Lecture 23 -11/30/99
Sloan, "Effects of Health Insurance on Physicians’ Fees"
Background
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Thought that insurers’ payment affects fees, but prior to
study, virtually no empirical evidence on this
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UCR, basic insurance versus major medical, indemnity versus
service benefit, Medicare assignment
Theory:Single Product Market
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p=P(y;M) where p=physician’s fee, y=physician’s output, M=exogenous
(to physician) factors affecting demand for physician
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C=C(y;N) where C=total practice cost, N=exogenous factors
affecting cost curve
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profit=[p(y;M)+ks]y-C(y;N)]. Physician maxs this by selecting
y. FOC:MR=MC
Theory: Two Product Markets
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Price-setting market like before and price-taking market
where payment is i per unit of service
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profit=ix+[ks+p(y;M)]y-C(x+y;N)
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Now two cases: in Case 1, physician only serves price-setting
market. In Case 1,FOC is MRY =MC. In Case 2, physician serves both markets,
and i=MRY=MC.
Graph:MD Participates in Both Markets
Graph: Physician Only Participates in Price-Setting Market
Predicted Effects of Changes in Exogenous Insurance Variables
Data
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Physicians’ Practice Cost Surveys conducted by National Opinion
Research Center of U. of Chicago in 1977 & 1978
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Surveys contained questions about fees for particular procedures
and how much each payer (type) paid for the procedure
Explanatory Variables
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Three alternative specifications of insurance:
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Payer-specific fee schedules weighted by proportion of physician’s
practice patients with each payer type;
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Separate variables representing proportions of patients with
private insurance (actual re sponses), Medicare (actual responses), and
Medicaid (predicted values);
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Variables for proportions of patients*fee schedule for that
patient type.
Other Explanatory Variables
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Binary variables for specialty
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Physician credentials
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Physician relationship to hospital
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Product demand variables (other than insurance)
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Factor prices
Empirical Results
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Table 2 shows estimated office (FOV) and hospital visit (FHV)
equations. Table 3 shows regressions for five other more specialized procedures.
Estimated elasticities presented in Table 4.
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Discuss other research findings on physician participation
in Medicaid (related to Medicare assignment of benefits)
Weighted Fee Schedule Results
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Weighted fee schedule coefficients are all positive and statistically
significant at 5% level or higher.
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Associated fee-weighted fee schedule elasticities range from
0.24 to 0.38.
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Hard to isolate effect of Medicaid fee schedule using this
approach--selection problem
Implications
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More generous payment by insurers leads to higher fees.
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From here, effect of Medicaid fee schedule indeterminate
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May be effects of insurer payment on quality-amenities (references
to Sloan-Lorant and Guterman research)
Medical Malpractice
What is the specific role of medical malpractice in addressing quality?
Myths About Medical Malpractice
5 Myths
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There are too many malpractice suits.
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Only "good" doctors are sued.
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Dispute resolution in medical malpractice is a lottery.
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Medical malpractice plaintiffs are overcompensated for their
losses.
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The high cost of health care: Oh those d___ malpractice suits
(and greedy patients).
Data Sources
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Harvard Medical Practice Study (New York)
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Survey of Medical Malpractice Claimants--Birth-related and
ER injuries
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Survey of Obstetrical Care (Florida)
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Other data: surveys of physician practices, premium data
from insurers, etc.
Myth 1: There are too many malpractice suits.