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International Journal of Health Economics and Management

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37184822/finding-fraud-enforcement-detection-and-recoveries-after-the-aca
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria Perez, Julio A Ramos Pastrana
Medicaid Fraud Control Units investigate and prosecute acts of financial fraud and patient abuse within the program. Prior to the expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), federal government MFCU expenditures totaled half a percent of Medicaid expenditures. Following the enrollment of 12 million adults into the Medicaid program under the ACA, expenditures for these units are now less than pre-ACA levels, as a share of program expenses. We use data for states' fraud enforcement efforts in the period 2010-2018 and a difference-in-differences design that exploits states' decision to expand Medicaid under the ACA...
May 15, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37184821/priority-setting-in-the-german-healthcare-system-results-from-a-discrete-choice-experiment
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
V Meusel, E Mentzakis, P Baji, G Fiorentini, F Paolucci
Worldwide, social healthcare systems must face the challenges of a growing scarcity of resources and of its inevitable distributional effects. Explicit criteria are needed to define the boundaries of public reimbursement decisions. As Germany stands at the beginning of such a discussion, more formalised priority setting procedures seem in order. Recent research identified multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) as a promising approach to inform and to guide decision-making in healthcare systems. In that regard, this paper aims to analyse the relative weight assigned to various criteria in setting priority interventions in Germany...
May 15, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37106248/how-does-the-quality-of-care-for-type-2-diabetic-patients-benefit-from-gps-nurses-teamwork-a-staggered-difference-in-differences-design-based-on-a-french-pilot-program
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie Gilles de la Londe, Anissa Afrite, Julien Mousquès
In many countries, policies have explicitly encouraged primary care teams and inter-professional cooperation and skill mix, as a way to improve both productive efficiency gains and quality improvement. France faces barriers to developing team working as well as new and more advanced roles for health care professionals including nurses. We aim to estimate the impact of a national pilot experiment of teamwork between general practitioners (GPs) and advance practitioners nurses (APN)-who substitute and complement GPs-on yearly quality of care process indicators for type two diabetes patients (T2DP)...
April 27, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37103662/the-effectiveness-of-vaccination-testing-and-lockdown-strategies-against-covid-19
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marlon Fritz, Thomas Gries, Margarete Redlin
The ability of various policy activities to reduce the reproduction rate of the COVID-19 disease is widely discussed. Using a stringency index that comprises a variety of lockdown levels, such as school and workplace closures, we analyze the effectiveness of government restrictions. At the same time, we investigate the capacity of a range of lockdown measures to lower the reproduction rate by considering vaccination rates and testing strategies. By including all three components in an SIR (Susceptible, Infected, Recovery) model, we show that a general and comprehensive test strategy is instrumental in reducing the spread of COVID-19...
April 27, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37095293/are-women-breaking-the-glass-ceiling-a-gendered-analysis-of-the-duration-of-sick-leave-in-spain
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ángel L Martín-Román, Alfonso Moral, Sara Pinillos-Franco
We study the gender gap in the duration of sick leave in Spain by splitting this duration into two types of days - those which are related to biological characteristics and those derived from behavioral reasons. Using the Statistics of Accidents at Work for 2011-2019, we found that women presented longer standard durations (i.e., purely attached to physiological reasons) compared to men. However, when estimating individuals' efficiency as the ratio between actual and standard durations, we found that women were more inefficient at lower levels of income, whereas in case of men, this occurred at higher levels of income...
April 24, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37081203/intensification-or-diversification-responses-by-anti-health-pass-entrepreneurs-to-french-government-announcements
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christophe Lévêque, Haris Megzari
We study the extent to which French entrepreneurs mobilized in an online collective action against the generalization of the health-pass policy in summer 2021. We document the dynamics of registrations on the website Animap.fr where entrepreneurs could claim they would not check the health-pass of their clients. We first note an over-representation of complementary and alternative medicine practitioners among the mobilized people. We also suggest that professionals related to the touristic industry mobilized on the website...
April 20, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37069418/national-or-local-infodemic-the-demand-for-news-in-italy-during-covid-19
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefano Castriota, Marco Delmastro, Mirco Tonin
Information can have an important impact on health behavior and, according to the World Health Organization, an 'infodemic' has accompanied the current pandemic. Observing TV news viewership in Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic using actual consumption data, we investigate whether demand for national and local news depends on national or local epidemiological developments, as measured by the number of new positives or the number of current positives on any given day. Exploiting the fact that the impact of the pandemic displays a great deal of variation among the different regions, we find that at the regional level, demand for both national and local news responds to national epidemiological developments rather than to local ones...
