市场力量致死:英国国家医疗服务体系中的改革、竞争与患者结果

Death by Market Power: Reform, Competition, and Patient Outcomes in the National Health Service

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy · 2013
被引 96
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

利用2006年英国医院竞争改革作为自然实验,研究发现竞争增加降低了患者死亡率、缩短住院时间且未增加成本,对卫生政策制定者和医院管理者有参考价值。

Abstract

The effect of competition on the quality of health care remains a contested issue. Most empirical estimates rely on inference from non experimental data. In contrast, this paper exploits a pro-competitive policy reform to provide estimates of the impact of competition on hospital outcomes. The English government introduced a policy in 2006 to promote competition between hospitals. Patients were given choice of location for hospital care and provided information on the quality and timeliness of care. Prices, previously negotiated between buyer and seller, were set centrally under a DRG type system. Using this policy to implement a difference-in-differences research design we estimate the impact of the introduction of competition on not only clinical outcomes but also productivity and expenditure. Our data set is large, containing information on approximately 68,000 discharges per year per hospital from 160 hospitals. We find that the effect of competition is to save lives without raising costs. Patients discharged from hospitals located in markets where competition was more feasible were less likely to die, had shorter length of stay and were treated at the same cost.

医疗市场竞争患者死亡率住院时长医疗成本