Skip to main content
Erschienen in: International Journal of Health Economics and Management 4/2018

25.04.2018 | Research Article

Has inpatient hospital treatment before and after age 65 changed as the difference between private and Medicare payment rates has widened?

verfasst von: Thomas M. Selden, Zeynal Karaca, Sandra Decker

Erschienen in: International Journal of Health Economics and Management | Ausgabe 4/2018

Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten

Abstract

The past decade witnessed a dramatic increase in inpatient hospital payment rates for patients with private insurance relative to payment rates for those covered by Medicare. A natural question is whether the widening private-Medicare payment rate difference had implications for the hospital care received by patients just before and after turning 65—the age at which there is a substantial shift from private to Medicare coverage. Using a large discharge dataset covering the period 2001–2011, we tracked changes at age 65 in the following dimensions of hospital care: overall hospitalization rates, case mix, referral-sensitive surgeries, length of stay, full established charges, number of procedures, mortality, and composite measures of inpatient quality and patient safety. In all cases we found either no change or a change that was small and inconsistent with payment rate changes during the study period.
Anhänge
Nur mit Berechtigung zugänglich
Fußnoten
1
Estimates from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey of Hospitals show very similar trends for all hospital care (American Hospital Association 2015), and recent cross-sectional analyses provide corroborating evidence of historically large private-Medicare payment rate differences (Ginsburg 2010; Baker et al. 2016; Philipson et al. 2010; Cooper et al. 2015).
 
2
See, for instance: Decker (2005), Card et al. (2008, 2009).
 
3
We chose to end the analysis in 2011, because of a change in the design of the NIS data effective with the 2012 data (Houchens et al. 2014).
 
4
To develop these measures, we regressed (1) all-cause in-hospital mortality and (2) hospital charges on indicators for age, CCS conditions, and ECI conditions. The estimated model was then used to predict mortality and charges for our sample with age set at 65—yielding a (cardinal) mortality-weighted and charge-related measure of primary CCS conditions and ECI comorbidities. Both indices were normalized to average 100 in our sample.
 
