Publication | Open Access
Differing Impacts Of Market Concentration On Affordable Care Act Marketplace Premiums
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Citations
13
References
2016
Year
Health Insurance DesignHealth Care AccountingPremium GrowthFinancial ProtectionHealth Care FinanceInsurance RegulationsManaged CarePublic HealthInsuranceHealth Services ResearchMarket ConcentrationHealth Insurance ReformEconomicsPublic PolicyHealth PolicyHealth InsuranceNational Health InsuranceCost SharingEconomic EvaluationHealth EconomicsCovered CaliforniaHealth Policy InitiativeBusinessHealth Services CompetitionHealth Care CostLong-term Care InsuranceFinancingMicroeconomics
Recent increases in market concentration among health plans, hospitals, and medical groups raise questions about what impact such mergers are having on costs to consumers. We examined the impact of market concentration on the growth of health insurance premiums between 2014 and 2015 in two Affordable Care Act state-based Marketplaces: Covered California and NY State of Health. We measured health plan, hospital, and medical group market concentration using the well-known Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) and used a multivariate regression model to relate these measures to premium growth. Both states exhibited a positive association between hospital concentration and premium growth and a positive (but not statistically significant) association between medical group concentration and premium growth. Our results for health plan concentration differed between the two states: It was positively associated with premium growth in New York but negatively associated with premium growth in California. The health plan concentration finding in Covered California may be the result of its selectively contracting with health plans.
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