Timmons Edward Joseph
Department of Business Administration, Saint Francis University, United States.
Health Policy. 2017 Feb;121(2):189-196. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2016.12.002. Epub 2016 Dec 23.
The provision of health care to low-income Americans remains an ongoing policy challenge. In this paper, I examine how important changes to occupational licensing laws for nurse practitioners and physician assistants have affected cost and intensity of health care for Medicaid patients. The results suggest that allowing physician assistants to prescribe controlled substances is associated with a substantial (more than 11%) reduction in the dollar amount of outpatient claims per Medicaid recipient. I find little evidence that expanded scope of practice has affected proxies for care intensity such as total claims and total care days. Relaxing occupational licensing requirements by broadening the scope of practice for healthcare providers may represent a low-cost alternative to providing quality care to America's poor.
为低收入美国人提供医疗保健仍然是一项持续存在的政策挑战。在本文中,我研究了对执业护士和医师助理的职业许可法律的重大变革如何影响医疗补助患者的医疗成本和医疗强度。结果表明,允许医师助理开具管制药品与每位医疗补助受益人的门诊索赔金额大幅下降(超过11%)相关。我几乎没有发现证据表明扩大执业范围会影响诸如总索赔和总护理天数等护理强度指标。通过扩大医疗服务提供者的执业范围来放宽职业许可要求,可能是为美国贫困人口提供优质医疗服务的一种低成本替代方案。