We investigate differences in patients’ length of stay between National Health Service (NHS) public hospitals, public treatment centres and private treatment centres that provide elective (non-emergency) hip replacement to publicly-funded patients. We find that private treatment centres and public treatment centres have on average respectively 40% and 18% shorter length of stay compared to NHS public hospitals, even after controlling for differences in age, gender, number and type of diagnosis, deprivation and geographical variation. We therefore interpret such differences as due to efficiency as opposed to selection (treatment of less complex cases). Quantile regression suggests that the proportionate differences between different provider...
The implications of hospital quality competition depend on what type of quality affects choice of ho...
An ageing population at greater risk of proximal femoral fracture places an additional clinical and ...
Objective. To test the hypothesis that physicians whowork in different hospitals adapt their length ...
We investigate differences in patients' length of stay between National Health Service (NHS) pu...
Inequality between private and public patients in Australia has been an ongoing concern due to its t...
We examine whether hospital patients living in low income areas of England cost more to treat, using...
In the Dutch health care system, hospitals are expected to compete. A necessary condition for compet...
With the NHS facing severe funding constraints, it has been suggested that the greatest potential sa...
This paper uses a difference-in-difference estimator to test whether the introduction of patient cho...
Whether one examines the average length of hospital stay at the level of geographic areas, at the le...
Whether one examines the average length of hospital stay at the level of geographic areas, at the le...
The Blair/Brown reforms of the English NHS in the early to mid 2000s gave hospitals strong new incen...
We investigate whether public and private providers differ in quality in Lombardy, a large Italian r...
AbstractWe investigate (a) how patient choice of hospital for elective hip replacement is influenced...
none3siObjectives In England, patients can choose to have their NHS elective care delivered by priv...
The implications of hospital quality competition depend on what type of quality affects choice of ho...
An ageing population at greater risk of proximal femoral fracture places an additional clinical and ...
Objective. To test the hypothesis that physicians whowork in different hospitals adapt their length ...
We investigate differences in patients' length of stay between National Health Service (NHS) pu...
Inequality between private and public patients in Australia has been an ongoing concern due to its t...
We examine whether hospital patients living in low income areas of England cost more to treat, using...
In the Dutch health care system, hospitals are expected to compete. A necessary condition for compet...
With the NHS facing severe funding constraints, it has been suggested that the greatest potential sa...
This paper uses a difference-in-difference estimator to test whether the introduction of patient cho...
Whether one examines the average length of hospital stay at the level of geographic areas, at the le...
Whether one examines the average length of hospital stay at the level of geographic areas, at the le...
The Blair/Brown reforms of the English NHS in the early to mid 2000s gave hospitals strong new incen...
We investigate whether public and private providers differ in quality in Lombardy, a large Italian r...
AbstractWe investigate (a) how patient choice of hospital for elective hip replacement is influenced...
none3siObjectives In England, patients can choose to have their NHS elective care delivered by priv...
The implications of hospital quality competition depend on what type of quality affects choice of ho...
An ageing population at greater risk of proximal femoral fracture places an additional clinical and ...
Objective. To test the hypothesis that physicians whowork in different hospitals adapt their length ...