Review of Economics and Statistics | 2019

Evaluating Measures of Hospital Quality: Evidence from Ambulance Referral Patterns

 
 
 

Abstract


Hospital quality measures are crucial to a key idea behind health care payment reforms: “paying for quality” instead of quantity. Nevertheless, such measures face major criticisms largely over the potential failure of risk adjustment to overcome endogeneity concerns when ranking hospitals. In this paper, we test whether patients treated at hospitals that score higher on commonly used quality measures have better health outcomes in terms of rehospitalization and mortality. To compare similar patients across hospitals in the same market, we exploit ambulance company preferences as an instrument for hospital choice. We find that a variety of measures that insurers use to measure provider quality are successful: choosing a high-quality hospital compared to a low-quality hospital results in 10% to 15% better outcomes.

Volume 101
Pages 841-852
DOI 10.1162/rest_a_00804
Language English
Journal Review of Economics and Statistics

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