Can Centralization of Cancer Surgery Improve Social Welfare?

Q3 Economics, Econometrics and Finance Forum for Health Economics and Policy Pub Date : 2012-10-16 DOI:10.1515/FHEP-2012-0016
V. Ho, Marah Short, Meei-Hsiang Ku-Goto
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

Abstract The empirical association between high hospital procedure volume and lower mortality rates has led to recommendations for the centralization of complex surgical procedures. Yet redirecting patients to a select number of high-volume hospitals creates potential negative consequences for market competition. We use patient-level data to estimate the association between hospital procedure volume and patient mortality and costs. We also estimate the association between hospital market concentration and mortality, cost, and prices. We use our estimates to simulate the change in social welfare resulting from redirecting patients at low-volume hospitals to high-volume facilities. We find that a higher procedure volume leads to significant reductions in mortality for patients undergoing surgery for pancreatic cancer, but not colon cancer. Procedure volume also influences costs for both surgeries, but in a nonlinear fashion. Increased market concentration is associated with higher costs and prices for colon cancer, but not pancreatic cancer patients. Simulations indicated that centralizing pancreatic cancer surgery is unambiguously welfare enhancing. In contrast, there is less evidence to suggest that centralizing colon cancer surgery would be welfare improving.
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癌症手术集中化能改善社会福利吗?
高医院手术量和低死亡率之间的经验关联导致了复杂外科手术集中的建议。然而,将患者重新定向到特定数量的大医院会对市场竞争产生潜在的负面影响。我们使用患者水平的数据来估计医院手术量与患者死亡率和成本之间的关系。我们也估计了医院市场集中度与死亡率、成本和价格之间的关系。我们使用我们的估计来模拟将小容量医院的患者转移到大容量医院所导致的社会福利变化。我们发现,手术量越大,胰腺癌患者的死亡率就会显著降低,而结肠癌则不然。手术量也影响两种手术的费用,但以非线性的方式。市场集中度的提高与结肠癌患者的成本和价格上涨有关,但与胰腺癌患者无关。模拟表明,集中胰腺癌手术无疑是提高福利。相比之下,很少有证据表明集中结肠癌手术会改善福利。
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来源期刊
Forum for Health Economics and Policy
Forum for Health Economics and Policy Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: Forum for Health Economics & Policy (FHEP) showcases articles in key substantive areas that lie at the intersection of health economics and health policy. The journal uses an innovative structure of forums to promote discourse on the most pressing and timely subjects in health economics and health policy, such as biomedical research and the economy, and aging and medical care costs. Forums are chosen by the Editorial Board to reflect topics where additional research is needed by economists and where the field is advancing rapidly. The journal is edited by Katherine Baicker, David Cutler and Alan Garber of Harvard University, Jay Bhattacharya of Stanford University, Dana Goldman of the University of Southern California and RAND Corporation, Neeraj Sood of the University of Southern California, Anup Malani and Tomas Philipson of University of Chicago, Pinar Karaca Mandic of the University of Minnesota, and John Romley of the University of Southern California. FHEP is sponsored by the Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics at the University of Southern California. A subscription to the journal also includes the proceedings from the National Bureau of Economic Research''s annual Frontiers in Health Policy Research Conference. Topics: Economics, Political economics, Biomedical research and the economy, Aging and medical care costs, Nursing, Cancer studies, Medical treatment, Others related.
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