Making Profits And Providing Care: Comparing Nonprofit, For-Profit, And Government Hospitals
- 1 May 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 24 (3) , 790-801
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.24.3.790
Abstract
Three types of entities—nonprofit, for-profit, and government—own hospitals. Yet we know neither whether hospital types specialize in different medical services nor how service profitability affects specialization. In this econometric analysis of American Hospital Association data for every U.S. urban, acute care hospital (1988–2000), more than thirty services were categorized as relatively profitable, unprofitable, or variable. For-profits are most likely to offer relatively profitable medical services; government hospitals are most likely to offer relatively unprofitable services; nonprofits often fall in the middle. For-profits are also more responsive to changes in service profitability than the other two types.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Updated Variable‐Radius Measures of Hospital CompetitionHealth Services Research, 2004
- Technological development and medical productivity: the diffusion of angioplasty in New York stateJournal of Health Economics, 2003
- Hospital ownership and cost and quality of care: is there a dime’s worth of difference?Published by Elsevier ,2000
- How Does Managed Care Do It?The RAND Journal of Economics, 2000
- Are Focused Factories the Wave of the Future?Frontiers of Health Services Management, 2000
- Understanding Geographic Variations in Health Care DeliveryNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- A Study on Recidivism in the Psychiatric Emergency RoomAnnals of Clinical Psychiatry, 1998
- Does The Sale Of Nonprofit Hospitals Threaten Health Care For The Poor?Health Affairs, 1997
- How Hospital Ownership Affects Access to Care for the UninsuredThe RAND Journal of Economics, 1994
- Reducing Bias in Observational Studies Using Subclassification on the Propensity ScoreJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1984