Hospital markup and operation outcomes in the United States.

[1]  S. Maithel,et al.  The Association Between Hospital Finances and Complications After Complex Abdominal Surgery: Deficiencies in the Current Health Care Reimbursement System and Implications for the Future. , 2015, Annals of surgery.

[2]  G. Anderson,et al.  Extreme Markup: The Fifty US Hospitals With The Highest Charge-To-Cost Ratios. , 2015, Health affairs.

[3]  S. Maithel,et al.  Association Between Hospital Finances, Payer Mix, and Complications After Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy: Deficiencies in the Current Healthcare Reimbursement System and Future Implications , 2015, Annals of Surgical Oncology.

[4]  Edward J. Tanner,et al.  Under-utilization of minimally invasive surgery in the management of endometrial cancer: A Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-National Inpatient Sample study (HCUP-NIS) , 2015 .

[5]  C. White,et al.  Understanding differences between high- and low-price hospitals: implications for efforts to rein in costs. , 2014, Health affairs.

[6]  V. Wu,et al.  How Do Hospitals Cope with Sustained Slow Growth in Medicare Prices? , 2013, Health services research.

[7]  M. Jaff,et al.  Risk adjustment for case mix and the effect of surgeon volume on morbidity. , 2013, JAMA surgery.

[8]  David C. Miller,et al.  Anticipating the effects of accountable care organizations for inpatient surgery. , 2013, JAMA surgery.

[9]  C. White Contrary to cost-shift theory, lower Medicare hospital payment rates for inpatient care lead to lower private payment rates. , 2013, Health affairs.

[10]  W. Berry,et al.  Relationship between occurrence of surgical complications and hospital finances. , 2013, JAMA.

[11]  P. Pronovost,et al.  Limitations of administrative databases. , 2012, JAMA.

[12]  D. Himmelstein,et al.  Medical bankruptcy in Massachusetts: has health reform made a difference? , 2011, The American journal of medicine.

[13]  J. Birkmeyer,et al.  Medicare payments for common inpatient procedures: implications for episode-based payment bundling. , 2010, Health services research.

[14]  G. Melnick,et al.  Disproportionate Share Hospital Subsidies for Treating the Uninsured , 2010, Medical care.

[15]  L. Wise,et al.  National and Surgical Health Care Expenditures, 2005–2025 , 2010, Annals of surgery.

[16]  Justin B Dimick,et al.  Variation in hospital mortality associated with inpatient surgery. , 2009, The New England journal of medicine.

[17]  J. Birkmeyer,et al.  Complications, Failure to Rescue, and Mortality With Major Inpatient Surgery in Medicare Patients , 2009, Annals of surgery.

[18]  H. Miller,et al.  From volume to value: better ways to pay for health care. , 2009, Health affairs.

[19]  G. Anderson,et al.  Health spending in OECD countries: obtaining value per dollar. , 2008, Health affairs.

[20]  G. Melnick,et al.  Hospital pricing and the uninsured: do the uninsured pay higher prices? , 2008, Health affairs.

[21]  Gerard F Anderson,et al.  Health spending in OECD countries in 2004: an update. , 2007, Health affairs.

[22]  G. Anderson,et al.  From 'soak the rich' to 'soak the poor': recent trends in hospital pricing. , 2007, Health affairs.

[23]  M. Morrisey Hospital cost shifting, a continuing debate. , 1996, EBRI issue brief.

[24]  M. Morrisey Hospital pricing: cost shifting and competition. , 1993, EBRI issue brief.

[25]  O. Professor “Soak the Rich”: , 1982, ASA News.

[26]  S. Altman,et al.  The precarious pricing system for hospital services. , 2006, Health affairs.

[27]  R. McKinney Pricing of hospital services: issues and some propositions. , 1990, Journal of hospital marketing.