Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
1.
Health Econ ; 29(10): 1270-1278, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33463861

ABSTRACT

In July 2002, a global budgeting system was imposed on hospitals in Taiwan. This system set a fixed budget for all hospitals within a region but included special provisions that sheltered reimbursements for drug expenditures. We study the size and nature of changes in hospital physicians' use of drugs for outpatient care following this budgetary change and find that drug expenditures for outpatient care increased by 11.7%. Our results suggest that physicians began prescribing more expensive drugs, more drugs, and drugs for longer periods but that these different responses did not all occur at the same time. The overall response was strongest in for-profit hospitals, but drug-related decisions changed in all hospital types.


Subject(s)
Health Expenditures , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Budgets , Hospitals , Humans , Taiwan
2.
Demography ; 52(3): 883-904, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25917343

ABSTRACT

In this article, we exploit a unique natural experiment-the implementation of National Health Insurance (NHI) in Taiwan in 1995-to examine how the introduction of universal health insurance increases or decreases the likelihood of intergenerational coresidence. Five waves of surveys from the Survey of Health and Living Status of the Elderly in Taiwan between 1989 and 2003 are employed, and models with various specifications are estimated. Our results indicate a mixed relationship between the likelihood of intergenerational coresidence and the enactment of NHI. Although NHI on average reduces the probability that elderly parents live with their adult children by approximately 6.6 %, the likelihood of intergenerational coresidence increases among families benefiting most from NHI, such as those with unhealthy elderly mothers and fewer children.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Universal Health Insurance/statistics & numerical data , Activities of Daily Living , Adult Children/statistics & numerical data , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Intergenerational Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Econometric , Sex Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , Taiwan
3.
Int Health ; 6(1): 62-9, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24526003

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A global budgeting system helps control the growth of healthcare spending by setting expenditure ceilings. However, the hospital global budget implemented in Taiwan in 2002 included a special provision: drug expenditures are reimbursed at face value, while other expenditures are subject to discounting. That gives hospitals, particularly those that are for-profit, an incentive to increase drug expenditures in treating patients. METHODS: We calculated monthly drug expenditures by hospital departments from January 1997 to June 2006, using a sample of 348 193 patient claims to Taiwan National Health Insurance. To allow for variation among responses by departments with differing reliance on drugs and among hospitals of different ownerships, we used quantile regression to identify the effect of the hospital global budget on drug expenditures. RESULTS: Although drug expenditure increased in all hospital departments after the enactment of the hospital global budget, departments in for-profit hospitals that rely more heavily on drug treatments increased drug spending more, relative to public hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that a global budgeting system with special reimbursement provisions for certain treatment categories may alter treatment decisions and may undermine cost-containment goals, particularly among for-profit hospitals.


Subject(s)
Budgets , Cost Control , Drug Utilization/economics , Health Expenditures , Hospitals , National Health Programs , Ownership/economics , Decision Making , Hospitals, Public , Humans , Insurance, Health, Reimbursement , Private Sector , Public Sector , Regression Analysis , Taiwan
4.
Health Serv Res ; 45(5 Pt 1): 1168-87, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20662948

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether provider volume has an impact on the hazard of mortality for coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) patients in Taiwan. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Multiple sources of linked data from the National Health Insurance Program in Taiwan. STUDY DESIGN: The linked data were used to identify 27,463 patients who underwent CABG without concomitant angioplasty or valve procedures and the surgeon and hospital volumes. Generalized estimating equations and hazard models were estimated to assess the impact of volume on mortality. The hazard modeling technique used accounts for bias stemming from unobserved heterogeneity. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Both surgeon and hospital volume quartiles are inversely related to the hazard of mortality after CABG. Patients whose surgeon is in the three higher volume quartiles have lower 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-month mortality after CABG, while only those having their procedure performed at the highest quartile of volume hospitals have lower mortality outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Mortality outcomes are related to provider CABG volume in Taiwan. Unobserved heterogeneity is a concern in the volume-outcome relationship; after accounting for it, surgeon volume effects on short-term mortality are large. Using models controlling for unobserved heterogeneity and examining longer term mortality may still differentiate provider quality by volume.


