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  5. Does Managed Care Change the Management of Nonprofit Hospitals?

Does Managed Care Change the Management of Nonprofit Hospitals?

File(s)
doesmanagedcarechangethe.pdf (113.59 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/76155
Collections
Faculty Publications - Human Resource Studies
ILR Articles and Chapters
Author
Bertrand, Marianne
Hallock, Kevin
Arnould, Richard
Abstract

This paper examines how the managerial labor market in nonprofit hospitals has adjusted to the financial pressures induced by HMO penetration. Using a panel of about 1,500 nonprofit hospitals over the period 1992–96, the authors find that top executive turnover increased following an increase in HMO penetration. Moreover, the increase in turnover was concentrated among the hospitals that had lower levels of economic profitability. While the link between top executive pay and for-profit performance measures was on average very weak, HMO penetration tightened that link: as HMO penetration increased, top executives were compensated more for improving the profitability of their hospitals. These results, while of limited economic magnitude, are qualitatively consistent with the view that HMO penetration has increased the weight assigned to for-profit performance in the management of not-for-profit hospitals.

Date Issued
2005-04-01
Keywords
labor
•
labor market
•
hospital
•
nonprofit
•
HMO
•
executive
•
turnover
•
profit
•
pay
•
performance
•
measures
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: Posted with permission from the Industrial & Labor Relations Review.
Type
article

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