Grantee Publication

HMO Mergers: Estimating Impacts on Premiums and Costs

Health Affairs
Commentary
November 1997
Christianson, J., Feldman, R., and D. Wholey
pp. 133-41

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False Hope: Bone Marrow Transplantation for Breast Cancer

Oxford University Press
January 2007
Rettig, R., Jacobson, P., Aubry, W., and C. Farquhar

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Consumer-Driven Health Plans: Early Results from a National Study

September 2004
Feldman R, Parente S, Christianson J

Health Services Research--September 2004

Roger Feldman and colleagues Stephen Parente and Jon Christianson, from the Carlson School of Management, have published the early results from their national study of consumer-driven health plans (CDHPs). In a set of three papers in Health Services Research, the University of Minnesota researchers provided valuable, unbiased information to the policy and research community about the potential for CDHPs to take hold.  
 

Prescription Drug Coverage, Health, and Medication Acquisition Among Seniors With One or More Chronic Conditions

Medical Care--November 2004
Vol. 42, No. 11
November 2004
Jackson, J.E., Doescher, M.P., Saver, B.G., and P. Fishman
pp. 1056-65

Background: The unabated rise in medication costs particularly affects older persons with chronic conditions that require long-term medication use, but how prescription benefits affect medication adherence for such persons has received limited study.

Objective: We sought to study the relationship among prescription benefit status, health, and medication acquisition in a sample of elderly HMO enrollees with 1 or more common, chronic conditions.

Has Medicaid Managed Care Affected Beneficiary Access and Use

Inquiry
Vol. 39, No. 3
September 2002
Zuckerman, S., Brennan, N., and A. Yemane
pp. 221-42

This paper uses data from the 1997 National Survey of America's Families to examine the effects of the various forms of mandatory Medicaid managed care on access and use among beneficiaries not receiving Supplemental Security Income or Medicare benefits. The results show that mandatory health maintenance organization (HMO) programs have had a positive impact on both children and adults, particularly when compared to Medicaid fee-for-service plans.

Agents' Behavior Under Health Insurance Market Reforms

Journal of Insurance Regulation
Spring 2000
Richardson, C. and M. Hall

Evaluations of health insurance market reforms have tended to neglect the critical role of independent agents, and have failed, so far, to directly observe market behavior. This article reports on an initial attempt to assess the impact of health insurance market reforms through structured contacts with insurance agents. A small employer was trained to contact a stratified random sampling of agents in eight states with varying market rules, to inquire about insurance purchase for a group of three and an individual, under a scenario that presented various elevated risk factors.

Exporting the Buyers Health Care Action Group Purchasing Model: Lessons from Other Communities

The Milbank Quarterly--March 2004
Vol. 83, No. 1
March 2005
Christianson, J., and R. Feldman
pp. 149-76

When first implemented in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, the Buyers Health Care Action Group's (BHCAG) purchasing approach received considerable attention as an employer-managed, consumer-driven health care model embodying many of the principles of managed competition. First BHCAG and, later, a for-profit management company attempted to export this model to other communities. Their efforts were met with resistance from local hospitals and, in many cases, apathy by employers who were expected to be supportive.

Topic: 
Purchasing

Community-Based Trauma Systems: An Examination of Structural Development

Social Sciences and Medicine
Vol. 46, No. 9
May 1998
Bazzoli, G.J., Harmata. R., and C. Chan
pp. 1137-49

OBJECTIVE: To examine the organizational, political, and community characteristics that facilitate or impede community progress in developing a coordinative network of health services for trauma delivery. STUDY SETTING/DESIGN: A comparative case study design was used to examine trauma network development in 6 U.S. cities with a population of 1,000,000 or more. Five key coordinative activities were selected for study. Each study site varied in the set of activities that had been implemented.

Treatment of Coronary Artery Disease: What Does Rationing Do?

Brookings Policy Brief Series-December 2005
Policy Brief #148
December 2005
Aaron, H.J.

Providing all beneficial care to those who need it is rapidly becoming unaffordable, even for a nation as rich as the United States. The highly decentralized U.S. payment system is unique in its lack of effective levers for limiting health care spending, and managed care has largely been ineffective. A different solution, considered extreme by many in the United States, is rationing.

The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 and U.S. Hospital Operations

Inquiry - Winter 2004/2005
Vol. 41, No. 4
Winter 2004/2005
Bazzoli, G.J., Lindrooth, R.C., Hasnain-Wynia, R., and J. Needleman
pp. 401-17

The Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 initiated several changes to Medicare payment policy in an effort to slow growth of hospital Medicare payments and ensure the future of the Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund.  Although subsequent federal legislation relaxed some original proposals, restored funds were limited and directed to specific types of hospitals.  In addition, these Medicare policy changes came at a time when hospitals faced private sector payment constraints.  This paper assesses the short-term effects to those observed in the early 1980s during implementatio

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