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Returns to physician human capital: Evidence from patients randomized to physician teams

Author(s)
Doyle, Joseph J.; Ewer, Steven M.; Wagner, Todd H.
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Abstract
Physicians play a major role in determining the cost and quality of healthcare, yet estimates of these effects can be confounded by patient sorting. This paper considers a natural experiment where nearly 30,000 patients were randomly assigned to clinical teams from one of two academic institutions. One institution is among the top medical schools in the U.S., while the other institution is ranked lower in the distribution. Patients treated by the two programs have similar observable characteristics and have access to a single set of facilities and ancillary staff. Those treated by physicians from the higher ranked institution have 10–25% less expensive stays than patients assigned to the lower ranked institution. Health outcomes are not related to the physician team assignment. Cost differences are most pronounced for serious conditions, and they largely stem from diagnostic-testing rates: the lower ranked program tends to order more tests and takes longer to order them.
Date issued
2010-12
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/63138
Department
Sloan School of Management
Journal
Journal of Health Economics
Publisher
Elsevier Science Direct
Citation
Doyle Jr., Joseph J., Steven M. Ewer, and Todd H. Wagner. “Returns to physician human capital: Evidence from patients randomized to physician teams.” Journal of Health Economics 29.6 (2010) : 866-882. Copyright © 2010, Elsevier
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0167-6296

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