Grantee Publication

The Effect of HMO Penetration on Physician Retirement

Center for Health
Vol. 35, No. 5, Pt. 5
March 2003
Kletke, P.R., Polsky, D., Wozniak, G.D., and J.E. Escarce
pp. 17-31

OBJECTIVE: To examine the effect of HMO penetration on physician retirement. STUDY DESIGN: We linked together historical data from the Physician Masterfile of the American Medical Association for successive years to track changes in physicians' activity status between 1980 and 1997. We used a multivariate discrete-time survival model to examine how the probability of physician retirement was affected by the level of HMO penetration in the physician's market area, controlling for other physician and market characteristics.

Defective Design: Regional Competition in Medicare

Health Affairs--August 2005
August 23, 2005
Pizer, S., Feldman, R., and A. Frankt
pp. W5-399-411

The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act (MMA) of 2003 creates several new types of private insurance plans in Medicare. The most familiar of these is the preferred provider organization (PPO).

Topic: 
Medicare

Uninsured vs. Insured Population: Variation Among Nonelderly Americans

Journal of Health and Social Policy--March 2003
Vol. 17, No. 3
March 2003
Jovanovic, Z., Lin, C.J., and C.H. Chang
pp. 71-85

This study identified the underlying demographic and socioeconomic factors associated with insurance status among nonelderly Americans (age 19-64), as well as compared health care utilization between insured and uninsured. Data from the Community Tracking Study 1996-1997 Household Survey were analyzed. Approximately 74 percent of uninsured Americans are nonelderly Americans. Among the nonelderly Americans, about 17 percent are uninsured.

Access Intervention in an Integrated, Prepaid Group Practice: Effects on Primary Care Physician Productivity

Health Services Research-October 2008
Vol. 43, No. 5, pt2
October 2008
Conrad, D., Fishman, P., Grembowski, D., Ralston, J., Reid, R., Martin, D., Larson, E., and M. Anderson
pp. 1888-905

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the joint effect of a multifaceted access intervention on primary care physician (PCP) productivity in a large, integrated prepaid group practice. DATA SOURCES: Administrative records of physician characteristics, compensation and full-time equivalent (FTE) data, linked to enrollee utilization and cost information. STUDY DESIGN: Dependent measures per quarter per FTE were office visits, work relative value units (WRVUs), WRVUs per visit, panel size, and total cost per member per quarter (PMPQ), for PCPs employed >0.25 FTE.

Do Medicaid Reimbursement Rates Shape Access to Nursing Homes?

Research on Aging
Vol. 23, No. 5
September 2001
Meyer, M.H.
pp. 532-51

Medicaid reimbursement rates vary widely around the country and at times are just 70 to 80 percent of prevailing private pay rates.

Effects of the Medicare Prospective Payment System on Hospital Cost Containment: An Early Appraisal

Medical Care
Vol. 66, No. 2
September 1988
Sloan, F.A., Morrisey, M.A., and J. Valvona
pp. 191-220

Medicare's Prospective Payment System (PPS) created incentives to reduce the application of technology to hospitalized Medicare beneficiaries. Using data from 501 hospitals from 1980 and 1983-85, this study assesses changes in use of intensive care units and use of nonsurgical procedures before versus after implementation of PPS. The percent of hospitalized patients, both Medicare and non-Medicare, admitted to intensive care units increased post-PPS. Also, stays within such units remained constant.

Accuracy in Self-Reported Health Insurance Coverage Among Medicaid Enrollees

Inquiry-Winter/Spring 2009
Vol. 45, No. 4
Winter 2008/2009
Call, K.T., Davidson, G., Davern, M., Brown., E.R., Kincheloe, J., and J.G. Nelson
pp. 438-56

The largest portion of the Medicaid undercount is caused by survey reporting error--that is, Medicaid recipients misreport their enrollment in health insurance coverage surveys. In this study, we sampled known Medicaid enrollees to learn how they respond to health insurance questions and to document correlates of accurate and inaccurate reports. We found that Medicaid enrollees are fairly accurate reporters of insurance status and type of coverage, but some do report being uninsured. Multivariate analyses point to the prominent role of program-related factors in the accuracy of reports.

Revisiting the Relationship Between Managed Care and Hospital Consolidation

Health Services Research - February 2007
Vol. 41, No. 1, Pt 1
February 2007
Town, R.J., Wholey, D., Feldman, R., and L.R. Burns
pp. 219-38

Objective.
This paper analyzes whether the rise in managed care during the 1990s caused the increase in hospital concentration.

Data Sources.
We assemble data from the American Hospital Association, InterStudy and government censuses from 1990 to 2000.

Study Design.
We employ linear regression analyses on long differenced data to estimate the impact of managed care penetration on hospital consolidation. Instrumental variable analogs of these regressions are also analyzed to control for potential endogeneity.

Improving Quality Through Identifying Inappropriate Care: The Use of Guideline-Based Utilization Review Protocols in the Washington State Workers' Compensation System

Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine--March 2004
Vol. 46, No. 3
March 2004
Wickizer, T., Franklin, G., Gluck, J., and D. Fulton-Kehoe
pp. 198-204

Utilization review (UR) is widely instituted to ensure that medical treatment is clinically necessary and appropriate. UR programs have been criticized for their failure to promote quality and for relying on proprietary review criteria that are rarely subject to external, independent evaluation or validation. In fashioning its UR program for workers' compensation, the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries sought to address these shortcomings.

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