학술논문

Certificate of need and the cost of competition in home healthcare markets
Document Type
article
Source
Home Health Care Services Quarterly. 39(2)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Health Services
Good Health and Well Being
Certificate of Need
Cohort Studies
Delivery of Health Care
Economic Competition
Home Care Agencies
Humans
United States
Home health
nursing home
certificate-of-need
cost
regulation
Nursing
Public Health and Health Services
Gerontology
Health services and systems
Language
Abstract
We used 2010-16 Medicare Cost Reports for 10,737 freestanding home health agencies (HHAs) to examine the impact of home health (HH) and nursing home (NH) certificate-of-need (CON) laws on HHA caseload, total and per-patient variable costs. After adjusting for other HHA characteristics, total costs were higher in states with only HH CON laws ($2,975,698), only NH CON laws ($1,768,097), and both types of laws ($3,511,277), compared with no CON laws ($1,538,536). Higher costs were driven by caseloads, as CON reduced per-patient costs. Additional research is needed to distinguish whether this is due to skimping on quality vs. economies of scale.