The Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research, Gaustadallèen 21, 0349, Oslo, Norway.
Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Eur J Health Econ. 2021 Aug;22(6):931-949. doi: 10.1007/s10198-021-01299-9. Epub 2021 Apr 24.
In several countries, a fee has been introduced to reduce bed-blocking in hospitals. This paper studies the implications of this fee for the strategic decisions of the hospitals and the long-term care providers. We introduce a Stackelberg game where the hospital is the leader and the care provider the follower. The policy reduces the treatment time at the hospital but does not necessarily lead to less bed-blocking, as this depends on the treatment time and bed-blocking before the reform. We test the results with data from the Norwegian Coordination Reform introduced in 2012 and find that this reform led to a large reduction in bed-blocking. The direct effect was even larger than a naïve comparison would suggest because hospitals began to report patients as ready to be discharged earlier than before the reform. Confronted with the theoretical predictions, this would mean that hospital services in average were set relatively close to the minimum levels before the reform.
在一些国家,已经引入了费用来减少医院的床位占用。本文研究了这一费用对医院和长期护理提供者的战略决策的影响。我们引入了一个医院是领导者而护理提供者是跟随者的斯塔克尔伯格博弈。该政策减少了医院的治疗时间,但并不一定会减少床位占用,因为这取决于改革前的治疗时间和床位占用情况。我们使用 2012 年挪威协调改革的数据进行了测试,结果表明,这一改革导致了床位占用的大量减少。直接效应甚至比简单的比较所显示的要大,因为医院开始比改革前更早地报告患者准备出院。面对理论预测,这意味着医院服务在平均水平上相对于改革前的最低水平设置得相对较近。