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Comparing High- and Low-Performing Hospitals Using Risk-Adjusted Excess Mortality and Cost Inefficiency
57
Citations
13
References
2005
Year
Health Care ManagementFlorida HospitalsHospital MedicinePrimary CareCost InefficiencyPerformance GroupsManaged CarePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHospital Performance GroupsHealth PolicyOutcomes ResearchEconomic EvaluationHealthcare ValueHealth Care DeliveryNursingHealth EconomicsHospital EnvironmentPatient SafetyHealth Care CostMedicineEmergency Medicine
This study examines characteristics associated with high- and low-performing hospitals, where performance is defined in terms of both mortality outcomes and efficiency. In particular, we use data for Florida hospitals in 1999-2001 to classify hospitals into performance groups based on both risk-adjusted excess mortality and cost efficiency. The results indicate that hospitals in the high-performing group were more likely to be for-profit, had higher occupancy rates, had proportionately more Medicare and proportionately fewer Medicaid and self-pay patients, used fewer patient-care personnel per admission, and had higher operating margins than all other hospitals. Hospitals in the low-performing group, on the other hand, were less likely to be for-profit, had more beds, used more patient-care personnel per admission, had lower pay per patient-care personnel, had higher average costs, and had lower operating margins than all other hospitals. Interestingly, managed care presence, measured by proportion of HMO-PPO admissions, was not a significant factor in differentiating hospital performance groups.
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