4.4 Article

Spending per Medicare Beneficiary Is Higher in Hospital-Owned Small- and Medium-Sized Physician Practices

Journal

HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 53, Issue 4, Pages 2133-2146

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.12765

Keywords

Ambulatory; outpatient care; health care organizations and systems; ownership; governance

Funding

  1. Commonwealth Fund
  2. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

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ObjectiveTo examine the relationship of physician versus hospital ownership of small- and medium-sized practices with spending and utilization of care. Data Source/Study Setting/Data CollectionSurvey data for 1,045 primary care-based practices of 1-19 physicians linked to Medicare claims data for 2008 for 282,372 beneficiaries attributed to the 3,010 physicians in these practices. Study DesignWe used generalized linear models to estimate the associations between practice characteristics and outcomes (emergency department visits, index admissions, readmissions, and spending). Principal FindingsBeneficiaries linked to hospital-owned practices had 7.3 percent more emergency department visits and 6.4 percent higher total spending compared to beneficiaries linked to physician-owned practices. ConclusionsPhysician practices are increasingly being purchased by hospitals. This may result in higher total spending on care.

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