Charity and community: The role of nonprofit ownership in a managed health care system

被引:49
|
作者
Schlesinger, M
Gray, B
Bradley, E
机构
[1] NEW YORK ACAD MED,DIV HLTH & SCI POLICY,NEW YORK,NY
[2] YALE UNIV,SCH MED,NEW HAVEN,CT 06520
关键词
D O I
10.1215/03616878-21-4-697
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
As American medicine has been transformed by the growth of managed care, so too have questions about the appropriate role of nonprofit ownership in the health care system. The standards for community benefit that are increasingly applied to nonprofit hospitals are, at best, only partially relevant to expectations for nonprofit managed care plans. Can we expect nonprofit ownership to substantially affect the behavior of an increasingly competitive managed care industry dealing with insured populations? Drawing from historical interpretations of tax exemption in health care and from the theoretical literature on the implications of ownership for organizational behavior, we identify five forms of community benefit that might be associated with nonprofit forms of managed care. Using data from a national survey of firms providing third-party utilization review services in 1993, we test for ownership-related differences in these five dimensions. Nonprofit utilization review firms generally provide more public goods, such as information dissemination, and are more ''community oriented'' than proprietary firms, but they are not distinguishable from their for-profit counterparts in addressing the implications of medical quality or the cost of the review process. However, a subgroup of nonprofit review organizations with medical origins are more likely to address quality issues than are either for-profit firms or other nonprofit agencies. Evidence on responses to information asymmetries is mixed but suggests that some ownership-related differences exist.
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页码:697 / 751
页数:55
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