Literature DB >> 21595325

Patient cost-sharing and healthcare spending growth.

Katherine Baicker1, Dana Goldman.   

Abstract

In this paper, we explore the role patient incentives play in slowing healthcare spending growth. Evidence suggests that while patients do indeed respond to financial incentives, cost-sharing does not uniformly improve value; rather, cost-sharing provisions must be deliberately structured and targeted to reduce care of low marginal value. Other mechanisms may be helpful in targeting particular populations or types of utilization. The spillover effects between privately insured and publicly insured populations as well as market imperfections suggest a potential role for public policy in promoting insurance design that slows spending growth while increasing the health that each dollar buys.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21595325     DOI: 10.1257/jep.25.2.47

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Econ Perspect        ISSN: 0895-3309


  33 in total

1.  High Out-of-Pocket Medical Spending among the Poor and Elderly in Nine Developed Countries.

Authors:  Katherine Baird
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2016-01-22       Impact factor: 3.402

2.  In the Shadow of a Giant: Medicare's Influence on Private Physician Payments.

Authors:  Jeffrey Clemens; Joshua D Gottlieb
Journal:  J Polit Econ       Date:  2016-12-16

3.  Assessing the effectiveness of health care cost containment measures: evidence from the market for rehabilitation care.

Authors:  Nicolas R Ziebarth
Journal:  Int J Health Care Finance Econ       Date:  2013-12-04

4.  Out-of-pocket spending in the last five years of life.

Authors:  Amy S Kelley; Kathleen McGarry; Sean Fahle; Samuel M Marshall; Qingling Du; Jonathan S Skinner
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2012-09-05       Impact factor: 5.128

5.  Prevention under the Affordable Care Act (ACA): has the ACA overpromised and under delivered?: Comment on "Interrelation of preventive care benefits and shared costs under the Affordable Care Act (ACA)".

Authors:  Carol Molinari
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2014-08-27

6.  Out-of-pocket health care expenditures at the end of life.

Authors: 
Journal:  Natl Bur Econ Res Bull Aging Health       Date:  2010

7.  How Low-Income Subsidy Recipients Respond to Medicare Part D Cost Sharing.

Authors:  Bruce Stuart; Franklin B Hendrick; Jing Xu; J Samantha Dougherty
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2016-06-20       Impact factor: 3.402

8.  A method to simulate incentives for cost containment under various cost sharing designs: an application to a first-euro deductible and a doughnut hole.

Authors:  D Cattel; R C van Kleef; R C J A van Vliet
Journal:  Eur J Health Econ       Date:  2016-11-14

9.  Behavioral Health Services in the Changing Landscape of Private Health Plans.

Authors:  Constance M Horgan; Maureen T Stewart; Sharon Reif; Deborah W Garnick; Dominic Hodgkin; Elizabeth L Merrick; Amity E Quinn
Journal:  Psychiatr Serv       Date:  2016-02-14       Impact factor: 3.084

10.  Association of Cost Sharing With Mental Health Care Use, Involuntary Commitment, and Acute Care.

Authors:  Bastian Ravesteijn; Eli B Schachar; Aartjan T F Beekman; Richard T J M Janssen; Patrick P T Jeurissen
Journal:  JAMA Psychiatry       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 21.596

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