Subject(s)
Cardiology Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Coronary Artery Bypass/mortality , Hospital Mortality , Patient Admission/statistics & numerical data , Proportional Hazards Models , Quality Indicators, Health Care/organization & administration , Aged , Coronary Artery Bypass/trends , Female , Health Services Research , Hospital Bed Capacity/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Mortality/trends , Humans , Insurance Claim Reporting/statistics & numerical data , Logistic Models , Male , Medical Record Linkage , Middle Aged , National Health Programs/organization & administration , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Risk Adjustment , Taiwan/epidemiology
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20575230

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This chapter examines how drug prescribing behavior in Taiwanese hospitals changed after the government changed reimbursement systems. In 2002, Taiwan instituted a system in which hospitals are reimbursed for drug expenditures at full price from a fixed global budget before the remaining budget is allocated to reimburse all other expenditures, often at discounted prices. Providers are thus given a financial incentive to increase prescriptions. METHODOLOGY: We isolate the effect of this system from that of other confounding factors by estimating a difference-in-difference model to analyze monthly drug expenditures of hospital departments for outpatients during the years 1999-2006. FINDINGS: Our results suggest that hospital departments which use drugs more heavily as part of their regular medical care increased their drug prescription expenditures after the implementation of the global budget system. In addition, we find that the response was stronger among for-profit than not-for-profit and public hospitals. IMPLICATIONS: Hospital doctors responded to the financial incentive created by the particular global budgeting system adopted in Taiwan by increasing expenditures on drug treatments for outpatients.


Subject(s)
Budgets/legislation & jurisprudence , Drug Prescriptions/economics , Reimbursement, Incentive/legislation & jurisprudence , Databases as Topic , Economics, Hospital , Taiwan
6.
J Health Econ ; 29(2): 213-25, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20031241

ABSTRACT

Improving patient compliance with physicians' treatment or prescription recommendations is an important goal in medical practice. We examine the relationship between treatment progress and patient compliance. We hypothesize that patients balance expected benefits and costs during a treatment episode when deciding on compliance; a patient is more likely to comply if doing so results in an expected gain in health benefit. We use a unique data set of outpatient alcohol abuse treatment to identify a relationship between treatment progress and compliance. Treatment progress is measured by the clinician's comments after each attended visit. Compliance is measured by a client attending a scheduled appointment, and continuing with treatment. We find that a patient who is making progress is less likely to drop out of treatment. We find no evidence that treatment progress raises the likelihood of a patient attending the next scheduled visit. Our results are robust to unobserved patient heterogeneity.


Subject(s)
Alcoholism/therapy , Patient Compliance , Adult , Alcoholism/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Theoretical , Patient Dropouts , Probability , Recurrence , Treatment Outcome
7.
J Health Econ ; 27(5): 1208-23, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18486978

ABSTRACT

This paper compares program expenditure and treatment quality of stroke and cardiac patients between 1997 and 2000 across hospitals of various ownership types in Taiwan. Because Taiwan implemented national health insurance in 1995, the analysis is immune from problems arising from the complex setting of the U.S. health care market, such as segmentation of insurance status or multiple payers. Because patients may select admitted hospitals based on their observed and unobserved characteristics, we employ instrument variable (IV) estimation to account for the endogeneity of ownership status. Results of IV estimation find that patients admitted to non-profit hospitals receive better quality care, either measured by 1- or 12-month mortality rates. In terms of treatment expenditure, our results indicate no difference between non-profits and for-profits index admission expenditures, and at most 10% higher long-term expenditure for patients admitted to non-profits than to for-profits.


Subject(s)
Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Heart Diseases/therapy , Hospitals, Proprietary/organization & administration , Hospitals, Public/organization & administration , Hospitals, Voluntary/organization & administration , Ownership/statistics & numerical data , Quality of Health Care , Stroke/therapy , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Health Services Research , Heart Diseases/mortality , Hospital Mortality , Hospitals, Proprietary/economics , Hospitals, Proprietary/standards , Hospitals, Public/economics , Hospitals, Public/standards , Hospitals, Voluntary/economics , Hospitals, Voluntary/standards , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , National Health Programs , Ownership/classification , Stroke/mortality , Taiwan/epidemiology , Treatment Outcome
8.
J Health Econ ; 23(6): 1261-83, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15556245

ABSTRACT

This paper considers three types of provider-client interactions that influence quantity of health care use: rationing, effort, and persuasion. By rationing, we refer to a quantity limit set by a provider; effort, the productive inputs supplied by a provider to increase a client's demand; persuasion, the unproductive inputs used by a provider to induce a client's demand. We construct a theoretical model incorporating all three mechanisms as special cases. When the general model is specialized into one of three mechanisms, a set of empirical implications emerges. We test for the presence of each mechanism using data of patients receiving outpatient treatment for alcohol abuse in the Maine Addiction Treatment System. We find evidence for rationing and persuasion, but not effort.


Subject(s)
Health Services Needs and Demand , Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Physician-Patient Relations , Adult , Female , Health Care Rationing , Health Services/economics , Health Services Needs and Demand/economics , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Maine , Male , Models, Econometric , Persuasive Communication , Substance Abuse Treatment Centers/economics , Substance Abuse Treatment Centers/statistics & numerical data
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...