Public hospitals as competitors for medicaid revenue: the case study of St. Louis regional medical center
By: Drucker, Mark L.
Material type:
ArticlePublisher: 1999Description: p.1587-1613.Subject(s): Medical centres | Hospitals | Revenue | Hospitals
In:
International Journal of Public AdministrationSummary: Medicaid revenues may determine whether public hospitals will survive. Public hospitals participate aggressively in the public market competition for their states' Medicaid dollars. States must decide whether the survival of public hospitals, as providers of last resort to both Medicaid and uninsured patients, is of continuing importance to their Medicaid programs. Cities, if the states were willing, alternatively could voucher uninsured patients and direct Medicaid patients to the private hospitals that would outlive closed public hospitals. In fact, Medicaid's managed care programs already have heightened this competition, by organizing sufficiently large populations of prepaid Medicaid patients to attract networks of private providers to offer discounted prices, in competition with public hospitals for this market. - Reproduced
| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Articles
|
Indian Institute of Public Administration | Volume no: 22, Issue no: 11-12 | Available | AR43083 |
Medicaid revenues may determine whether public hospitals will survive. Public hospitals participate aggressively in the public market competition for their states' Medicaid dollars. States must decide whether the survival of public hospitals, as providers of last resort to both Medicaid and uninsured patients, is of continuing importance to their Medicaid programs. Cities, if the states were willing, alternatively could voucher uninsured patients and direct Medicaid patients to the private hospitals that would outlive closed public hospitals. In fact, Medicaid's managed care programs already have heightened this competition, by organizing sufficiently large populations of prepaid Medicaid patients to attract networks of private providers to offer discounted prices, in competition with public hospitals for this market. - Reproduced


Articles
There are no comments for this item.