Journal article
Time is money: opportunity cost and physicians' provision of charity care 1996-2005
Health services research, Vol.45(6 Pt 1), pp.1670-1692
12/2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2010.01139.x
PMCID: PMC3026953
PMID: 20662946
Abstract
To test whether physicians' provision of charity care depends on their hourly wage.
Secondary data from four rounds of the Community Tracking Study (CTS) Physician Survey (1996-2005). Data are nationally representative of nonfederal office- and hospital-based physicians spending at least 20 hours per week on patient care.
A two-part model with site-level fixed effects, time trend variables, and site-year interactions is used to model the relationship between physicians' hourly wage and both their decision to provide any charity care and the amount of charity care provided. Salaried and nonsalaried physicians are modeled separately.
Data from each round of the CTS were merged into a single cross-sectional file with 38,087 physician-year observations.
The association between physician's hourly wage and the likelihood of providing charity care is positive for salaried physicians and negative for nonsalaried physicians. Among physicians providing any charity care, hourly wage is positively associated with the amount of charity care provided regardless of salaried status. Practice characteristics are also significant.
The financial considerations of salaried physicians differ significantly from those of nonsalaried physicians in the decision to provide charity care, but factor similarly into the amount of charity care provided.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Time is money: opportunity cost and physicians' provision of charity care 1996-2005
- Creators
- David Bradley Wright - Cecil G Sheps Center for Health Services Research, The University of North Carolina, 725 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, CB#7590, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA. bradwright@unc.edu
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Health services research, Vol.45(6 Pt 1), pp.1670-1692
- DOI
- 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2010.01139.x
- PMID
- 20662946
- PMCID
- PMC3026953
- NLM abbreviation
- Health Serv Res
- ISSN
- 0017-9124
- eISSN
- 1475-6773
- Grant note
- T32 HS000032 / AHRQ HHS T32-HS000032 / AHRQ HHS T32 HS000011 / AHRQ HHS
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 12/2010
- Academic Unit
- Public Policy Center (Archive)
- Record Identifier
- 9984364386602771
Metrics
7 Record Views