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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Does Health Insurance Promote Health through Providers and Networks?

$3.48M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Recipient Organization National Bureau of Economic Research
Country United States
Start Date Sep 01, 2022
End Date May 31, 2026
Duration 1,368 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10688252
Grant Description

OTHER PROJECT INFORMATION – Project Summary/Abstract Does Health Insurance Promote Health through Providers and Networks? Through their varying provider networks and coverages, health insurance plans directly and indirectly steer patients toward some clinicians and hospitals and away from others. If providers differ in their quality of

care and especially if they provide better care for certain types of patients, such network variation can meaningfully affect health outcomes at the plan level, and not just the provider level. Yet, consumers selecting health plans lack information about which plans will direct them to better providers, obscuring this

potentially important channel to improving population health. This project will develop novel outcome-based measures of insurance plan quality based on where enrollees receive care, and taking account how causal impacts on health vary across provider networks. By furthering the scientific understanding of the relationship between provider quality and patient outcomes at

the plan level, we aim to equip patients with new information for selecting insurance plans. Our measures will also provide regulators with new instruments to reward plans that make people healthier. At the core of our research plan are new, causal estimates of how mortality impacts vary across hospitals

and physicians and, in turn, across the health plans that rely on different provider networks. We focus on older Americans enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans, leveraging novel data on the provider networks used by different Medicare Advantage plans. The estimates will characterize which hospitals and providers

produce the best outcomes for beneficiaries with different demographics and comorbidities and thus which plans are suitable for each type of patient by directing them to providers who produce good outcomes for conditions they have or are likely to develop. The project has four primary aims: Aim 1: Measure and Validate Mortality Effects for Healthcare Providers

Aim 2: Link Physician and Hospital Mortality Effects to Plan Mortality Effects Aim 3: Explore Heterogeneity in Mortality Effects Across Beneficiaries Aim 4: Evaluate the Impact of Policy Proposals

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National Bureau of Economic Research

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