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Measuring and Modeling Health Care Costs

Online ISBN:
9780226530994
Print ISBN:
9780226530857
Publisher:
University of Chicago Press
Book

Measuring and Modeling Health Care Costs

Ana Aizcorbe (ed.),
Ana Aizcorbe
(ed.)
Bureau of Economic Analysis
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Colin Baker (ed.),
Colin Baker
(ed.)
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
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Ernst R. Berndt (ed.),
Ernst R. Berndt
(ed.)
MIT Sloan School of Management
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David M. Cutler (ed.)
David M. Cutler
(ed.)
Harvard University
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Published online:
24 January 2019
Published in print:
5 March 2018
Online ISBN:
9780226530994
Print ISBN:
9780226530857
Publisher:
University of Chicago Press

Abstract

National statistical agencies keep good track of how medical care dollars are spent—how much is paid to hospitals, physicians’ offices, pharmaceutical companies, and the like. However, it has proven much more challenging to measure the productivity of those dollars. What is medical care doing for our health? Given the large size of the US health care sector—roughly $3 trillion annually—measuring medical care productivity is essential in understanding what we get for our medical care dollars and in evaluating productivity growth in the economy as a whole. The National Bureau of Economic Research/Conference on Research in Income and Wealth last published a volume devoted to medical care accounting in 2001 (Cutler and Berndt, eds., “Medical Care Output and Productivity”). That volume brought to the forefront issues of productivity assessment in medicine. In the past 15 years, much has happened in the US health sector and in the ability to evaluate medical care productivity. This present volume thus returns to these themes. We report on methodological issues in measuring health care costs and outcomes, describe analyses of populations and market segments, explore prescription pharmaceutical markets in detail, consider issues in industrial organization and market design, and conclude with chapters on the “benefit incidence” of US public spending on medical care and the relationship between medical R&D and health improvement.

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