The "Hassle Factor"
Open Access
- 27 May 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 162 (10) , 1134-1139
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.162.10.1134
Abstract
IN AN EFFORT TO CONTROL health care costs, many third-party payers have developed mechanisms to limit physicians' abilities to order expensive tests, treatments, or referrals for their patients. In many cases, these restrictions are used to guide physicians away from unnecessary medical services, such as expensive interventions that bring no more benefit than less expensive ones. In other cases, restrictions encourage physicians to make cost-quality tradeoffs, such that expensive services that bring marginal benefits are foregone in favor of less expensive services.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patients' role in the use of radiology testing for common office practice complaints.Archives of internal medicine (1960), 2001
- Physicians' ethical beliefs about cost-control arrangements.Archives of internal medicine (1960), 2000
- Primary Care Physicians' Experience of Financial Incentives in Managed-Care SystemsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Response rates to mail surveys published in medical journalsJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1997