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Chapter 6 The production, costs, and technology of health care. Production and the possibility for substitution Economies of scale and scope Technology- allocative inefficient, cost and diffusion . Production and the Possibilities for Substitution.
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Chapter 6 The production, costs, and technology of health care Production and the possibility for substitution Economies of scale and scope Technology- allocative inefficient, cost and diffusion
Production and the Possibilities for Substitution • Monotechnic View: only one correct way of treating a given illness • Substitution: figure 6.1 A. No substitution (ES=0); B. Considerable substitution • Physician extender (physician assistant) could substitute for 25 percent to more than 50 percent • The elasticity of substitution (ES) measures the responsiveness of a cost-minimizing firm to change in relative input prices • Estimates for Hospital care1. all inputs are substitutes for each other. However, their range is uncertain.2. The small values are beds with labors(Table 6-1)
Cost in Theory and Practice-economies of scale and scope • Cost function (Figure 6-2) and iso-cost (cost-minimization) • Scale economies: long-run average cost is declining (Figure 6-3)1. profit-maximizing 2. consumers 3. the theory of perfect competition 4. does it work for health care industry? Sinjay and Campbell (1965) shows that mergers with the desire of scale economies • Economies of scope1. multi-product nature2. equation 6.1
Empirical cost-function studies • Long-Run versus short-run studies: clear in theory but difficulties in empirical dataapplication: No change in profit implies in the long run since managers have selected the appropriate level of capital to achieve the highest profit • Structural versus behavioral cost functions1.structural cost function derived from economic theory such as iso-cost: • Conrad&Strauss (1983) economies of scaleCowing&Holtman (1983) C.R.SVita (1990) diseconomies of scale2.behavioral cost function derived fromactual data and sometimes omit variablesGranneman, Brown, and Pauly (1986) economies of scale
Difficulties faced by all hospital costs studies • Case-mix problem1.Medicare’s Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) identify 506 groups of cases2. some studies adjust with case mix3.How to treat quality? A quality-adjusted model: scale economies for low quality nursing home while average quality with constant cost and high-quality with diseconomies of scale4. Figure 5-6 :Real flat LARC. Points CDE mistake for diseconomies of scale • Reliable measure for hospital input prices:registered nurse’s wage ; physician’s input prices
Technical and Allocative Inefficiency • Technical inefficient (Figure 6.6 ):1. Inefficiencies are measured as relative distances from the production frontier with output distance and input distance 2. Some cases are off isoquant curve • Allocative Inefficient (Figure 6.7)Each firm minimizing production costs with responding optimally to input prices
Two types of empirical frontier • The data envelopment analysis (DEA) approach (Figure 6-8)1. frontier isoquant for a selected level of output by forming an envelope of the data2.nonparametric • The Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA) analysis (Figure 6-9) 1. If each firm is randomly shocked, the firm’s best possible practice (stochastic frontier ) will be randomly shifted2. parameter assumption where statistical distribution of this inefficiencies3. no strong parameter assumption in panel data
Technological Changes and costs • Technological Change: Cost Increasing or Decreasing (Figure 6-10)Panel A (B) : cost decreasing (increasing) Technological changes
Diffusion of New Health Care Technologies • The profit Principle: profit, prestige and well-being of patients • The information channel: sociology • Information externality (Figure 6-11, equation 6-2): adopting surgeons were more likely to be young, male, board-certificated, US medical school graduates, and urban located • Other factors that may affect adoption ratethe disadvantage (advantage) of waiting: loss market share (future advance and learn experience) • Diffusion of technology and managed care: the result is yes for some technologies and no for others