Abstract

In this issue of the Journal, Trivedi and colleagues1 examine the effect of cost sharing on the use of screening mammography among women enrolled in Medicare managed-care plans from 2001 to 2004. Focusing on more than 350,000 women between the ages of 65 and 69 years, the authors show that cost sharing — either in the form of copayments (in which patients pay flat fees when they receive services) or coinsurance (in which patients pay a fixed percentage of the cost of those services) — reduces the number of women who undergo mammography. The effects are large relative to the . . .

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