Evans William N, Garthwaite Craig, Wei Heng
Department of Economics and Econometrics, University of Notre Dame, 440 Flanner Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556, United States.
Department of Economics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, United States.
J Health Econ. 2008 Jul;27(4):843-870. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2007.12.003. Epub 2008 Jan 4.
Using an interrupted time series design and a census of births in California over a 6-year period, we show that state and federal laws passed in the late 1990s designed to increase the length of postpartum hospital stays reduced considerably the fraction of newborns that were discharged early. The law had little impact on re-admission rates for privately insured, vaginally delivered newborns, but reduced re-admission rates for privately insured c-section-delivered and Medicaid-insured vaginally delivered newborns by statistically significant amounts. Our calculations suggest the program was not cost saving.
利用中断时间序列设计以及加利福尼亚州六年期间的出生人口普查数据,我们发现,20世纪90年代末通过的旨在延长产后住院时间的州和联邦法律,大幅降低了早期出院新生儿的比例。该法律对私人保险的顺产新生儿的再入院率影响不大,但显著降低了私人保险的剖腹产新生儿以及医疗补助保险的顺产新生儿的再入院率。我们的计算表明,该项目并未节省成本。