Grantee Publication

Effects of a Consumer Driven Health Plan on Pharmaceutical Spending and Utilization

Health Services Research-October 2008
Vol 43, No. 5, pt1
October 2008
Parente, S.T., Feldman, R., and S. Chen
pp. 1542-56

Objectives. To compare pharmaceutical spending and utilization in a consumer driven health plan (CDHP) with a three-tier pharmacy benefit design, and to examine whether the CDHP creates incentives to reduce pharmaceutical spending and utilization for chronically ill patients, generic or brand name drugs, and mail-order drugs. Study Design. Retrospective insurance claims analysis from a large employer that introduced a CDHP in 2001 in addition to a point of service (POS) plan and a preferred provider organization (PPO), both of which used a three-tier pharmacy benefit. Methods.

Should Episode-Based Economic Profiles be Risk Adjusted to Account for Differences in Patients' Health Risks?

HSR - April 2006
Vol. 42, No. 2
April 2006
Thomas, J.W.
pp. 581-98

Objective. To determine whether additional risk adjustment is necessary in economic profiling of physicians when claims data are already grouped into episodes of care, and to measure effects of risk adjustment on cost efficiency rankings of physicians.

Data Sources. Four years of inpatient, outpatient, professional, and pharmacy claims data from a mixed model HMO.

Medicare Prospective Payment and Post-Hospital Transfers to Subacute Care

Medical Care
Vol. 26, No. 7
September 1988
Morrisey, M.S., Sloan, F.A., and J. Valvona
p. 685

This study analyzed the early effects of the Medicare Prospective Payment System (PPS) on the likelihood of hospital's discharging Medicare beneficiaries to skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), intermediate care facilities (ICFs), and home health agencies. It also examined length of stay before transfer. Discharge abstract data on patients in five DRG groups were studied. Data were obtained from 501 hospitals for the third quarters of 1980, 1983, 1984, and 1985. Multinomial logit and ordinary least squares regression techniques were employed.

Health Information Technology and Patient Safety: Evidence from Panel Data

Health Affairs
Vol. 28, No 2
March/April 2009
Parente, S.T., and J.S. McCullough
pp. 357-60

The potential of health information technology (IT) to transform health care delivery has spurred health IT adoption and will likely contribute to increased investments in coming years. Although an extensive literature shows the value of health IT at leading academic institutions, its broader value remains unknown. We sought to estimate IT's effect on key patient safety measures in a national sample. Using four years of Medicare inpatient data, we found that electronic medical records have a small, positive effect on patient safety.

Journal Article: Geographic Variation in Alcohol, Drug and Mental Health Services Utilization: What is the Role of Physician Practice Patterns

Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics - September 2006
Vol. 9, No. 3
September 2006
Edlund, M.J., Belin, T.R., and L. Tang
pp. 123-32

Geographic variation in health services utilization for medical, surgical, and psychiatric conditions may signal problems in quality.  We utilized data from a nationally representative survey of alcohol, drug and mental disorders (ADM) and treatment to investigate the extent to which geographic variation in treatment rates for ADM disorders was due to variation in case-mix across sites.

Managed Competition versus Industrial Purchasing of Health Care among the Fortune 500

Journal of Health Policy, Polictics, and Law
Vol. 27, No. 1
February 2002
Maxwell, J. and P. Temin
pp. 5-30.

The theory of managed competition has found favor with many health policy analysts and academic economists alike. Three characteristics – consumer choice, defined contribution, and dissemination of information – signal managed competition strategy. By requiring private employers to provide their employees with a choice of health carriers, a fixed-dollar strategy (defined contribution), and quality information to make appropriate choices among carriers, managed competition offers to remedy imperfections in both the consumer and provider sides of the market for health insurance.

Topic: 
Managed Care
Topic: 
Purchasing

Improving Health-Based Payment for Medicaid Beneficiaries: CDPS

Health Care Financing Review--March 2003
Vol. 21, No. 3
March 2003
Kronick, R., Gilmer, T., Dreyfus, T., and L. Lee
pp. 29-64

This article describes the Chronic Illness and Disability Payment System (CDPS), a diagnostic classification system that Medicaid programs can use to make health-based capitated payments for TANF and disabled Medicaid beneficiaries. The authors describe the diversity of diagnoses and different burdens of illness among disabled and AFDC Medicaid beneficiaries. Claims from seven States are analyzed, and payment weights are provided that States can use when adjusting HMO payments.

Consumer Competencies and the Use of Comparative Quality Information

Medical Care Research and Review-August 2007
Vol. 64, No 4
August 2007
Hibbard, J.H., Peters, E., Dixon, A., and M. Tusler
pp. 379-94

While consumers are increasingly expected to use complex health care information to make informed decisions, it is unclear how many have the skills to do so.  In this investigation we examine health literacy, numeracy, and patient activation, assessing the contribution of each to the comprehension of comparative health care performance reports and their use in making an informed choice.  A convenience sample of 303 employed-age adults participated in the study.  The findings indicate that numeracy skill is the strongest predictor of comprehension, followed by health literacy.

Market Watch: Community Rating and Sustainable Individual Health Insurance Markets in New Jersey

Health Affairs--July/August 2004
Vol. 23, No. 4
July/August 2004
Monheit, A.C., Cantor J.C., Koller, M., and K.S. Fox
pp. 167-75

The New Jersey Individual Health Coverage Program (IHCP) was implemented in 1993; key provisions included pure community rating and guaranteed issue/renewal of coverage. Despite positive early evaluations, the IHCP appears to be heading for collapse. Using unique administrative and survey data, we examined trends in IHCP enrollment and premiums. We found the stability of the IHCP to be fragile in light of improving opportunities for job-related health insurance.

Do Physicians Cost Shift?

Health Affairs
Vol. 15, No. 3
September 1996
Rice, T., Stearns, S., DesHarnais, S., Pathman, D., Tai-Seale, M., and M. Brasure
pp. 215-25

This study analyzes whether physicians charge their privately insured patients more-a practice known as cost shifting-in response to Medicare payment reductions. As part of congressional legislation in 1989 and 1990, Medicare reduced its payment rates for selected procedures by as much as 30 percent. Here we examine whether reductions in Medicare rates increase how much physicians charge privately insured patients. Our data provide no evidence that physicians respond to Medicare payment reductions by shifting costs to their privately insured patients.

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