Three essays in health economics

As medical care becomes an increasingly large share of Gross Domestic Product, understanding the mechanisms for how and why medical care spending is rising becomes increasingly important. Such an evaluation should consider the productivity relationship between medical care and health. An evaluation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wendling, Brett William
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/29691
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-29691
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-296912015-09-20T17:31:11ZThree essays in health economicsWendling, Brett WilliamMedical care spendingMedical productivityHealth outcome pricesInput and output price measurementProductivity assessmentMedical care Expenditure Panel SurveyAs medical care becomes an increasingly large share of Gross Domestic Product, understanding the mechanisms for how and why medical care spending is rising becomes increasingly important. Such an evaluation should consider the productivity relationship between medical care and health. An evaluation of medical productivity involves the measurement of medical care input prices, disease treatment output prices, and the productive relationship between medical care inputs and disease treatment health outcomes. Medical care price measurement is complicated by the heterogeneity of services, the role of insurance in negotiating prices, rapid technological advancements in medical care and limited availability of transaction price data. Health outcome prices are difficult to construct because of the difficulty in measuring health outcomes, the heterogeneity of health outcomes, and the messy relationship between consumption goods and health. Finally, in addition to accurate input and output price measurement, a productivity assessment requires a measurable causal relationship between medical care services and health outcomes. To date, all of these requirements have been insurmountable hurdles to assessing the productivity of medical care for the entire United States economy. This dissertation uses the Medical care Expenditure Panel Survey to address the necessary requirements for evaluating the productivity of medical care. The second chapter constructs regional medical care price indices using transaction prices that control for service type heterogeneity. The data employed in the analysis associates the observed medical care spending with the diseases the spending is used to treat. This association is exploited in the third chapter, which constructs medical care treatment prices for twelve of the major health conditions in the United States. The fourth chapter compares the productivity of medical care services used to produce disease treatment health outcomes across insurance types.text2015-05-05T17:52:03Z2015-05-05T17:52:03Z2006-052015-05-05Thesiselectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/29691engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Medical care spending
Medical productivity
Health outcome prices
Input and output price measurement
Productivity assessment
Medical care Expenditure Panel Survey
spellingShingle Medical care spending
Medical productivity
Health outcome prices
Input and output price measurement
Productivity assessment
Medical care Expenditure Panel Survey
Wendling, Brett William
Three essays in health economics
description As medical care becomes an increasingly large share of Gross Domestic Product, understanding the mechanisms for how and why medical care spending is rising becomes increasingly important. Such an evaluation should consider the productivity relationship between medical care and health. An evaluation of medical productivity involves the measurement of medical care input prices, disease treatment output prices, and the productive relationship between medical care inputs and disease treatment health outcomes. Medical care price measurement is complicated by the heterogeneity of services, the role of insurance in negotiating prices, rapid technological advancements in medical care and limited availability of transaction price data. Health outcome prices are difficult to construct because of the difficulty in measuring health outcomes, the heterogeneity of health outcomes, and the messy relationship between consumption goods and health. Finally, in addition to accurate input and output price measurement, a productivity assessment requires a measurable causal relationship between medical care services and health outcomes. To date, all of these requirements have been insurmountable hurdles to assessing the productivity of medical care for the entire United States economy. This dissertation uses the Medical care Expenditure Panel Survey to address the necessary requirements for evaluating the productivity of medical care. The second chapter constructs regional medical care price indices using transaction prices that control for service type heterogeneity. The data employed in the analysis associates the observed medical care spending with the diseases the spending is used to treat. This association is exploited in the third chapter, which constructs medical care treatment prices for twelve of the major health conditions in the United States. The fourth chapter compares the productivity of medical care services used to produce disease treatment health outcomes across insurance types. === text
author Wendling, Brett William
author_facet Wendling, Brett William
author_sort Wendling, Brett William
title Three essays in health economics
title_short Three essays in health economics
title_full Three essays in health economics
title_fullStr Three essays in health economics
title_full_unstemmed Three essays in health economics
title_sort three essays in health economics
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/29691
work_keys_str_mv AT wendlingbrettwilliam threeessaysinhealtheconomics
_version_ 1716824443529986048