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Seeking a Replacement for the Medicare Physician Services Payment Method

Seeking a Replacement for the Medicare Physician Services Payment Method Abstract Business and government spending on physician services have soared over the last few decades. Most payers for services traditionally peg their payment rates to Medicare. However, most consider the current Medicare single payment rate flawed because it fails to improve health outcomes or control spending. Everyone wants to replace it, but good replacements have not been identified. We estimated elasticities of the single-payment rate with respect to several of its determinants, proposed a replacement—a service-specific payment rate—for the single-payment rate, and estimated the budget implications of this replacement. Key findings are that the single-payment rate is relatively inelastic to the Sustained Growth Rate (SGR)1 and expenditure levels and that the proposed service-specific payment rate promotes primary care, controls spending, and saves money. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Business Economics Springer Journals

Seeking a Replacement for the Medicare Physician Services Payment Method

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References (2)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
2007 National Association for Business Economics
ISSN
0007-666X
eISSN
1554-432X
DOI
10.2145/20070306
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract Business and government spending on physician services have soared over the last few decades. Most payers for services traditionally peg their payment rates to Medicare. However, most consider the current Medicare single payment rate flawed because it fails to improve health outcomes or control spending. Everyone wants to replace it, but good replacements have not been identified. We estimated elasticities of the single-payment rate with respect to several of its determinants, proposed a replacement—a service-specific payment rate—for the single-payment rate, and estimated the budget implications of this replacement. Key findings are that the single-payment rate is relatively inelastic to the Sustained Growth Rate (SGR)1 and expenditure levels and that the proposed service-specific payment rate promotes primary care, controls spending, and saves money.

Journal

Business EconomicsSpringer Journals

Published: Jul 1, 2007

Keywords: economics, general; political economy/economic systems; business and management, general

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