A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?

By using a natural experiment approach and longitudinal national hospital data, this study sheds light on the objective functions of hospitals with different ownership forms by comparing their relative reductions in HH provision after the implementation of the BBA. The empirical findings reveal that...

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Main Author: Chou, Tiang-Hong
Format: Others
Published: VCU Scholars Compass 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1985
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2984&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-29842019-10-20T22:07:59Z A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter? Chou, Tiang-Hong By using a natural experiment approach and longitudinal national hospital data, this study sheds light on the objective functions of hospitals with different ownership forms by comparing their relative reductions in HH provision after the implementation of the BBA. The empirical findings reveal that for-profit hospitals behave differently as compared to public and private nonprofit hospitals, due to their different operational objectives. While the response of for-profit hospitals is consistent with the profit-maximizer model, both public and private nonprofit ownership types behave consistently in accordance with the model of two-good producers whose objective is to maximize market outputs for meeting the health care needs of the community, given the break-even requirement. This finding provides support for the tax exemption the United States government has granted private nonprofit hospitals. Although the response patterns of the nonprofit ownership types are in general similar, this study found that, contrary to expectation, religious hospitals were more likely than secular nonprofit hospitals to have reduced HH provision after the BBA. Further studies are needed to explore the difference in operational behaviors between these two ownership types. Built on previous related studies and applying a more comprehensive set of independent and control variables with improved data sources, this study is able to examine the effects of certain organizational and market factors on hospital offering of HH care pre-BBA and the change in the provision of HH care in the six years following the implementation of the BBA. Hospital proportion of Medicare patients, hospital size, total profit margin, case mix index, elderly density in the market are found to be positive determinants of a hospital’s likelihood of offering HH care. However, these organizational and market factors, in general, play a non-significant role in influencing hospitals’ changes in HH care provision after the implementation of the BBA. In the study, explanations and implications of these finding are discussed. Finally, potential limitations to this study and opportunities for future research are addressed. 2009-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1985 https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2984&context=etd © The Author Theses and Dissertations VCU Scholars Compass Hospital Ownership Religious hospital Secular Nonprofit Hospital Objective Function Home Health Care Balanced Budget Act of 1997 Multi-theoretical Framework Resource Dependence Theory Transaction Cost Economics Institutional Theory Population Ecology Theory Weisbrod's Nonprofit Model Policy Analysis Health and Medical Administration Medicine and Health Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Hospital Ownership
Religious hospital
Secular Nonprofit Hospital
Objective Function
Home Health Care
Balanced Budget Act of 1997
Multi-theoretical Framework
Resource Dependence Theory
Transaction Cost Economics
Institutional Theory
Population Ecology Theory
Weisbrod's Nonprofit Model
Policy Analysis
Health and Medical Administration
Medicine and Health Sciences
spellingShingle Hospital Ownership
Religious hospital
Secular Nonprofit Hospital
Objective Function
Home Health Care
Balanced Budget Act of 1997
Multi-theoretical Framework
Resource Dependence Theory
Transaction Cost Economics
Institutional Theory
Population Ecology Theory
Weisbrod's Nonprofit Model
Policy Analysis
Health and Medical Administration
Medicine and Health Sciences
Chou, Tiang-Hong
A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?
description By using a natural experiment approach and longitudinal national hospital data, this study sheds light on the objective functions of hospitals with different ownership forms by comparing their relative reductions in HH provision after the implementation of the BBA. The empirical findings reveal that for-profit hospitals behave differently as compared to public and private nonprofit hospitals, due to their different operational objectives. While the response of for-profit hospitals is consistent with the profit-maximizer model, both public and private nonprofit ownership types behave consistently in accordance with the model of two-good producers whose objective is to maximize market outputs for meeting the health care needs of the community, given the break-even requirement. This finding provides support for the tax exemption the United States government has granted private nonprofit hospitals. Although the response patterns of the nonprofit ownership types are in general similar, this study found that, contrary to expectation, religious hospitals were more likely than secular nonprofit hospitals to have reduced HH provision after the BBA. Further studies are needed to explore the difference in operational behaviors between these two ownership types. Built on previous related studies and applying a more comprehensive set of independent and control variables with improved data sources, this study is able to examine the effects of certain organizational and market factors on hospital offering of HH care pre-BBA and the change in the provision of HH care in the six years following the implementation of the BBA. Hospital proportion of Medicare patients, hospital size, total profit margin, case mix index, elderly density in the market are found to be positive determinants of a hospital’s likelihood of offering HH care. However, these organizational and market factors, in general, play a non-significant role in influencing hospitals’ changes in HH care provision after the implementation of the BBA. In the study, explanations and implications of these finding are discussed. Finally, potential limitations to this study and opportunities for future research are addressed.
author Chou, Tiang-Hong
author_facet Chou, Tiang-Hong
author_sort Chou, Tiang-Hong
title A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?
title_short A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?
title_full A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?
title_fullStr A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?
title_full_unstemmed A Longitudinal Examination of How Hospital Provision of Home Health Services Changed after the Implementation of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Does Ownership Matter?
title_sort longitudinal examination of how hospital provision of home health services changed after the implementation of the balanced budget act of 1997: does ownership matter?
publisher VCU Scholars Compass
publishDate 2009
url https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1985
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2984&context=etd
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AT choutianghong longitudinalexaminationofhowhospitalprovisionofhomehealthserviceschangedaftertheimplementationofthebalancedbudgetactof1997doesownershipmatter
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