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題名 Global Budgets and Provider Incentives: Hospitals` Drug Expenditures in Taiwan
作者 Chou, Shin-Yi;Mary E. Deily;Lien, Hsien-Ming;Zhang, Jing-Hua
貢獻者 財政系
日期 2010.02
上傳時間 3-Nov-2014 14:22:02 (UTC+8)
摘要 Purpose: This chapter examines how drug prescribing behavior in Taiwanese hospitals changed after the government changed reimbursement systems. In 2002, Taiwan instituted a system in which hospitals are reimbursed for drug expenditures at full price from a fixed global budget before the remaining budget is allocated to reimburse all other expenditures, often at discounted prices. Providers are thus given a financial incentive to increase prescriptions. Methodology: We isolate the effect of this system from that of other confounding factors by estimating a difference-in-difference model to analyze monthly drug expenditures of hospital departments for outpatients during the years 1999–2006. Findings: Our results suggest that hospital departments which use drugs more heavily as part of their regular medical care increased their drug prescription expenditures after the implementation of the global budget system. In addition, we find that the response was stronger among for-profit than not-for-profit and publichospitals. Implications: Hospital doctors responded to the financial incentive created by the particular global budgeting system adopted in Taiwan by increasing expenditures on drug treatments for outpatients.
關聯 Pharmaceutical Markets and Insurance Worldwide (Advances in Health Economics and Health Services Research 22) , Emerald Group Publishing, 103 - 122
ISBN: 9781848440029
資料類型 book/chapter
dc.contributor 財政系en_US
dc.creator (作者) Chou, Shin-Yi;Mary E. Deily;Lien, Hsien-Ming;Zhang, Jing-Huaen_US
dc.date (日期) 2010.02en_US
dc.date.accessioned 3-Nov-2014 14:22:02 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 3-Nov-2014 14:22:02 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 3-Nov-2014 14:22:02 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/71037-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) Purpose: This chapter examines how drug prescribing behavior in Taiwanese hospitals changed after the government changed reimbursement systems. In 2002, Taiwan instituted a system in which hospitals are reimbursed for drug expenditures at full price from a fixed global budget before the remaining budget is allocated to reimburse all other expenditures, often at discounted prices. Providers are thus given a financial incentive to increase prescriptions. Methodology: We isolate the effect of this system from that of other confounding factors by estimating a difference-in-difference model to analyze monthly drug expenditures of hospital departments for outpatients during the years 1999–2006. Findings: Our results suggest that hospital departments which use drugs more heavily as part of their regular medical care increased their drug prescription expenditures after the implementation of the global budget system. In addition, we find that the response was stronger among for-profit than not-for-profit and publichospitals. Implications: Hospital doctors responded to the financial incentive created by the particular global budgeting system adopted in Taiwan by increasing expenditures on drug treatments for outpatients.en_US
dc.format.extent 279905 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf-
dc.language.iso en_US-
dc.relation (關聯) Pharmaceutical Markets and Insurance Worldwide (Advances in Health Economics and Health Services Research 22) , Emerald Group Publishing, 103 - 122en_US
dc.relation (關聯) ISBN: 9781848440029en_US
dc.title (題名) Global Budgets and Provider Incentives: Hospitals` Drug Expenditures in Taiwanen_US
dc.type (資料類型) book/chapteren