Virtual Journal Club

Please note: This website is for discussion purposes only. The information provided at this website is not intended to provide treatment advice, or to diagnose or treat any medical disorder. The creator of this website is not responsible for events that occur as a result of decisions made based on the information presented here.

Citations powered by PubMed

Entries Tagged as 'Health Econ'

Does advanced medical technology encourage hospitalist use and their direct employment by hospitals?

February 26th, 2009 · Start a Discussion

Related Articles

Does advanced medical technology encourage hospitalist use and their direct employment by hospitals?

Health Econ. 2009 Feb;18(2):237-47

Authors: David G, Helmchen LA, Henderson RA

In the United States, inpatient medical care increasingly encompasses the use of expensive medical technology and, at the same time, is coordinated and supervised more and more by a rapidly growing number of inpatient-dedicated physicians (hospitalists). In the production of inpatient care services, Hospitalist services can be viewed as complementary to sophisticated and expensive medical equipment in the provision of inpatient medical care. We investigate the causal relationship between a hospital’s access to three types of sophisticated diagnostic and therapeutic medical equipment – intensity-modulated radiation therapy, gamma knife, and multi-slice computed tomography – and its likelihood of using hospitalists. To rule out omitted variables bias and reverse causality, we use technology-specific Certificate of Need regulation to predict technology use. We find a strong positive association, yet no causal link between access to medical technology and hospitalist use. We also study the choice of employment modality among hospitals that use hospitalists, and find that access to expensive medical technology reduces the hospital’s propensity to employ hospitalists directly.

PMID: 18470953 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

[Read more →]

Tags: Health Econ