The incentive contracts that managed care organizations write with physicians have generated considerable controversy. Critics fear that if informational asymmetries inhibit patients from directly assessing the quality of care provided by their physician, competition will lead to a "race to the bottom" in which managed care plans induce physicians to offer only minimal levels of care. To analyze this issue we propose a model of competition between managed care organizations. The model serves for both physician incentive contracts and HMO product market strategies in an environment of extreme information asymmetry--physicians perceive quality of care perfectly, and patients don't perceive it at all. We find that even in this stark setting, m...
The increased competition for a share of the market of insured patients, which arose in the wake of ...
Abstract This article develops a framework that distinguishes four types of com-petitive strategies ...
Sloan and Hall reflect on whether the market defects identified explain why the managed care revolut...
We analyze the effect that competition between HMOs has on the cost and quality of medical services....
Abstract: We analyze the effect that competition between HMOs has on the cost and quality of medica...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74586/1/j.1465-7295.1999.tb01430.x.pd
Managed care organizations may exert monopsony power, reduce provider monopoly, or engage in bargain...
We studied the effect of physician incentives in an HMO network. Physician incentives are controvers...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71878/1/j.1430-9134.1997.00129.x.pd
This paper looks at the ethical problems posed by managed care (in particular, at its incentives to ...
Prior to the emergence of managed care, the popular consensus and the majority of research supported...
A central challenge for all health care reform proposals currently being discussed is finding the me...
Non-pecuniary sources of motivation are a strong feature of the health care sector and the impact of...
Managed care (MC) imposes restrictions on physician behavior, but also holds promises, especially in...
Abstract Background. Despite the growth of managed care in the United States, there is little inform...
The increased competition for a share of the market of insured patients, which arose in the wake of ...
Abstract This article develops a framework that distinguishes four types of com-petitive strategies ...
Sloan and Hall reflect on whether the market defects identified explain why the managed care revolut...
We analyze the effect that competition between HMOs has on the cost and quality of medical services....
Abstract: We analyze the effect that competition between HMOs has on the cost and quality of medica...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74586/1/j.1465-7295.1999.tb01430.x.pd
Managed care organizations may exert monopsony power, reduce provider monopoly, or engage in bargain...
We studied the effect of physician incentives in an HMO network. Physician incentives are controvers...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71878/1/j.1430-9134.1997.00129.x.pd
This paper looks at the ethical problems posed by managed care (in particular, at its incentives to ...
Prior to the emergence of managed care, the popular consensus and the majority of research supported...
A central challenge for all health care reform proposals currently being discussed is finding the me...
Non-pecuniary sources of motivation are a strong feature of the health care sector and the impact of...
Managed care (MC) imposes restrictions on physician behavior, but also holds promises, especially in...
Abstract Background. Despite the growth of managed care in the United States, there is little inform...
The increased competition for a share of the market of insured patients, which arose in the wake of ...
Abstract This article develops a framework that distinguishes four types of com-petitive strategies ...
Sloan and Hall reflect on whether the market defects identified explain why the managed care revolut...