Unions and hospitals: some unresolved issues.

Abstract:

:This article investigates the impact of unions on the wages of hospital workers. Our OLS findings agree with previous OLS studies--unions increase registered nurses' (RNs) wages by five percent and by about eight to ten percent for other hospital workers. By contrast, we find (after correcting for selectivity bias in hospital unionization status) a direct union effect of about twenty percent on RN wages and in excess of thirty percent on wages of other hospital workers. While the results based on selectivity bias adjustments make us uneasy, we do not reject them out-of-hand. We also find indirect union effects (up to five percent) by other unionized occupations within a hospital and up to ten percent by other unionized hospitals in the local labor market. Prospective reimbursement programs have a negative impact on the wages of hospital workers but are only significant for non-unionized occupations. Our three empirical tests of monopsony all reject the view that monopsony is a factor in hospital wage-setting. Even considering the large union effects (based on selectivity bias adjustment), we conclude that unions have been a minor contributor to hospital cost inflation.

journal_name

J Health Econ

authors

Adamache KW,Sloan FA

doi

10.1016/0167-6296(82)90022-4

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

1982-05-01 00:00:00

pages

81-108

issue

1

eissn

0167-6296

issn

1879-1646

pii

0167-6296(82)90022-4

journal_volume

1

pub_type

杂志文章
  • Aversion to health inequalities in healthcare prioritisation: a multicriteria optimisation perspective.

    abstract::In this paper we discuss the prioritisation of healthcare projects where there is a concern about health inequalities, but the decision maker is reluctant to make explicit quantitative value judgements and the data systems only allow the measurement of health at an aggregate level. Our analysis begins with a standard ...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.04.005

    authors: Morton A

    更新日期:2014-07-01 00:00:00

  • Explaining China's regional health expenditures using LM-type unit root tests.

    abstract::This paper investigates the relationship between health care expenditure, income, and other factors that are not related to income for China with pooled cross-section and time series data. To study the stationarity property of these variables, we use panel Lagrange Multiplier (LM) unit root tests that allow for struct...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2006.12.002

    authors: Chou WL

    更新日期:2007-07-01 00:00:00

  • Having the wrong friends? Peer effects in adolescent substance use.

    abstract::Swedish cross-sectional survey data on young individuals aged 12-18-year-old was used to analyse school-class based peer effects in binge drinking, smoking and illicit-drug use. Significant and positive peer effects were found for all three activities. By introducing school/grade fixed effects, the estimated peer effe...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2005.02.001

    authors: Lundborg P

    更新日期:2006-03-01 00:00:00

  • Demand elasticities and service selection incentives among competing private health plans.

    abstract::We examine selection incentives by health plans while refining the selection index of McGuire et al. (2014) to reflect not only service predictability and predictiveness but also variation in cost sharing, risk-adjusted profits, profit margins, and newly-refined demand elasticities across 26 disaggregated types of ser...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.09.006

    authors: Ellis RP,Martins B,Zhu W

    更新日期:2017-12-01 00:00:00

  • Health economics and applications in developing countries.

    abstract::The concept of health human capital guides the statistical study of (1) health production functions, (2) derived demands for medical and behavioral health inputs, and (3) determinants of health and productivity outcomes. Health inputs are generally endogenous to health outcomes, and prices of health inputs are the mos...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 评论,杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2004.04.002

    authors: Schultz TP

    更新日期:2004-07-01 00:00:00

  • Pro-cyclical mortality across socioeconomic groups and health status.

    abstract::Using variation across geographic regions, a number of studies from the U.S. and other developed countries have found more deaths in economic upturns and less deaths in economic downturns. We use data from regions in Norway for 1977-2008 and find the same pro-cyclical patterns. Using individual-level register data for...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.08.005

    authors: Haaland VF,Telle K

    更新日期:2015-01-01 00:00:00

  • Health dynamics shape life-cycle incomes.

    abstract::This paper empirically investigates the long-run effects of major health improvements on income growth in the United States. To isolate exogenous changes in health, the econometric model uses quasi-experimental variation in cardiovascular disease mortality across states over time. Based on data for the white populatio...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2020.102398

    authors: Kotschy R

    更新日期:2021-01-01 00:00:00

  • Moral hazard in insurance, value-based cost sharing, and the benefits of blissful ignorance.

    abstract::The conventional theory of optimal coinsurance rates for health insurance with moral hazard indicates that coinsurance should vary with the price responsiveness or price-elasticity of demand for different medical services. An alternative theory called "value-based cost sharing" indicates that coinsurance should be low...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2008.07.003

    authors: Pauly MV,Blavin FE

    更新日期:2008-12-01 00:00:00

  • Direct versus indirect standardization in risk adjustment.

