Case-mix specialization in the market for hospital services.

Historically, cost-based reimbursement encouraged hospitals to compete on the basis of quality, leading to duplication of services and other inefficient behavior. More recently, prospective payment, selective contracting, and other innovations in reimbursement have strengthened incentives for more efficient hospital operations. In principle, hospitals may be able to reduce their costs by limiting the array of services they provide, but there has been little empirical evidence that U.S. hospitals are moving toward greater specialization or that specialization leads to cost savings. This article explores recent changes in case-mix specialization and the relationship of these changes to hospital costs. It first describes an index of specialization derived from Information Theory and shows that this index provides intuitively reasonable results in characterizing patterns of specialization across hospitals. The analysis then demonstrates that specialization, as measured by this index, in fact increased from 1980 through 1985; that specialization can indeed lower hospital costs; and that increases in specialization have been largest in those hospitals with the greatest incentives to reduce costs.

[1]  F. Hellinger,et al.  Heart disease and hospital deaths: an empirical study. , 1987, Health services research.

[2]  H S Luft,et al.  Competition and the cost of hospital care, 1972 to 1982. , 1987, JAMA.

[3]  H. Luft,et al.  The volume-outcome relationship: practice-makes-perfect or selective-referral patterns? , 1987, Health services research.

[4]  H S Luft,et al.  Effects of Surgeon Volume and Hospital Volume on Quality of Care in Hospitals , 1987, Medical care.

[5]  S. Lutz Marketing. Hospitals consider product line management techniques to better meet consumers' needs. , 1987, Modern Healthcare.

[6]  Harold S. Luft,et al.  Association of volume with outcome of coronary artery bypass graft surgery —scheduled vs nonscheduled operations , 1987, JAMA.

[7]  D. Dranove Rate-Setting by Diagnosis Related Groups and Hospital Specialization , 1987 .

[8]  S. Powills Segment marketing: less costly, more efficient. , 1987, Hospitals.

[9]  James C. Robinson,et al.  The impact of hospital market structure on patient volume, average length of stay, and the cost of care. , 1985, Journal of health economics.

[10]  S. Enright Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 , 1983 .

[11]  M. Barer Case mix adjustment in hospital cost analysis: information theory revisited. , 1982, Journal of health economics.

[12]  J. Hausman Specification tests in econometrics , 1978 .

[13]  R. Evans,et al.  Information Theory and the Analysis of Hospital Cost Structure , 1972 .

[14]  R. Evans "Behavioural" Cost Functions for Hospitals , 1971 .

[15]  R. S. MacStravic Product-line administration in hospitals , 1986, Health care management review.

[16]  W. Baumol,et al.  Contestable Markets and the Theory of Industry Structure , 1982 .

[17]  Paul L. Joskow,et al.  Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with Funding from Boston Library Consortium Iviember Libraries Working Paper Department of Economics the Effects of Competition and Regulation on Hospital Bed Supply and the Reservation Quality of the Hospital , 2022 .

[18]  L B Lave,et al.  The extent of role differentiation among hospitals. , 1971, Health services research.