Insurance and Provider Markets
Our work in Insurance and Provider Markets
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Insurers’ Negotiating Leverage and the External Effects of Medicare Part D
The researchers analyzed how increases in insurer size resulting from the implementation of Medicare Part D affected drug prices negotiated in the non-Medicare commercial market.
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How Can We Make Health Care More Affordable?
Neeraj Sood testified before the California State Senate Committee on Health.
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Public-Private Partnership as a Path to Affordable Healthcare in Emerging Markets
This look of the potential applicability and impacts of public subsidies for private health insurance plans, as well as opportunities and challenges for implementation, in the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) found that providing public subsidies rather than health insurance would enable BRICS governments to avoid the open-ended financial liabilities that have plagued advanced economies, while still expanding access to health insurance and encouraging the development of a robust private health insurance market.
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Examining Health Care Competition: Limited Networks
Paul Ginsburg presented about insurance and provider networks during an FTC-DOJ workshop.
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ASHEcon: June 22-25, 2014
The Schaeffer Center was selected to host the 2014 American Society for Health Economists (ASHEcon), the premiere conference in health economics.
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Quintiles Seminar Series – Spring: Jan-May 2014
The Quintiles Seminar Series is a biweekly seminar series that features prominent academics, researchers, policy makers, and industry leaders to discuss prevalent and current themes in health, policy, and economics.
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Don’t Be Fooled by Claims About the ACA Impact on Insurance Premiums
The goal of competition is to lower prices, but when it comes to health insurance — as with all of health care — we need to be careful about what we mean by price.
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