The Rand Health Insurance Experiment and HMOs
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medical Care
- Vol. 28 (3) , 191-200
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199003000-00001
Abstract
The Rand Health Insurance Experiment (HIE) provides the most persuasive evidence to date on the relative effects of health maintenance organization (HMO) and fee-for-service care on utilization, costs, client satisfaction, and health care outcomes. Publications from the HIE have suggested that HMO care was associated with lower costs because of reduced hospitalizations, lower client satisfaction, and poorer health status among the subgroup with limited incomes and initial health status. In our view, the evidence justifies the conclusions related to utilization, costs, and satisfaction, but not the suggestion that HMO care had adverse health effects on low-income, sick individuals.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of a Health Maintenance Organization on Physiologic HealthAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1987
- COMPARISON OF HEALTH OUTCOMES AT A HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANISATION WITH THOSE OF FEE-FOR-SERVICE CAREThe Lancet, 1986