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Are hospital services rationed in New Haven or over-utilised in Boston?
The populations of New Haven and Boston are demographically similar and receive most of their hospital care in university hospitals, but in 1982 their expenditures per head for inpatient care were $451 and $889, respectively. The 685,400 residents of Boston incurred about $300 million more in hospital expenditures and used 739 more beds than they would have if the use rates for New Haven residents had applied. Most of the extra beds were invested in higher admission rates for medical conditions in which the decision to admit can be discretionary. The overall rates for major surgery were equal, but rates for some individual operations varied widely. These findings indicate that academic standards of care are compatible with widely varying patterns of practice and that medical care costs are not necessarily high in communities served largely by university hospitals. They also emphasise the need for increased attention to the outcome and cost implications of differences in practice styles.
PMID: 2883497 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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Cited by 45 PubMed Central articles
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Extending the P4P agenda, part 2: how Medicare can reduce waste and improve the care of the chronically ill.
Wennberg JE, Fisher ES, Skinner JS, Bronner KK.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2007 Nov-Dec; 26(6):1575-85.
[Health Aff (Millwood). 2007]
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Does safety climate moderate the influence of staffing adequacy and work conditions on nurse injuries?
Mark BA, Hughes LC, Belyea M, Chang Y, Hofmann D, Jones CB, Bacon CT.
J Safety Res. 2007; 38(4):431-46. Epub 2007 Jul 25.
[J Safety Res. 2007]
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ReviewImproving medical practice: a conceptual framework.
Solberg LI.
Ann Fam Med. 2007 May-Jun; 5(3):251-6.
[Ann Fam Med. 2007]
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