Consolidation and restructuring: the next step in managed care.Health Care Manag. 1995 Oct; 2(1):221-35.HC
Abstract
Rising expenditures on health care in the U.S. have been facilitated by the fundamental problems of asymmetric information and insurance-induced moral hazard. If managed care is to succeed, it must take both into account through strategies such as information-based consumer education and provider risk-sharing. Because larger networks offer significant advantages in implementing such strategies, hospital mergers, physician-hospital alliances, and economies of scale are major trends in the evolution of managed care.
MeSH
Community NetworksContinuity of Patient CareDelivery of Health Care, IntegratedEconomic CompetitionEfficiency, OrganizationalHealth Facility MergerHealth Services ResearchHospital-Physician Joint VenturesInsurance Selection BiasManaged Care ProgramsMulti-Institutional SystemsOrganizational InnovationQuality of Health CareRisk ManagementUnited States
Pub Type(s)
Journal Article
Language
eng
PubMed ID
10165637
Citation
Danzon, P M., et al. "Consolidation and Restructuring: the Next Step in Managed Care." Health Care Management (Philadelphia, Pa.), vol. 2, no. 1, 1995, pp. 221-35.
Danzon PM, Boothman LG, Greenberg PE. Consolidation and restructuring: the next step in managed care. Health Care Manag. 1995;2(1):221-35.
Danzon, P. M., Boothman, L. G., & Greenberg, P. E. (1995). Consolidation and restructuring: the next step in managed care. Health Care Management (Philadelphia, Pa.), 2(1), 221-35.
Danzon PM, Boothman LG, Greenberg PE. Consolidation and Restructuring: the Next Step in Managed Care. Health Care Manag. 1995;2(1):221-35. PubMed PMID: 10165637.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR
T1 - Consolidation and restructuring: the next step in managed care.
AU - Danzon,P M,
AU - Boothman,L G,
AU - Greenberg,P E,
PY - 1995/9/5/pubmed
PY - 1995/9/5/medline
PY - 1995/9/5/entrez
SP - 221
EP - 35
JF - Health care management (Philadelphia, Pa.)
JO - Health Care Manag
VL - 2
IS - 1
N2 - Rising expenditures on health care in the U.S. have been facilitated by the fundamental problems of asymmetric information and insurance-induced moral hazard. If managed care is to succeed, it must take both into account through strategies such as information-based consumer education and provider risk-sharing. Because larger networks offer significant advantages in implementing such strategies, hospital mergers, physician-hospital alliances, and economies of scale are major trends in the evolution of managed care.
SN - 1069-6571
UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/10165637/Consolidation_and_restructuring:_the_next_step_in_managed_care_
L2 - https://medlineplus.gov/managedcare.html
DB - PRIME
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -