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1.
Health Serv Res ; 30(4): 507-30, 1995 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7591779

ABSTRACT

STUDY QUESTION: This study investigated the longitudinal relations between hospital financial performance outcomes and three hospital-physician integration strategies: physician involvement in hospital governance, hospital ownership by physicians, and the integration of hospital-physician financial relationships. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING: Using secondary data from the State of California, integration strategies in approximately 300 California short-term acute care hospitals were tracked over a ten-year period (1981-1990). STUDY DESIGN: The study used an archival design. Hospital performance was measured on three dimensions: operational profitability, occupancy, and costs. Thirteen control variables were used in the analyses: market competition, affluence, and rurality; hospital ownership; teaching costs and intensity; multihospital system membership; hospital size; outpatient service mix; patient volume case mix; Medicare and Medicaid intensity; and managed care intensity. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION: Financial and utilization data were obtained from the State of California, which requires annual hospital reports. A series of longitudinal regressions tested the hypotheses. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Considerable variation was found in the popularity of the three strategies and their ability to predict hospital performance outcomes. Physician involvement in hospital governance increased modestly from 1981-1990, while ownership and financial integration declined significantly. Physician governance was associated with greater occupancy and higher operating margins, while financial integration was related to lower hospital operating costs. Direct physician ownership, particularly in small hospitals, was associated with lower operating margins and higher costs. Subsample analyses indicate that implementation of the Medicare prospective payment system in 1983 had a major impact on these relationships, especially on the benefits of financial integration. CONCLUSIONS: The findings support the validity of hospital-physician financial integration efforts, and to a lesser extent the involvement of physicians in hospital governance. The results lend considerably less support for strategies built around direct physician ownership in hospitals, particularly since PPS implementation. RELEVANCE/IMPACT: These findings challenge prior studies that found few financial benefits to hospital-physician integration prior to PPS implementation in 1983. The results imply that financial benefits of integration may take several years after implementation to emerge, are most salient in a managed care or managed competition environment, and vary by hospital size and multihospital system membership.


Subject(s)
Financial Management, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Governing Board/statistics & numerical data , Hospital-Physician Joint Ventures/economics , Hospital-Physician Relations , Analysis of Variance , California , Decision Making, Organizational , Financial Management, Hospital/trends , Governing Board/organization & administration , Health Services Research , Hospital Costs/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Costs/trends , Hospital-Physician Joint Ventures/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Ownership/economics , Ownership/statistics & numerical data , Regression Analysis
2.
J Healthc Manag ; 45(5): 317-30; discussion 330-1, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11067424

ABSTRACT

Healthcare decision makers and researchers have long been interested in the factors behind medical technology acquisition. The rate of environmental change in recent years has dramatically affected technology acquisition decision making in acute care hospitals. This study examines the relative role of decision-maker influence and environmental factors on the timing of MRI acquisition in hospitals operating in three western states with different levels of environmental uncertainty. The results suggest that the relative influence of decision makers and environmental factors on innovation acquisition timing varies depending on environmental turbulence, and that hospitals acquire new technology as one way of controlling the turbulence in their environments.


Subject(s)
Decision Making, Organizational , Diffusion of Innovation , Purchasing, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Technology Assessment, Biomedical/statistics & numerical data , California , Hospital Bed Capacity , Hospitals, Teaching , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/instrumentation , Oregon , Ownership , Purchasing, Hospital/organization & administration , Surveys and Questionnaires , Technology, High-Cost , Washington
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