Health care report cards - public disclosure of patient health outcomes at the level of the individual physician and/or hospital - may address important informational asymmetries in markets for health care, but they may also give doctors and hospitals incentives to decline to treat more difficult, severely ill patients. Whether report cards are good for patients and for society depends on whether their financial and health benefits outweigh their costs in terms of the quantity, quality, and appropriateness of medical treatment that they induce. Using national data on Medicare patients at risk for cardiac surgery, we find that cardiac surgery report cards in New York and Pennsylvania led both to selection behavior by providers and to improve...
We would like to thank the Martindale Center at Lehigh University for their generous support of this...
Public reporting of clinical outcomes data is but one response to calls for increasing transparency ...
This Note examines the emergence of consumer-directed information disclosure proposals in the health...
Health care report cards' public disclosure of patient health outcomes at the level of the individua...
During the past two decades, several public and private organizations have initiated programs to rep...
This paper exploits a brief period of asymmetric information during the implementation of Pennsylvan...
I provide a signaling-game theoretical foundation, upon which an updated empirical framework is prop...
This paper provides a signaling-game theoretical foundation for empirically testing the effects of q...
Standardized public reporting on the quality of healthcare (report cards) offers an opportunity to e...
Cardiac surgery report cards have been credited with fostering reductions in patient mortality, but ...
This study analyzes the effect of the content of report cards on the optimal incentivized payment fo...
Background- Report cards of risk-adjusted mortality rates of individual cardiac surgeons have been p...
Hospital 'report cards' policies involve governments publishing information about hospital quality. ...
Although policymakers have increasingly turned to provider report cards as a tool to improve health ...
Summarizes the theory behind, evolution of, and initiatives for public reporting of information abou...
We would like to thank the Martindale Center at Lehigh University for their generous support of this...
Public reporting of clinical outcomes data is but one response to calls for increasing transparency ...
This Note examines the emergence of consumer-directed information disclosure proposals in the health...
Health care report cards' public disclosure of patient health outcomes at the level of the individua...
During the past two decades, several public and private organizations have initiated programs to rep...
This paper exploits a brief period of asymmetric information during the implementation of Pennsylvan...
I provide a signaling-game theoretical foundation, upon which an updated empirical framework is prop...
This paper provides a signaling-game theoretical foundation for empirically testing the effects of q...
Standardized public reporting on the quality of healthcare (report cards) offers an opportunity to e...
Cardiac surgery report cards have been credited with fostering reductions in patient mortality, but ...
This study analyzes the effect of the content of report cards on the optimal incentivized payment fo...
Background- Report cards of risk-adjusted mortality rates of individual cardiac surgeons have been p...
Hospital 'report cards' policies involve governments publishing information about hospital quality. ...
Although policymakers have increasingly turned to provider report cards as a tool to improve health ...
Summarizes the theory behind, evolution of, and initiatives for public reporting of information abou...
We would like to thank the Martindale Center at Lehigh University for their generous support of this...
Public reporting of clinical outcomes data is but one response to calls for increasing transparency ...
This Note examines the emergence of consumer-directed information disclosure proposals in the health...