Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.

In both the British National Health Service (NHS) and U.S. Medicare, recent emphasis has been on contracts with payment based only on the number of patients treated. It is shown that, without direct monitoring of quality or effort to reduce costs, such contracts are efficient only when it is efficie...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chalkley, M, Malcomson, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1998
_version_ 1797080091935637504
author Chalkley, M
Malcomson, J
author_facet Chalkley, M
Malcomson, J
author_sort Chalkley, M
collection OXFORD
description In both the British National Health Service (NHS) and U.S. Medicare, recent emphasis has been on contracts with payment based only on the number of patients treated. It is shown that, without direct monitoring of quality or effort to reduce costs, such contracts are efficient only when it is efficient to treat all patients wanting treatment. It may not be when treatment costs are insured or subsidized. Such contracts can then be improved by including payments for the number of patients wanting treatment, as well as for the number actually treated. Even then, the outcome will not generally be efficient if quality is multidimensional.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T00:55:12Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:87d3f4b0-c082-4cc0-99ec-6d22dd807e6e
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T00:55:12Z
publishDate 1998
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:87d3f4b0-c082-4cc0-99ec-6d22dd807e6e2022-03-26T22:13:03ZContracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:87d3f4b0-c082-4cc0-99ec-6d22dd807e6eEnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints1998Chalkley, MMalcomson, JIn both the British National Health Service (NHS) and U.S. Medicare, recent emphasis has been on contracts with payment based only on the number of patients treated. It is shown that, without direct monitoring of quality or effort to reduce costs, such contracts are efficient only when it is efficient to treat all patients wanting treatment. It may not be when treatment costs are insured or subsidized. Such contracts can then be improved by including payments for the number of patients wanting treatment, as well as for the number actually treated. Even then, the outcome will not generally be efficient if quality is multidimensional.
spellingShingle Chalkley, M
Malcomson, J
Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.
title Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.
title_full Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.
title_fullStr Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.
title_full_unstemmed Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.
title_short Contracting for Health Services with Unmonitored Quality.
title_sort contracting for health services with unmonitored quality
work_keys_str_mv AT chalkleym contractingforhealthserviceswithunmonitoredquality
AT malcomsonj contractingforhealthserviceswithunmonitoredquality