5
We used Inpatient Quality Indicators (IQI #90) detailed in Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2015c).
 
6
We used Inpatient Quality Indicators (IQI #91) detailed in Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2015d).
 
7
We used Patient Safety Indicator (PSI #90) detailed in Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2015e).
 
Literatur
Zurück zum Zitat Anderson, G. F., Reinhardt, U. E., Hussey, P. S., & Petrosyan, V. (2003). It’s the prices, stupid: Why the United States is so different from other countries. Health Affairs, 22, 89–105.CrossRef Anderson, G. F., Reinhardt, U. E., Hussey, P. S., & Petrosyan, V. (2003). It’s the prices, stupid: Why the United States is so different from other countries. Health Affairs, 22, 89–105.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Baicker, Katherine, & Robbins, Jacob A. (2015). Medicare payments and system-level health-care use. American Journal of Health Economics, 1(4), 399–431.CrossRef Baicker, Katherine, & Robbins, Jacob A. (2015). Medicare payments and system-level health-care use. American Journal of Health Economics, 1(4), 399–431.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Baker, L. C., Bundorf, M. K., Devlin, A. M., & Kessler, D. P. (2016). Medicare advantage plans pay hospitals less than traditional medicare pays. Health Affairs, 8, 1444–1451.CrossRef Baker, L. C., Bundorf, M. K., Devlin, A. M., & Kessler, D. P. (2016). Medicare advantage plans pay hospitals less than traditional medicare pays. Health Affairs, 8, 1444–1451.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Biener, A. A., & Selden, T. M. (2017). Public and private payments for physician office visits. Health Affairs, 36(12), 2160–2164.CrossRef Biener, A. A., & Selden, T. M. (2017). Public and private payments for physician office visits. Health Affairs, 36(12), 2160–2164.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Billings, J., Zeitel, L., Lukomnik, J., Carey, T. S., Blank, A. E., & Newman, L. (1993). Impact of socioeconomic status on hospital use in New York city. Health Affairs, 12, 162–173.CrossRef Billings, J., Zeitel, L., Lukomnik, J., Carey, T. S., Blank, A. E., & Newman, L. (1993). Impact of socioeconomic status on hospital use in New York city. Health Affairs, 12, 162–173.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Card, D., Dobkin, C., & Maestas, N. (2008). The impact of nearly universal insurance coverage on health care utilization: Evidence from medicare. American Economic Review, 98, 2242–2258. Accessed 4 May 2017.CrossRef Card, D., Dobkin, C., & Maestas, N. (2008). The impact of nearly universal insurance coverage on health care utilization: Evidence from medicare. American Economic Review, 98, 2242–2258. Accessed 4 May 2017.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Card, D., Dobkin, C., & Maestas, N. (2009). Does medicare save lives? Quarterly Journal of Economics, 124, 597–636.CrossRef Card, D., Dobkin, C., & Maestas, N. (2009). Does medicare save lives? Quarterly Journal of Economics, 124, 597–636.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Cooper, Z., Craig, S. V., Gaynor, M., & Van Reenen, J. (2015). The price ain’t right? Hospital prices and health spending on the privately insured. NBER Working Paper No. 21815. http://www.nber.org/papers/w21815. Accessed 4 May 2017. Cooper, Z., Craig, S. V., Gaynor, M., & Van Reenen, J. (2015). The price ain’t right? Hospital prices and health spending on the privately insured. NBER Working Paper No. 21815. http://​www.​nber.​org/​papers/​w21815. Accessed 4 May 2017.
Zurück zum Zitat Cutler, D. M., & Morton, F. S. (2013). Hospitals, market share, and consolidation. Journal of the American Medical Association, 310, 1964–1970.CrossRef Cutler, D. M., & Morton, F. S. (2013). Hospitals, market share, and consolidation. Journal of the American Medical Association, 310, 1964–1970.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Decker, S. L. (2005). Medicare and the health of women with breast cancer. Journal of Human Resources, 40, 948–968.CrossRef Decker, S. L. (2005). Medicare and the health of women with breast cancer. Journal of Human Resources, 40, 948–968.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Dow, W. H. (2004). The introduction of medicare: Effects on elderly health. University of California, Berkeley (unpublished). Dow, W. H. (2004). The introduction of medicare: Effects on elderly health. University of California, Berkeley (unpublished).
Zurück zum Zitat Elixhauser, A., Steiner, C., Harris, D. R., & Coffey, R. M. (1998). Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Medical Care, 36, 8–27.CrossRef Elixhauser, A., Steiner, C., Harris, D. R., & Coffey, R. M. (1998). Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Medical Care, 36, 8–27.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Hu, T., Decker, S. L., & Chou, S.-Y. (2017). The impact of health insurance expansion on physician treatment choice: Medicare part D and physician prescribing. International Journal of Health Economics and Management, 17(3), 333–358.CrossRef Hu, T., Decker, S. L., & Chou, S.-Y. (2017). The impact of health insurance expansion on physician treatment choice: Medicare part D and physician prescribing. International Journal of Health Economics and Management, 17(3), 333–358.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Martin, A. B., Hartman, N., Benson, J., & Catlin, A. (2016). National health spending in 2014: Faster growth driven by coverage expansion and prescription drug spending. Health Affairs, 35, 150–160.CrossRef Martin, A. B., Hartman, N., Benson, J., & Catlin, A. (2016). National health spending in 2014: Faster growth driven by coverage expansion and prescription drug spending. Health Affairs, 35, 150–160.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Philipson, T., Seabury, S., Lockwood, K., Goldman, D., & Lakdawalla, D. (2010). Geographic variation in health care: The role of private markets. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 41, 325–361.CrossRef Philipson, T., Seabury, S., Lockwood, K., Goldman, D., & Lakdawalla, D. (2010). Geographic variation in health care: The role of private markets. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 41, 325–361.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat Selden, T. M., Karaca, Z., Keenan, P., White, C., & Kronick, R. (2015). The growing difference between public and private payment rates for inpatient hospital care. Health Affairs, 34, 2147–2150.CrossRef Selden, T. M., Karaca, Z., Keenan, P., White, C., & Kronick, R. (2015). The growing difference between public and private payment rates for inpatient hospital care. Health Affairs, 34, 2147–2150.CrossRef
Zurück zum Zitat White, Chapin. (2014). cutting medicare hospital prices leads to a spillover reduction in hospital discharges for the nonelderly. Health Services Research, 49(5), 1578–1595.CrossRef White, Chapin. (2014). cutting medicare hospital prices leads to a spillover reduction in hospital discharges for the nonelderly. Health Services Research, 49(5), 1578–1595.CrossRef
Metadaten
Titel
Has inpatient hospital treatment before and after age 65 changed as the difference between private and Medicare payment rates has widened?
verfasst von
Thomas M. Selden
Zeynal Karaca
Sandra Decker
Publikationsdatum
25.04.2018
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
International Journal of Health Economics and Management / Ausgabe 4/2018
Print ISSN: 2199-9023
Elektronische ISSN: 2199-9031
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10754-018-9240-5

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 4/2018

International Journal of Health Economics and Management 4/2018 Zur Ausgabe