Overlapping markets and quality competition among community health centers.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Health Services Research Pub Date : 2024-10-28 DOI:10.1111/1475-6773.14396
Kun Li, Avi Dor
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Abstract

Objective: To examine the response of community health center (CHC) quality to quality levels at neighboring CHCs in the presence of non-price competition.

Data setting and design: A quasi-experimental study of US community health centers. Outcome variables were indices that measured overall quality of CHC care. Using patient flow data, we constructed CHC-specific Hirschman-Herfindahl index (HHI) and competitors' composite quality measure. The plausibly exogenous change in characteristics of "competitors' competitors" was exploited to identify the relationship between competition and quality of care, using a generalized two-stage least square model with instrumental variables.

Data sources and analytic sample: Using the Health Center Program Uniform Data System (2014-2018), linked with American Community Survey and Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, we analyzed 1098 unique federally funded CHCs in 50 states and District of Columbia which had at least one neighboring CHC and had non-missing data for 2015-2018 (4226 CHC-years).

Principal findings: Most of CHCs served populations in overlapping geographic markets, with median market concentration decreasing during the study period. A one-percent increase in competitors' quality was associated with a 0.71-percent increase in an index CHC's composite quality (p < 0.01), consisting of a 0.59-percent increase in chronic condition control rates (p < 0.01); a 0.68-percent increase in the screening and assessment rates (p < 0.01); and a 0.78-percent increase in medication management rates (p < 0.01). The association was stronger at CHCs serving a smaller proportion of uninsured patients. No significant quality reaction was observed at CHCs with a percentage of uninsured patients larger than the 75th percentile. We observed no significant associations between HHI and quality.

Conclusions: Increasing competition does not harm quality of care at CHCs. A CHC appears to improve its quality if its competitors improved quality. The beneficial quality effect was less pronounced in CHCs providing a significant proportion of care to uninsured patients, suggesting lack of incentives faced by these CHCs.

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社区医疗中心之间的市场重叠和质量竞争。
目的研究在非价格竞争的情况下,社区医疗中心(CHC)的质量对邻近社区医疗中心质量水平的影响:数据设置与设计:一项针对美国社区医疗中心的准实验研究。结果变量是衡量社区医疗中心整体医疗质量的指数。利用患者流量数据,我们构建了社区医疗中心特有的赫希曼-赫芬达尔指数(HHI)和竞争对手的综合质量指标。我们利用 "竞争者的竞争者 "特征中看似外生的变化,使用带有工具变量的广义两阶段最小平方模型来确定竞争与医疗质量之间的关系:利用与美国社区调查和医疗支出小组调查相关联的健康中心计划统一数据系统(2014-2018 年),我们分析了 50 个州和哥伦比亚特区的 1098 家联邦政府资助的健康中心,这些健康中心至少有一家邻近的健康中心,且 2015-2018 年(4226 个健康中心年)的数据无缺失:大多数社区健康中心服务的人群在地理市场上相互重叠,在研究期间,市场集中度中位数有所下降。竞争者的质量每提高一个百分点,指数型社区健康中心的综合质量就会提高 0.71 个百分点(p 结论:竞争的加剧不会损害社区健康中心的质量:竞争的加剧不会损害社区健康中心的医疗质量。如果其竞争对手的医疗质量有所提高,那么该中心的医疗质量似乎也会有所提高。在为未参保患者提供大量医疗服务的社区医疗中心中,有益的质量效应并不明显,这表明这些社区医疗中心缺乏激励机制。
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来源期刊
Health Services Research
Health Services Research 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
5.90%
发文量
193
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Services Research (HSR) is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal that provides researchers and public and private policymakers with the latest research findings, methods, and concepts related to the financing, organization, delivery, evaluation, and outcomes of health services. Rated as one of the top journals in the fields of health policy and services and health care administration, HSR publishes outstanding articles reporting the findings of original investigations that expand knowledge and understanding of the wide-ranging field of health care and that will help to improve the health of individuals and communities.
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