    abstract::Direct and indirect standardization procedures aim at comparing differences in health or in health care expenditures between subgroups of the population after controlling for observable morbidity differences. There is a close analogy between this problem and the issue of risk adjustment in health insurance. Traditiona...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2008.10.012

    authors: Schokkaert E,Van de Voorde C

    更新日期:2009-03-01 00:00:00

  • Advance directives and medical treatment at the end of life.

    abstract::To assess the consequences of advance medical directives--which explicitly specify a patient's preferences for one or more specific types of medical treatment in the event of a loss of competence--we analyze the medical care of elderly Medicare beneficiaries who died between 1985 and 1995. We compare the care of patie...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2003.08.006

    authors: Kessler DP,McClellan MB

    更新日期:2004-01-01 00:00:00

  • Competition, gatekeeping, and health care access.

    abstract::We study gatekeeping physicians' referrals of patients to specialty care. We derive theoretical results when competition in the physician market intensifies. First, due to competitive pressure, physicians refer patients to specialty care more often. Second, physicians earn more by treating patients themselves, so refe...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.11.005

    authors: Godager G,Iversen T,Ma CT

    更新日期:2015-01-01 00:00:00

  • The value of health insurance: the access motive.

    abstract::Why do people purchase health insurance? Many economists would answer that it permits purchasers to avoid risk of financial loss. This note suggests that health insurance is also demanded because it represents a mechanism for gaining access to health care that would otherwise be unaffordable. For example, although a U...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/s0167-6296(98)00049-6

    authors: Nyman JA

    更新日期:1999-04-01 00:00:00

  • The effect of college education on mortality.

    abstract::We exploit exogenous variation in years of completed college induced by draft-avoidance behavior during the Vietnam War to examine the impact of college on adult mortality. Our estimates imply that increasing college attainment from the level of the state at the 25th percentile of the education distribution to that of...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2016.08.002

    authors: Buckles K,Hagemann A,Malamud O,Morrill M,Wozniak A

    更新日期:2016-12-01 00:00:00

  • Alternative health insurance schemes: a welfare comparison.

    abstract::In this paper, we present a simple model of health insurance with asymmetric information, where we compare two alternative ways of organizing the insurance market. Either as a competitive insurance market, where some risks remain uninsured, or as a compulsory scheme, where however, the level of reimbursement of loss i...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/s0167-6296(02)00062-0

    authors: Hansen BO,Keiding H

    更新日期:2002-09-01 00:00:00

  • Price elasticity of expenditure across health care services.

    abstract::Policymakers in countries around the world are faced with rising health care costs and are debating ways to reform health care to reduce expenditures. Estimates of price elasticity of expenditure are a key component for predicting expenditures under alternative policies. Using unique individual-level data compiled fro...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2012.07.002

    authors: Duarte F

    更新日期:2012-12-01 00:00:00

  • Price regulation and relative delays in generic drug adoption.

    abstract::Increasing the adoption of generic drugs has the potential to improve static efficiency in a health system without harming pharmaceutical innovation. However, very little is known about the timing of generic adoption and diffusion. No prior study has empirically examined the differential launch times of generics acros...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.04.004

    authors: Costa-Font J,McGuire A,Varol N

    更新日期:2014-12-01 00:00:00

  • R&D policy, agency costs and innovation in personalized medicine.

    abstract::The Orphan Drug Act (ODA) was designed to spur the development of drugs for rare diseases. In principle, its design also incentivizes pharmaceutical firms to develop drugs for "rare" subdivisions of more prevalent diseases. I find that in response to this incentive, firms develop drugs for ODA-qualifying subdivisions ...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2009.06.011

    authors: Yin W

    更新日期:2009-09-01 00:00:00

  • The welfare value of FDA's mercury-in-fish advisory: a dynamic reanalysis.

    abstract::Assessing the welfare impact of consumer health advisories is a thorny task. Recently, Shimshack and Ward (2010) studied how U.S. households responded to FDA's 2001 mercury-in-fish advisory. They found that the average at-risk household reduced fish consumption by 21%, resulting in a 17%-reduction in mercury exposure ...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.06.005

    authors: Rheinberger CM,Hammitt JK

    更新日期:2014-09-01 00:00:00

  • Understanding DALYs (disability-adjusted life years).

    abstract::The measurement unit disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), used in recent years to quantify the burden of diseases, injuries and risk factors on human populations, is grounded on cogent economic and ethical principles and can guide policies toward delivering more cost-effective and equitable health care. DALYs follo...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/s0167-6296(97)00004-0

    authors: Murray CJ,Acharya AK

    更新日期:1997-12-01 00:00:00

  • Older people's participation in extra-cost disability benefits.

