Kramer Jeffrey, Santerre Rexford E
Healthcare Management and Insurance Studies, School of Business, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269, USA.
Inquiry. 2010 Fall;47(3):242-51. doi: 10.5034/inquiryjrnl_47.03.242.
This paper uses observations from a panel data set of 35 chief executive officers (CEOs) from 29 not-for-profit hospitals in Connecticut over the period 1998 to 2006 to investigate the relationship between CEO performance and pay. Both economic and charity performance measures are specified in the empirical model. The multiple regression results reveal that not-for-profit hospital CEOs, at least in Connecticut, are driven at the margin to increase the occupancy rate of privately insured patients at the expense of uncompensated care and public-pay patients. This type of behavior on the part of not-for-profit hospital CEOs calls into question the desirability of allowing these hospitals a tax exemption on earned income, property, and purchases.
本文利用1998年至2006年期间康涅狄格州29家非营利性医院的35位首席执行官(CEO)的面板数据集进行观测,以研究CEO绩效与薪酬之间的关系。实证模型中同时设定了经济绩效和慈善绩效指标。多元回归结果显示,至少在康涅狄格州,非营利性医院的CEO们在一定程度上会以牺牲无偿医疗服务和公费患者为代价,来提高私立保险患者的入住率。非营利性医院CEO的这种行为让人质疑给予这些医院在 earned income、财产和采购方面免税待遇的合理性。