Abstract

Background: We tested whether provider quality and cost information had a meaningful impact on health care quality and costs at two large employers that introduced a transparent provider profiling system in 2006. Using retrospective claims from enrollees representing 3,928 covered lives in these two firms where the insurer was the sole provider of health insurance, we addressed two questions: 1) Did patients switch to higher quality and more efficient doctors when the provider rankings became available? 2) What is the effect of switching on total expenditures, out-of-pocket expenditures, and use of preventive services? Methods: We used nonlinear regression to identify factors associated with improvement in quality and cost efficiency of providers seen by covered enrollees. We used difference-in-differences regression to test the impact on expenditures and use of preventive services of those who switched to higher-rated physicians. Results: Age, illness burden, and female are positively associated with improvement in provider quality and efficiency. Provider portfolio improvement had a negative impact on expenditures, but the story with respect to prevention is mixed: preventive visits go up when the patient has an improved provider portfolio, but utilization of diagnostic screening procedures goes down. Conclusions: A common concern in medical markets is the lack of information for consumers to shop for health care. We find consumers exhibit behaviors that suggest they use such information when it is available and useful. These results suggest that consumers could process additional price and quality information to gain more value from their health insurance benefits.

Highlights

  • A central limitation of healthcare markets is the lack of readily accessible and usable information to compare the cost and quality of medical providers and technologies

  • Much of the problem is the complexity of medical care. Another part of the problem is the accessibility of summary information on health care quality

  • This paper tests whether consumers will use new sources of transparent provider quality and cost information and how use of such information affects health care cost and utilization of preventive services

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Summary

Introduction

A central limitation of healthcare markets is the lack of readily accessible and usable information to compare the cost and quality of medical providers and technologies. With respect to health care, while the value of the internet for seeking health information has been documented by Baker et al [3] little research has been published in the sixteen years since their article regarding consumer behavior towards price data and how they use it. It is unknown whether consumers understand the information they receive, gain knowledge as a consequence, and act from this knowledge. Despite these sites being available to the public, Mehrotra et al show that few people price shop for their healthcare, Kullgren, Duey and Werner have found the sites to have the potential to lower costs for the consumer [6,7]

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