Managed Care as a Public Cost-Containment Mechanism
Abstract
This article identifies the impact of managed-care reforms on the utilization of medical services within the military health-services system. The data come from a recent demonstration project that substituted an HMO and PPO for traditional FFS arrangements. Results from a semiparametric model indicate that the generosity of benefits in the HMO increased demand for ambulatory services. Unlike the private-sector experience with managed care, aggressive utilization review did not significantly curtail inpatient stays. These results vitiate the presumed effectiveness of reform strategies that rely on large, geographically diffused managed-care networks to contain public-sector health costs.Suggested Citation
Dana P. Goldman. "Managed Care as a Public Cost-Containment Mechanism" The RAND Journal of Economics 26.2 (1995).
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/dana_goldman/29