Book Review: The Impact of Cost-Sharing on Appropriate Utilization and Health Status: A Review of the Literature on Seniors
- 1 December 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Medical Care Research and Review
- Vol. 61 (4) , 415-452
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1077558704269498
Abstract
This article provides a review of research that has addressed the impact of patient costsharing on the use of services and resulting health status impacts, among the population age 65 and older. Nearly all of the 22 relevant studies examined that have been published since 1990—16 focusing on cost-sharing for prescription drugs and 6 on cost-sharing for medical services—conclude that increased cost-sharing reduces either or both the utilization and health status of seniors. Most of the studies, however, rely on cross-sectional and self-reported data. Further research, employing stronger study designs as well as clinical and administrative data, is necessary before drawing more definitive conclusions.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lack of an association between medicare supplemental insurance and delay in seeking emergency care for patients with myocardial infarctionAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Is The Informed-Choice Policy Approach Appropriate For Medicare Beneficiaries?Health Affairs, 2001
- Impact of a Cost‐Sharing Drug Insurance Plan on Drug Utilization Among Older PeopleJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2001
- Medicare Beneficiaries??? Management of Capped Prescription BenefitsMedical Care, 2001
- Use Of Antihypertensive Drugs By Medicare Enrollees: Does Type Of Drug Coverage Matter?Health Affairs, 2001
- Drug coverage and drug purchases by Medicare beneficiaries with hypertension.Health Affairs, 2000
- Supplemental Insurance and Mortality in Elderly Americans: Findings From a National CohortArchives of Family Medicine, 2000
- Factors Related to Potentially Preventable Hospitalizations Among the ElderlyMedical Care, 1998
- Medicare Coverage, Supplemental Insurance, and the Use of Mammography by Older WomenNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- What does the demand curve for medical care measure?Journal of Health Economics, 1993