    abstract::The targeting of an UK extra-cost disability benefit for older people, Attendance Allowance, is analyzed using longitudinal data from the British Household Panel Survey. First, a binary model of benefit participation is used to investigate whether receipt is responsive to the onset of disability. Second, matching esti...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2012.11.004

    authors: Zantomio F

    更新日期:2013-01-01 00:00:00

  • Useful beautiful minds-an analysis of the relationship between schizophrenia and employment.

    abstract::This paper examines the relationship between schizophrenia and employment. We use longitudinal register data and show a considerable drop in the employment rate for people with schizophrenia six years before the first treatment at a psychiatric facility. After the first treatment, the employment rate stabilizes at 18%...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2013.08.007

    authors: Greve J,Nielsen LH

    更新日期:2013-12-01 00:00:00

  • Where would you go for your next hospitalization?

    abstract::We examine the effects of diverse dimensions of hospital quality - including consumers' perceptions of unobserved attributes - on future hospital choice. We utilize consumers' stated preference weights to obtain hospital-specific estimates of perceptions about unmeasured attributes such as reputation. We report three ...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2011.05.006

    authors: Jung K,Feldman R,Scanlon D

    更新日期:2011-07-01 00:00:00

  • Do increased premium subsidies affect how much health insurance is purchased? Evidence from the self-employed.

    abstract::This paper estimates the effect of recent federal and state level increases in the deductibility of health insurance premiums for self-employed individuals, which reduced the after-tax price of health insurance, on both the take-up of coverage and the amount of insurance purchased. Using a panel of tax returns filed b...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2009.07.002

    authors: Heim BT,Lurie IZ

    更新日期:2009-12-01 00:00:00

  • Modelling and estimation of valuations for the Dutch London Handicap Scale.

    abstract::This paper presents a study to estimate a preference-based participation index from the Dutch London Handicap Scale (LHS) classification system that can be applied to past or future Dutch LHS data sets. A subset of 60 states were valued by a representative sample of 285 respondents of the Dutch general adult populatio...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2006.01.004

    authors: Groothuis-Oudshoorn CG,Chorus AM,Taeke van Beekum W,Detmar SB,van den Hout WB

    更新日期:2006-11-01 00:00:00

  • Health insurance and imperfect competition in the health care market.

    abstract::We show that when health care providers have market power and engage in Cournot competition, a competitive upstream health insurance market results in over-insurance and over-priced health care. Even though consumers and firms anticipate the price interactions between these two markets - the price set in one market af...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2006.03.003

    authors: Vaithianathan R

    更新日期:2006-11-01 00:00:00

  • The impact of legalized abortion on child health outcomes and abandonment. Evidence from Romania.

    abstract::We use household survey data and a unique census of institutionalized children to analyze the impact of abortion legalization in Romania. We exploit the lift of the abortion ban in December 1989, when communist dictator Ceausescu and his regime were removed from power, to understand its impact on children's health at ...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2011.08.004

    authors: Mitrut A,Wolff FC

    更新日期:2011-12-01 00:00:00

  • Patient cost sharing and medical expenditures for the Elderly.

    abstract::Despite the rapidly aging population, relatively little is known about how cost sharing affects the elderly's medical spending. Exploiting longitudinal claims data and the drastic reduction of coinsurance from 30% to 10% at age 70 in Japan, we find that the elderly's demand responses are heterogeneous in ways that hav...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2015.10.005

    authors: Fukushima K,Mizuoka S,Yamamoto S,Iizuka T

    更新日期:2016-01-01 00:00:00

  • The changing of the guards: can family doctors contain worker absenteeism?

    abstract::Using administrative data from Norway, we examine the extent to which family doctors influence their clients' propensity to claim sick-pay. The analysis exploits exogenous switches of family doctors occurring when physicians quit, retire, or for other reasons sell their patient lists. We find that family doctors have ...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2013.10.005

    authors: Markussen S,Røed K,Røgeberg O

    更新日期:2013-12-01 00:00:00

  • The impact of budgets for gatekeeping physicians on patient satisfaction: evidence from fundholding.

    abstract::Between 1991 and 1998 English general practices had the option of holding budgets for prescribing and elective secondary care. Fundholding was reintroduced in 2005. We examine the effect of fundholding on patients' satisfaction with their practice, using a cross section of 4441 patients from 60 practices in the last y...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/j.jhealeco.2006.12.003

    authors: Dusheiko M,Gravelle H,Yu N,Campbell S

    更新日期:2007-07-01 00:00:00

  • Standard errors for the retransformation problem with heteroscedasticity.

    abstract::Economists often estimate models with a log-transformed dependent variable. The results from the log-transformed model are often retransformed back to the unlogged scale. Other studies have shown how to obtain consistent estimates on the original scale but have not provided variance equations for those estimates. In t...

    journal_title:Journal of health economics

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1016/s0167-6296(00)00046-1

    authors: Ai C,Norton EC

    更新日期:2000-09-01 00:00:00