Literature DB >> 874301

The effect of physician-controlled health insurance. U.S. v. Oregon State Medical Society.

L G Goldberg, W Greenberg.   

Abstract

The trial record in an antitrust case against the Oregon State Medical Society, finally decided in 1952, was examined to reconstruct the behavior of a competitive market for health insurance coverage. Health insurers, called "hospital associations," were found to have engaged individually in cost-control efforts similar to, but possibly more aggressive than, today's utilization review under professional sponsorship. The subsequent disappearance of these insurer-initiated cost controls in Oregon is traced to the medical society's organization of a competing Blue Shield plan as a model of insurer conduct and to a simultaneous boycott by physicians of the hospital associations as long as they persisted in questioning doctors' practices. Some modern parallels are noted, and the advantages of fostering privately sponsored cost-control efforts are suggested.

Mesh:

Year:  1977        PMID: 874301     DOI: 10.1215/03616878-2-1-48

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law        ISSN: 0361-6878            Impact factor:   2.265


  2 in total

1.  The determinants of hospital and HMO vertically integrated delivery systems in a competitive health care sector.

Authors:  Warren Greenberg; Lawrence G Goldberg
Journal:  Int J Health Care Finance Econ       Date:  2002-03

2.  Third party cost containment and the physician-patient relationship: a case study.

Authors:  G A Goldberg; W Greenberg
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  1982
  2 in total

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