation has had a profound impact in the shaping of the American health care s...
This paper studies the role of health maintenance organizations in the health care market. Managed C...
This paper uses 1996–97 Community Tracking Study data to analyze the effects of different insurance ...
States choose to provide Medicaid coverage via managed care or traditional fee-for-service (FFS). Ma...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
Increases in the activity of managed care organizations may have "spilover effects, " infl...
Proponents of managed care extol its potential to control costs and improve quality through an empha...
Most Americans are now in some form of managed care plan that restricts access to services in order ...
health expenditures total more than $700 billion and make up over 13 percent of the gross domestic p...
Rising health care costs over the last 30 years resulted in a call for health care reform. While leg...
Attorneys Brown and Hartung provide a comprehensive overview of the development and structural compo...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
The claim that managed care plans are more efficient than fee-for-service plans has been made so oft...
This paper investigates the impact of Medicare HMO penetration on the medical care expenditures incu...
By 1993, over 70% of all Americans with health insurance were enrolled in some form of managed care ...
The advent of HMO legislation has had a profound impact in the shaping of the American health care s...
This paper studies the role of health maintenance organizations in the health care market. Managed C...
This paper uses 1996–97 Community Tracking Study data to analyze the effects of different insurance ...
States choose to provide Medicaid coverage via managed care or traditional fee-for-service (FFS). Ma...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
Increases in the activity of managed care organizations may have "spilover effects, " infl...
Proponents of managed care extol its potential to control costs and improve quality through an empha...
Most Americans are now in some form of managed care plan that restricts access to services in order ...
health expenditures total more than $700 billion and make up over 13 percent of the gross domestic p...
Rising health care costs over the last 30 years resulted in a call for health care reform. While leg...
Attorneys Brown and Hartung provide a comprehensive overview of the development and structural compo...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
The claim that managed care plans are more efficient than fee-for-service plans has been made so oft...
This paper investigates the impact of Medicare HMO penetration on the medical care expenditures incu...