April 17, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37067659/hospital-cost-efficiency-an-examination-of-us-acute-care-inpatient-hospitals
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebastian Linde
The use of stochastic frontier models for inference on hospital efficiency is complicated by the inability to fully control for quality differences across hospitals. Additionally, the potential existence of cross-sectional dependence due to the presence of unobserved common factors leads to endogeneity problems that can bias both cost function and efficiency estimates. Using a panel consisting of 1518 hospitals for the years 1996-2013 (T = 18), I adopt techniques for dealing with long, cross-sectionally dependent panel data in order to estimate cost parameters and hospital specific efficiency...
April 17, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37022649/total-expenditure-elasticity-of-spending-on-self-treatment-and-professional-healthcare-a-case-of-russia
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Evguenii Zazdravnykh, Andrey Aistov, Ekaterina Aleksandrova
The studies on the demand for healthcare in low- and middle-income countries rarely take into consideration the fact that many people spend their income on self-treatment and professional treatment. The estimation of the income elasticity of demand for self-treatment and professional treatment can show a more precise picture of the affordability of professional care. This paper contributes to the discussion around estimates of income elasticity of health spending and discussion whether professional care and self-treatment are close to a luxury good and inferior good respectively in a middle-income country...
April 6, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37010654/the-effect-of-health-facility-births-on-newborn-mortality-in-malawi
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dawoon Jung, Booyuel Kim
We examine the effect of health facility delivery on newborn mortality in Malawi using data from a survey of mothers in the Chimutu district, Malawi. The study exploits labour contraction time as an instrumental variable to overcome endogeneity of health facility delivery. The results show that health facility delivery does not reduce 7-day and 28-day mortality rates. In a low-income country like Malawi where the healthcare quality is severely compromised, we conclude that encouraging health facility delivery may not guarantee positive health outcomes for newborn births...
April 3, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37005943/impact-of-covid-19-on-hospital-screening-diagnosis-and-treatment-activities-among-prostate-and-colorectal-cancer-patients-in-canada
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shin-Haw Lee, Andrew Toye Ojo, Matthew Halat, Nataly Bleibdrey, Steven Zhang, Rob Chalmers, Dan Zimskind
BACKGROUND: Suspension of cancer screening and treatment programs were instituted to preserve medical resources and protect vulnerable populations. This research aims to investigate the implications of COVID-19 on cancer management and clinical outcomes for patients with prostate and colorectal cancer in Canada. METHODS: We examined hospital cancer screening, diagnosis, treatment, length of stay, and mortality data among prostate and colorectal cancer patients between April 2017 and March 2021...
April 2, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36929472/analyzing-the-effect-of-health-reforms-on-the-efficiency-of-ecuadorian-public-hospitals
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juan Piedra-Peña, Diego Prior
This study aims to assess whether Ecuadorian health reforms carried out since 2008 have affected the efficiency performance of public hospitals in the country. We contribute to the literature by shedding new light on the effects on public healthcare efficiency for developing countries when policies move toward health equity and universal coverage. We follow a two-stage approach, wherein the first stage we make use of factor and cluster analysis to obtain three clusters of public hospitals based on their technological endowment; we exploit Data Envelopment Analysis for panel data in the second stage to estimate robust efficiency measures over time...
March 16, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36859652/improving-diagnosis-based-cost-groups-in-the-dutch-risk-equalization-model-the-effects-of-a-new-clustering-method-and-allowing-for-multimorbidity
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michel Oskam, Richard C van Kleef, René C J A van Vliet
Health insurance markets with community-rated premiums typically use risk equalization (RE) to compensate insurers for predictable profits on people in good health and predictable losses on those with a chronic disease. Over the past decades RE models have evolved from simple demographic models to sophisticated health-based models. Despite the improvements, however, non-trivial predictable profits and losses remain. This study examines to what extent the Dutch RE model can be further improved by redesigning one key morbidity adjuster: the Diagnosis-based Cost Groups (DCGs)...
March 2, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853572/children-vaccines-and-financial-incentives
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Orhan Erdem, Sukran Erdem, Kelly Monson
Recent studies have been analyzing and measuring the efficacy of the use of financial incentives to increase the Covid-19 vaccine uptake. To the best of our knowledge, this paper is the only study available in the literature that aims to measure the effect of financial incentives on vaccine rates among children. This paper explores the effects of a specific financial incentive on parents' vaccination decisions for their children. Using data from a regional practice, where students aged 12 and older received $50 gift cards per Covid-19 vaccination dose, we use various methodologies (synthetic control, linear regression, and difference-in-differences) to approximate the effects of financial incentives on vaccine rates...
February 28, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36849754/the-short-term-effects-of-fixed-copayment-policy-on-elderly-health-spending-and-service-utilization-evidence-from-south-korea-s-age-based-policy-using-exact-date-of-birth
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
SeungHoon Han, Hosung Sohn
A large number of the poor elderly in Korea have been exposed to the risk of insufficient proper medical treatments because of financial restrictions. South Korea launched policies to reduce the cost-sharing burden on the elderly, including one compelling the elderly to pay a fixed out-of-pocket amount for outpatient treatments. The impacts of such policies, however, have yet to be elucidated. In this paper, we estimate the short-term effects of the fixed outpatient copayment policy on the health-related behavior of the elderly...
February 28, 2023: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36543962/the-effect-of-performance-pay-incentives-on-market-frictions-evidence-from-medicare
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Atul Gupta, Guy David, Lucy Kim
Medicare has increased the use of performance pay incentives for hospitals, with the goal of increasing care coordination across providers, reducing market frictions, and ultimately to improve quality of care. This paper provides new empirical evidence by using novel operations and claims data from a large, independent home health care firm with the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) penalty on hospitals providing identifying variation. We find that the penalty incentive to reduce re-hospitalizations passed through from hospitals to the firm for at least some types of patients, since it provided more care inputs for heart disease patients discharged from hospitals at greater penalty risk and that contributed more patients to the firm...
December 22, 2022: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36477343/does-the-market-reward-quality-evidence-from-india
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zachary Wagner, Somalee Banerjee, Manoj Mohanan, Neeraj Sood
There are two salient facts about health care in low and middle-income countries; (1) the private sector plays an important role and (2) the care provided is often of poor quality. Despite these facts we know little about what drives quality of care in the private sector and why patients seek care from poor quality providers. We use two field studies in India that provide insight into this issue. First, we use a discrete choice experiment to show that patients strongly value technical quality. Second, we use standardized patients to show that better quality providers are not able to charge higher prices...
December 7, 2022: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36417144/minimum-wages-and-health-evidence-from-european-countries
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laetitia Lebihan
This study investigates the effects of minimum wage on health, well-being, and income security in European countries. The empirical strategy consists of exploiting variations in the minimum wage across European countries over time. We show that minimum wage increases improve individuals' self-reported health and income security. Minimum wage increases also improve life satisfaction and happiness. The effects are largest among women, employed individuals, married individuals, and those with less than a secondary education...
November 22, 2022: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36367604/determinants-of-life-expectancy-at-birth-a-longitudinal-study-on-oecd-countries
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paolo Roffia, Alessandro Bucciol, Sara Hashlamoun
This paper analyses the influence of several determinants on life expectancy at birth in 36 OECD countries over the 1999-2018 period. We utilized a cross-country fixed-effects multiple regression analysis with year and country dummies and used dynamic models, backward stepwise selection, and Arellano-Bond estimators to treat potential endogeneity issues. The results show the influence of per capita health-care expenditure, incidence of out-of-pocket expenditure, physician density, hospital bed density, social spending, GDP level, participation ratio to labour, prevalence of chronic respiratory diseases, temperature, and total size of the population on life expectancy at birth...
November 11, 2022: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36131191/exploring-the-effectiveness-of-demand-side-retail-pharmaceutical-expenditure-reforms-cross-country-evidence-from-weighted-average-least-squares-estimation
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Berger, Markus Pock, Miriam Reiss, Gerald Röhrling, Thomas Czypionka
Increasing expenditures on retail pharmaceuticals bring a critical challenge to the financial stability of healthcare systems worldwide. Policy makers have reacted by introducing a range of measures to control the growth of public pharmaceutical expenditure (PPE). Using panel data on European and non-European OECD member countries from 1990 to 2015, we evaluate the effectiveness of six types of demand-side expenditure control measures including physician-level behaviour measures, system-level price-control measures and substitution measures, alongside a proxy for cost-sharing and add a new dimension to the existing empirical evidence hitherto based on national-level and meta-studies...
September 21, 2022: International Journal of Health Economics and Management
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